Andreyko fuses the narration of the issue with some degree of humor.
All tagged Brad Simpson
Andreyko fuses the narration of the issue with some degree of humor.
Fleecs fills the issue with a very heartfelt kind of precision.
Everything is seen through the ailing cat’s eyes.
Fleecs cranks-up the complexity.
Seeley and Fleecs deliver a lot of tension.
Fleecs is handling quite a lot in the course of a story,
A very real sense of earthbound drama.
Foxe plays the horror pretty close to humor.
Occasionally manage a kind of beauty.
Narrative coherence bleeds around the edges of the dark poetry in a satisfying eighth issue.
Watters soaks the page with metaphor.
Hazy wasteland poetics rumble through the opening chapter.
Time becomes a crucial point in the narrative with Larcohe's voluminous gaze into a very brief series of encounters.
A slightly disappointing seventh issue with lush moodiness.
The truly monumental scale of the action feels every bit as overwhelming as it should.
With Earth’s forces so completely overpowered, this issue of The Warning feels…like a disaster story
Laroche’s tale casts human politics against the overwhelming crush of an alien invasion.
…an idiosyncratically artistic addition to the alien invasion sub-genre that draws together various established elements of military-based sci-fi.
The transition from video game to comic book with this title leaves much to be desired.