With remarkably effective characterization and scene-setting, Aquaman: The Becoming #1 does a fantastic job at fleshing out the character of Jackson Hyde.
Hannibal Tabu Archives
Things are not right at an elite vacation resort, and Joey Dorsey is in way deeper than she expects. Between her clueless boyfriend Astor, a sympathetic
Today -- September 27, 2021 -- is apparently the final order cut off day for the huge new title from Second Sight Publishing and Legends Press Comics,
With a breadth of overwrought melodrama and an unfortunate and exhausting ending, X-Men: The Trial of Magneto #2 does nothing to honor its title or its
It’s the end of a long and complex road for the crew of the starship Enterprise. A few impossible challenges remain to vex this intrepid collection of
In Marvel Comics, the name "M’baku" got a lot of derisive snorts and scoffing before an actor named Winston Duke came along. Now, in The Last
With alarming but sadly realistic parallels to what we’ve seen on modern streets, Batman ’89 #2 goes deep into the making of one of Gotham City’s most
With an iconoclastic visual presentation, a sniper shot one-liners, and a meandering but clearly directed plot, Six Sidekicks of Trigger Keaton #4 rolls
Across the universe, the cosmic law enforcement group called the Green Lanterns are up against the wall as the source of their powers lies in ruins, and
With an immaculate Black American aesthetic and a powerful message to push us forward, Eve #5 is a lump in your throat, wind at your back, and the horizon
With an intriguing turn of events, Green Lantern 2021 Annual #1 makes a number of brave choices in talking about the topic of fear. As a new player seems
With none of the cliched jump scares or tricks of gore used in many modern horror treatments, The Me You Love In The Dark #2 does a great job making
With a must-see ending and very clever plotting along the way. The Nice House On The Lake #4 flips a kind of sociological experiment into a brilliant game
With a brilliant framing device, The Last Annihilation: Wiccan & Hulkling #1 does a lot of great things in terms of presenting character, coming up
With a strong showing of family dynamics and a good balance of plot elements, Static #3: Season One presents an embryonic hero facing enormous odds with a
With success on Kickstarter, The Antagonists #1-3 presents a wonderfully complex story about nuanced characters limited by technical execution issues.
With world-altering framing and sure hands comfortable with heavy lifting in a story, Dark Ages #1 posits a slightly different Marvel universe, just a
With a gigantic exposition dump and the beginnings of a sense of framing, Mister Miracle #4: The Source Of Freedom starts to connect the dots like
In Icon & Rocket #2: Season One, you absolutely should not come looking for your father’s Augustus Freeman the 3rd, or yours, depending on your age.
With solid timing on the heels of the Loki Disney+ series, Kang the Conqueror #1 is a character piece that digs into the forging of the chronal criminal
With a host of derivative and uninspired ideas at its core, Batman/Superman #21 manages to follow because it has no idea how to lead. Channeling the early
In Time Before Time #4, two desperate souls are out of their depth after stealing a time travel capsule from a criminal organization, and now they have to
The events of one of the latest crossovers have left an absence in the Bat "family," as Alfred Pennyworth perished at the hands of one of the costumed
A new take on paramilitary storytelling, enmeshed in the politics and themes of the day called False Flag, seeks to answer this question, featuring the painted illustrations of largely self-taught painter and artist Demar Douglas.
Almost like stepping into the maskless multiplexes of the late eighties and early nineties, Batman ’89 #1 seamlessly takes you back into the cinematic
It’s no easy trick using the actual commission of violence as a means of characterization. Still, The Six Sidekicks of Trigger Keaton #3 manages to pull
With a healthy respect for the source material that made it possible while injecting a new sense of immediacy to the proceedings, Hardware #1: Season One
In Nice House On The Lake #2, it’s the end of the world as we know it, and nobody here feels fine. An unexpected group of people were gathered by a
A Man Among Ye #5 takes all the things you love about derring-do adventurers and pours it into a pirate theme with simple, effective entertainment value.
Between The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, with the Empire arguably at the height of its powers, a desperate Rebel Alliance works to overcome