Buffy the Vampire Slayer #5 can’t decide who its audience is, and this issue suffers for it.
All in Horror
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #5 can’t decide who its audience is, and this issue suffers for it.
If this were the first issue of some brand new property, this would be a competent enough first issue, but as the first issue of a new Angel series, it’s lacking.
The one monster who never dies — who returns, again and again, to hate and destroy.
From the magic of crowd-funded comics comes a book that feels like a blast from the past and a breath of fresh air at the same time.
Artist Jorge Corona contrasts powerful destructive forces against subtle human emotion.
Die Hard, with a Gray Hulk
Dr. Strange contrasts against Galactus and Dormammu in a fun interaction that doesn’t quite live up to its potential.
The truly monumental scale of the action feels every bit as overwhelming as it should.
Boom! Studios’ reboot of Buffy has been solid from its start, but it’s this issue that really shows why relaunching the franchise opens up new possibilities in a way that continuing it couldn’t.
Wheres Ricks Body? Is there someone who can stop the Immortal Hulk!?
A mix of weird fiction that still manages to find the gravity of serious drama.
A horrifyingly enjoyable issue-length celebration of revenge.
How is Doc Samson Alive!? Is Hulk not the ONLY IMMORTAL ONE?
The Avengers make a mess of Russia-based monsters in a fun, witty action issue.