Russell lets the situations in the situational comedy.
All tagged Mark Russell
Russell lets the situations in the situational comedy.
It feels strangely imbalanced
The darkness continues to amplify.
A deliciously imperfect comedy.
Second Coming #6 leaves the story unsettlingly up in the air.
The joke plays out pretty much as expected.
Wonder Twins #10 is a fun comic, and a solid entry in the series.
The laughs themselves are a bit weak, but Russell and Norton host a fun, little 30-page party for anyone interested in attending.
Wonder Twins #9 suffers from some sequences without an obvious connection to the main plot of the book.
Second Coming remains one of the best comics on the stands right now. Fans of novelists Douglas Adams and Christopher Moore in particular should seek this title out, ASAP.
Wonder Twins #8 is a great issue that relies only on the circumstances of the Twins’ high school.
Second Coming remains clever enough, which goes a long way in this otherwise unfocused third issue.
Wonder Twins #7 is pleasant enough, but it lacks the bite of earlier issues.
“The greatest temptation in the world isn’t to do evil,” Jesus tells his new roommate, the superhero Sunstar, in the second issue of Ahoy Comics’ Second Coming, “but the need to be seen doing good.”
DC’s loss is AHOY’s gain with the compelling first issue of Second Coming.
Wonder Twins #6 asks “If your good doesn’t matter, what does it matter if you’re good?”
Wonder Twins continues to be a charming blend of sweet and topical, a rollicking triumph for DC’s Wonder Comics line.
Wonder Twins #4 feels like a rare misstep in what has otherwise been an exceptional miniseries.
Wonder Twins continues to be a weird, misshapen highlight in DC’s current publishing line.
Wonder Twins continues to be the ridiculous shining star of DC’s Wonder Comics line.