Lewis finds a fresh spin on a traditional combat between magical entities.
All in Horror
Lewis finds a fresh spin on a traditional combat between magical entities.
Sorrentino has a gift for bringing breathtakingly real visages,
Another well-rendered, well-modulated issue.
Writer Todd McFarlane does his...McFarlane thing…
Some of the heaviest stuff on the comics rack today.
Layman’s weird cast of characters is fun by virtue of the sheer randomness of their backgrounds.
Really SHOULD be a more appealing issue.
Sebela has a hell of a lot of ideas.
Brusha focuses matters on Robyn for much of the issue.
So much of it lacks any real depth.
Kudranski’s art is suitably impressive.
Liesel comes across as a fun hero here, but she deserves better.
Tynion isn’t really doing anything new with the opening issue.
Tynion is working with well-established images of good and evil.
Brusha doesn’t find a particularly novel approach to the resolution, but it’s still a fun one to explore.
There’s a deep respect for the common house cat that seems to resonate off the page.
A brilliantly expressive story.
A particularly nice embrace of a new season.
It’s a fun one-shot adventure.
Wilson’s satirical wit slices through wealthy southern California health culture.