A narrative voice that’s thick enough to be bulletproof.
All in Image Comics
A narrative voice that’s thick enough to be bulletproof.
Prince has a poetic sense of darkness.
Tynion has a way of twisting cliche until it confesses some kind of strange truth.
Cates and Stegman have reached the climax of this particular story arc.
Claretti’s manga-inspired art has a bouncy, rubbery energy.
Craig is laying out a hell of a lot.
Segovia shows some talent for pushing around the demonic muscle.
It lacks the kind of nuance that would elevate it.
Pires and White have a clear and definite idea of where they’re going with the story,
Soule walks a fine line.
Walker’s wit takes advantage of a very resourceful sense of humor.
A remarkably concise, little one-shot
Acosta frames the action pretty well.
Dániel’s art feels vividly like something that Marvel would have put out in the 1960s.
Parrott enters the new plot arc with style and poise.
Haberlin and Wall seem to be in a bit of a hurry to wrap up the series.
Craig keeps the action moving without bogging the page and panel down in too much drama.
Young takes a while to get the story moving.
Sorrentino has a gift for bringing breathtakingly real visages,
Burnett has a beautiful grasp of kinetic motion in action.