McFarlane paces the issue quite well.
All in Horror
McFarlane paces the issue quite well.
There are some very strong emotions being expressed.
Andreyko could have gone for a much more sophisticated in a dramatic sense.
Tieri has a clever mash-up with a vamp Santa.
Schultz’s mix of horror/fantasy and cyberpunk flavors reaches a particularly clever point.
Simple and clean presentation of a couple of well-realized horror concepts.
Kelly Thompson does a brilliant job of channelling an amazingly cool and deeply inspiring hero.
Reynolds’ vision of the old west is very gritty.
Williams keeps it sharp for his tale of Terry and the dummy.
Bennet mixes the supernatural with the criminal.
A very well put-together series of holiday horror stories.
Barberi’s art continues to look like a suitably exaggerated sort of an action horror thing.
Layman modulates the issue pretty well.
There’s real darkness in what Rosenberg is bringing to the page.
Walsh’s rendering of classic scenes from the movie hits the page much better than it hit the screen in the old movie.
Johns and company deliver a really impressive second issue.
Tomasi delivers a clever turn on the traditional coming of age story.
McManus’ execution of the art in that second story is pretty impressive.
Tynion twists a fiction around one of the most legendary deaths of the 20th century.
Darcy Van Poelgeest lets loose on the restless energy.