A clean and simple motion and emotion explore some of Catwoman’s deeper emotions.
All in Action
A clean and simple motion and emotion explore some of Catwoman’s deeper emotions.
Hine, Haberlin and Van Dyke continue to put together a fun fantasy adventure.
Action is handled well amid a drama that might be a bit too abstract.
Writer Jed MacKay delivers another story of weirdly stylish larceny.
Mark Waid gets quite a bit of unique mileage out of the superhero as a super-spy concept.
Writer Zhou Liefen gives artist Keng enough room to deliver a story the size of the Shanghai skyline.
Hazy wasteland poetics rumble through the opening chapter.
The action might feel stiff, but the horror of the drama is given vivid life.
Aaron and Hallum’s story continues to tumble through a pulpy, fun space adventure.
Thumbs is at its best when drama mixes with action in a dizzyingly tumultuous world of exploitation and revolution.
Fuses interpersonal drama with lighthearted fourth wall shattering multi-genre spoofery.
Genuinely groundbreaking storytelling
New Turtle on the block, and it ain’t easy being Green
Batman: Last Knight on Earth #2 is a great issue of comics, and is the crown jewel of DC’s meager offerings on this fifth week at the end of July. Highly recommended
Jason Aaron crafts an enjoyable pop fusion of demonic horror and superhero team action.
An immensely enjoyable opening chapter to the story of Jane Foster’s first steps as the last Valkyrie.
A new all-woman anthology series. It’s written by women. It’s drawn by women. It’s about characters who are women. Cool.
It’s very difficult for any art to frame a battle this big.
Castellucci and DiGiandomenico handle the transition from the previous creative team quite deftly.
Jurgens keeps the action going in an issue the narrowly avoids living-up to the potential of the story.