It’s not that difficult to push weight-loss narratives in the right direction and watch them go.
All tagged Alex Sinclair
It’s not that difficult to push weight-loss narratives in the right direction and watch them go.
This sort of thing has been done before,
With Superman Year One #3 on the stands, Frank Miller has completed his statement on Superman. Unfortunately, it’s clear that that statement is “Frank Miller doesn’t understand Superman, either as a character or as a symbol.”
Fantastic art by four different superstar teams don’t help make Legion of Superheroes: Millennium #1 anything other than unnecessary.
Overall, Superman Year One #2 is slightly less offensive than the first issue; instead, it commits the even greater sin of being simply boring.
Amethyst relays tales of palace intrigue, as Superboy and Impulse escape Dark Opal’s goons.
The first issue of Superman: Year One is as disastrous as what happens to Krypton in its opening pages.
Humphries’ mix of strangeness…enjoys another pleasant, little 22-page outing for DC’s ever-popular psycho clown girl.
Humphries continues to put together a really clever multi-layered script.
There’s a whimsically kinetic physical action of the issue.
With this latest issue, the cartwheeling between depth and silliness falters.
Looking into Harley’s face is like looking into the divided American consciousness.
She’s considering crime again because it‘s easier for her, at a time when the walls of reality are coming apart around her.
It’s up to Harley to travel through both time and space to fix all the continuity errors she created.
There’s more than one way to fly!
“Ive been reincarnated across time and space. Maybe as far back as creation.”
I am made to soar.