Yet another adorably strange issue.
All in Image Comics
Yet another adorably strange issue.
Department of Truth continues to be one of the sharpest new series in a very tumultuous year.
Haberlin isn't framing all of the plot elements quite as deftly as he has in previous issues.
An adventure that moves briskly across the page.
Doesn't really manage a hell of a lot of sophistication.
The characters remain interesting.
Ellie and Ryan both get missions.
Inkblot rests wide-eyed at the center of it all in another enjoyable journey into fantasy.
Tynion IV dives into the deep, deep darkness of contemporary consciousness.
It may be little more than another loser-saves-the-world storyline, but Remender and Larosa keep it fun.
Worlds collide.
It's a muddled farrago that still has the potential to turn into something more.
Another issue that doesn’t quite live up to its potential
Kubert’s playful sense of amplification makes Inkblot unmistakably feline.
Narrative coherence bleeds around the edges of the dark poetry in a satisfying eighth issue.
Bomb Queen has plenty of plenty of time to be gruesomely violent, abhorrently duplicitous, and beautifully clever.
A story that is weighted so heavily in dialogue really has no business working this well in a comic book format.
Old friends return and surprises abound.
The pacing of the story gets a bit lost in the poetry early on.
The drama hits the page with an odious moistness.