Slick and stylish fun.
All in Horror
Slick and stylish fun.
August goes back out to Proctor Valley Road and gets more than she bargained for.
He took it all too far, but boy could he play guitar (with a cursed coin as a guitar pick.)
Zadie's story shows some potential.
Tynion doesn’t quite manage anything of note here.
Hulk must fight off a group of government-paid psychopaths who he's barely beaten at full power before. Can ol' Jade Jaws survive? The answers may shock you!
There's something in the dark on Proctor Valley Road.
leaves you wanting more in the best of possible ways
The darkness has swallowed the Earth.
It’s not as compelling as previous chapters, but it does provide a bit of backstory.
Tynion’s working with the overlapping mysteries are dizzyingly provocative.
A comfortable kind of supernatural drama.
A definitive moment for the Hulk and Thing moving forward.
Department of Truth continues to be one of the sharpest new series in a very tumultuous year.
Tynion IV dives into the deep, deep darkness of contemporary consciousness.
Narrative coherence bleeds around the edges of the dark poetry in a satisfying eighth issue.
A story that is weighted so heavily in dialogue really has no business working this well in a comic book format.
Dan Panosian’s story develops further intrigues.
The overall sense of immensity and impending doom seems missing in an otherwise enjoyable finale.
The murky poetic mess of the narrative is great fun.