Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen remains the funniest book that DC is currently publishing, by a mile.
All in Comedy
Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen remains the funniest book that DC is currently publishing, by a mile.
If you want nothing more than fanservice this story is great—you can see your favorite heroes fight one on one in their swimsuits. But fanservice isn’t enough to carry an entire story.
It’s a weirdly satisfying end to a pleasantly odd satire.
Frank Castle’s rampage of revenge draws in the unstoppable Juggernaut!
The art IS still overpowering the story in the second issue, but far less so than it did in the debut issue last month.
Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen is the opposite of DC’s often-criticized doom and gloom.
Second Coming remains clever enough, which goes a long way in this otherwise unfocused third issue.
A whimsical sense of narrative tilt in another deliciously entertaining issue.
Wonder Twins #7 is pleasant enough, but it lacks the bite of earlier issues.
It's hard to match Gwenpool's raw, chaotic energy. Unless you're Deadpool, the king of chaos himself.
“Who needs a Prince Charming…when you could have The King?
“I let one man take it all away from me.”
A very appealing issue that challenges Quinn's sanity at a moment of great triumph in the shadow of significant loss.
“I feel eager.. Alive… it’s like I’m twenty again.”
The title is only half right.
After all of her adventures, it's great to see Gwenpool in her own solo series, even if it's only five issues. This is a great place for new fans to get started with Gwenpool and for existing fans to get more Gwen content.
Writer Jed MacKay delivers another story of weirdly stylish larceny.
Fuses interpersonal drama with lighthearted fourth wall shattering multi-genre spoofery.
A new all-woman anthology series. It’s written by women. It’s drawn by women. It’s about characters who are women. Cool.
Gryffen: Galaxy’s Most Wanted is antifascist space opera with an irreverent and sardonic bent.