Williamson ushers a couple of powerful Kryptonians through their greatest fears.
All in Horror
Williamson ushers a couple of powerful Kryptonians through their greatest fears.
Lore's writing ramps up once Punchline takes total stock of the fact that she's in a dream.
A tight, little nightmare
Skull Island. Seriously, call it Skull Island: The Great War.
Booth and company do the best they can with another issue-length combat sequence.
The Cull is completely unlike anything else on the comics rack right now.
Tynion crafts a very tight, little personality around Thessaly.
Wilson nails some of the more intriguing things that make Poison Ivy such a relatable character.
A fun opening to what is hopefully going to be a really well-articulated horror drama.
King has a tremendous amount of patience in laying out the full reality of a life.
Hazan launches the danger directly at the survivors.
Williamson carefully crafts a series of scenes.
Watters gives Jim Gordon another close-up.
It’s kind of an interesting image. Very iconic.
There are several thematic layers to Tynion’s story.
Clearly a story of one of the most horrifying prisons imaginable.
It’s like something blew up on the page.
Qualano puts just enough on the page to tell the story.
A perfectly respectable family drama.
Gailey narrowly focuses the issue on a single encounter.