A clear and articulate adventure
All tagged Steve Orlando
A clear and articulate adventure
Lupacchino keeps the physical end of the action moving across the page.
A story which had been veering into some pretty timeworn territory is given new life in Diana’s latest issue.
The emotional momentum of the series is maintained.
The issue’s central conflict makes for a satisfying adventure.
Steve Orlando rushes through the tale of political turmoil on a distant planet.
It’s a smartly-constructed issue that Orlando and Raynor have put together.
Orlando allows Wonder Woman’s unique personality to save this particular treatment of a familiar adventure fantasy theme.
A fairly even mix of earthbound life and the magic of something much bigger.
DC editorial should have known better than to publish Gotham City Monsters #5.
Gotham City Monsters #4 lacks the spark of life.
Gotham City Monsters #3 is full of overwrought dialogue and weird anatomy.
Gotham City Monsters #2 is inoffensive, but that’s about all it has going for it.
Pardon the expression, but Gotham City Monsters #1 is a strange beast.
Orlando and Rossmo hit a surprisingly deep issue.
The messy grittiness of a police assault on a rural human trafficking outpost feels weird and stringy.
Riley Rossmo's curvy melted-cheese-topping art feels relatively breathtaking on the unique alien landscape of Mars.
Plascencia’s artwork hold the emotionality of the story at a contorted distance.
A mix of weird fiction that still manages to find the gravity of serious drama.
Two armies stand ready to annihilate each other, with Wonder Woman and Artemis caught in the middle