Zdarsky does a clever job of manipulating the traditional trappings of superhero stories.
All in Action
Zdarsky does a clever job of manipulating the traditional trappings of superhero stories.
Andreyko fuses the narration of the issue with some degree of humor.
The art team does a good job of harnessing the horror.
It's a fun, little action sequence.
Kubert’s adventure shoots quite swiftly along.
Remender hits the page with one of the more brutal entries into the series.
There’s a kind of wistful restlessness about it.
Kaplan maintains the overall tone.
Todd McFarlane tries his best to tell a story.
Wiseman is juggling a lot.
Montclair is really settling in for a long haul with this series.
Casey mixes a few things into the narrative that make it feel considerably more sophisticated than Rambo.
Fleecs fills the issue with a very heartfelt kind of precision.
Craig is working with a fusion of various different elements.
Mele does a solid job of delivering the action to the page.
The action of the plot is deeply intertwined with the deeper dramas at work.
Shalvey constructs the script to this particular issue with a clever rhythm.
Thompson has taken the basic legend of Wonder Woman and moved it into a spectacularly mystic darkness.
Seeley balances the story pretty tightly between action and investigation.
Cox has been slowly making a statement about humanity.