Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen #2 is an ambitious comic, and its ambition pays off.
All in Superheroes
Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen #2 is an ambitious comic, and its ambition pays off.
Overall, Superman Year One #2 is slightly less offensive than the first issue; instead, it commits the even greater sin of being simply boring.
Year of the Villain: Black Mask #1 is a one-and-done comic done well.
Things haven't been great for Carol since her return to the superhero scene, and it looks like her life's going to get worse before it gets better. She's still falling from grace in the public eye and falling from such great height is dangerous, especially when you can no longer fly
Mutant and Machine collide in four different times.
The fully-painted art of Alex Maleev is the real star of Event Leviathan #3.
“The greatest temptation in the world isn’t to do evil,” Jesus tells his new roommate, the superhero Sunstar, in the second issue of Ahoy Comics’ Second Coming, “but the need to be seen doing good.”
Miles Morales: Spider-Man #9 will surely have repercussions in the future of the series.
Writer Zhou Liefen gives artist Keng enough room to deliver a story the size of the Shanghai skyline.
Jonathan Hickman changes everything about a longtime X-Men character.
Sabretooth’s plan is revealed!
It seems difficult to believe that Rucka, Perkins, et al can continue this momentum for ten more issues, but the first two indicate that Lois Lane will be an instant classic.
Nobody draws a symbiote better than Ryan Stegman in Absolute Carnage #1.
Just when you think you’re out, something shows up to drag you back in.
Grant Morrison and Giuseppe Camuncoli work together and deliver an excellent detour
Hickman’s mutant revolution continues.
Jason Aaron crafts an enjoyable pop fusion of demonic horror and superhero team action.
Castellucci and DiGiandomenico handle the transition from the previous creative team quite deftly.
Jurgens keeps the action going in an issue the narrowly avoids living-up to the potential of the story.
Dial H for HERO continues to be a hidden gem of DC Comics’ current lineup, and possibly the most heartfelt of the uniformly fun Wonder Comics line. Highly recommended.