Seems to actually kind of reach for something deeper than the silliness.
All in Fantasy
Seems to actually kind of reach for something deeper than the silliness.
There’s a primal, sweeping sense of action.
Grønbekk opens the series with a well-woven first issue.
Brown isn't quite pacing things right.
Wilson’s dialogue is as crisp as ever.
Mignola and Roberson do a very clever job of establishing the story's place in history.
Weisman cleanly opens a primal and well-defined conflict of simple elements.
As a writer, Kubert knows her own strengths as an artist.
Weisman keeps the action moving.
A sharply clever job of articulating bewildering complexity.
Barberi has a pretty solid look going for the issue.
King dives into a particularly dark end of romance.
A final dramatic push into the climax.
In theory, it should be a lot of fun.
A really clever way of taking traditional myth and the legend and modifying it.
The Unicorn Legacy is nothing if not cute.
Modern Christian paladins fighting demonic activity in a dark and brutal fantasy world.
Claretti’s manga-inspired art has a bouncy, rubbery energy.
Soule walks a fine line.
Godlike aggression exploding across the page.