Ayala and Draper-Ivey have rather meticulously led the hero.
All in Action
Ayala and Draper-Ivey have rather meticulously led the hero.
A fusion of a mutation of a few other characters.
It never really gets into the deeper implications.
The intrigue continues.
Brusha’s plot structure moves things along swiftly.
Ahmed manages to construct a thoroughly engrossing action drama.
Doesn’t really get particularly interesting until Nathan and Marshall sit down to make a decision.
A very earthbound sense of life-or-death survival.
The furtive “plap” of a severed head.
Beacham could slide off into a direction of intolerable cliche.
There's a lot of blasting and tumbling,
There’s a definite power to all of the talk of death and renewal.
There’s a primal, sweeping sense of action.
Burnett knows how to frame a heroic adventure.
Deibert makes the tour of the museum the entire substance of the story.
Grønbekk opens the series with a well-woven first issue.
Brown isn't quite pacing things right.
Bendis’s dialogue isn’t poetically brutal so much as it is...terse.
The title character serves as more of a sidekick
It’s a fun opening to a fast-paced action drama.