Jodi Houser does an admirable job of preserving the mystery in the second issue of Natasha’s latest mini-series.
All in Action
Jodi Houser does an admirable job of preserving the mystery in the second issue of Natasha’s latest mini-series.
The issue continues a very satisfying opening arc for the young title.
Thanks to clever oddness from Huphries and Basri, it’s still quite a bit of fun.
An interesting story of an aboriginal magic cast in the modern world.
The creative team brings together a fun father/son adventure into its fourth chapter.
Felicia’s emotional somersaults in and amidst the action is great fun.
A strange, little diversion into another place and a distant conflict serves as the end of a series.
Frank Castle’s rampage of revenge draws in the unstoppable Juggernaut!
The endgame for Otto vs Norman is at hand. Is the die truly cast?
The themed anthology format works strikingly well, especially in an era of high-priced individual comics.
McGuire and company maintain a remarkably balanced work/life/superhero balance in the issue.
Fun mutations of action that take full advantage of the weirdness.
An interesting issue with sharply witty dialogue.
The art IS still overpowering the story in the second issue, but far less so than it did in the debut issue last month.
A fully-engaging conflict in another cleverly-balanced issue by the new creative team.
Jurgens sets things up in an auspicious direction at issue's end.
Frank Castle takes his never-ending war to the denizens of the Nine Realms!
DC's flagship title stands tall and proves to be the powerhouse initially promised.
In a time where Batman can’t escape his own inner demons, Brian Michael Bendis and Nick Derrington bring about a breath of fresh air.
A genuinely bizarre crew of obscure Marvel superheroes brought together by the Black Panther to fight crime in the absence of S.H.I.E.L.D.