David Baron, Frazer Irving, and Allen Passalaqua cover the color art, and each contributes good work in this aspect too.
Wonder Woman Annual #2 isn't the most brilliant or surprising comic, but it delivers a fun story that feels special as an Annual should The slew of artists does excellent work on the visuals, and the[...]
Allen Passalaqua Archives
The duel they share in this comic would steal the spotlight if it weren't for Spoiler.
Batman: Detective Comics #980 art by Scot Eaton, Wayne Faucher, John Kalisz, and Allen Passalaqua
Scot Eaton's artwork is solid and does justice to Batman and his associates The Omac's look great especially Batwoman is drawn a little lanky with her[...]
It allowed the reader to delve deeper into who Basil was, what made him, and what motivated him.
Batman: Detective Comics #974 art by Philippe Briones and Allen Passalaqua
Philippe Briones' art does an incredible job of displaying the intense feelings and rage on display in the narrative Some characters look oddly flat at times, but this[...]
You can visually follow the story through the characters expressions, which are brought to life with colors by Allen Passalaqua They're a dynamic art team, and I genuinely love how Duce pencils Diana She is physically imposing and rather intimidating, which is how I like my Wonder Woman.
Hopefully we'll see more than just an issue[...]
In this series written with Mark Waid, colored by Allen Passalaqua, and lettered by Rachel Deering, the Silver Age inspired hero, the Fox, takes on some of his deadliest foes, but it's all intensely psychological when it comes to one's own doom.
Dark Circle describe this issue thus:
The FOX has been punched, thrown, stabbed, crushed, shot[...]
On The Trail Of Fox Hunt With Dean Haspiel – 'A Semi-Noir, Psychedelic Superhero-On-Acid Comic Book'
In 2013 and 2014, Archie Comics brought us The Fox: 'Freak Magnet', by Mark Waid and Dean Haspiel, with both contributing to the writing on the series and Haspiel on art, as well as Allen Passalaqua on colors and John Workman on letters Now with the "Red Circle" banner under which The Fox was originally[...]
You just can't keep a good Fox down.
The series has been graced by the flying colors of Allen Passalaqua and its hard to imagine the comic in other hands than his, so consistent are the resonances between the activity and vitality of the characters, the strange journeys they face, and their mental states and his[...]
John Workman does an excellent silver-age modern mash-up in his lettering on the series and colors by Allen Passalaqua are a major feature of the smack-you-in-the-face appeal of the comic The "writhing arms of destiny" deliver us the "dark embrace" of a sleek fox going multi-limbed to start things off Foes and friends are getting[...]
I look forward to where de Campi's storyline will take us as Southern Belles are transformed into "Bee Vixens From Mars".
Dark Horse remembers it's October now by bringing us The Occultist in its first issue, with story by Mike Richardson and Tim Seely, artwork by Mike Norton, colors by Allen Passalaqua, and letters by Nate[...]