Tynion definitely has put a hell of a lot of thought into the lore.
All in Drama
Tynion definitely has put a hell of a lot of thought into the lore.
Thompson does an outstanding job of modulating the energy.
Evely’s art seems perfectly matched with the pacing.
Clarke and Bennett fuse a Silver-Age-style superhero origin with an indie comedy.
Ram V’s script has a simple, poetic quality.
Delicate, largely unspoken drama mixes with creepy horror.
Bellaire wields the sword as a symbol.
Cain’s satire sinks into a more profound horror.
The whimsical darkness feels a bit dull.
Breathtakingly nuanced.
A great balancing act between interpersonal drama, cloak-and-dagger mystery, and all-out action.
A witty, briskly-paced adventure.
Catwoman? Yeah: she’s not really in this one.
Tynion isn’t really giving the artist a whole lot to work with.
The bulk of the five-story issue features some awe-inspiring work
Watters’ 1990s slacker/horror/drama action fusion actually works.
Maurene Goo gets a bit thick with the backstory.
Bellaire’s story has a brisk freshness about it.
Any series that opens with a drunken Kryptonian on her 21st birthday is going in the right direction right away.
Andrade carves elegant visuals around the poetry of Ram V’s script.