If this were a story unto itself, it might have done well but Hellions #5 will likely be much more enjoyable in the inevitable omnibus.
Comics Publishers Archives
REVIEW: Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Willow #4 is easily BOOM! Studios' best Joss Whedon title due to Tamaki's script and Bustos' artwork.
Commanders In Crisis #1 is a bold, jam-packed debut issue wears its politics on its sleeve as that arm punches a bad guy in the face. Carefully balancing
REVIEW: Getting it Together #1 draws inspiration from sitcoms like Friends, adding a modern vibe to the concept of an ensemble dramedy.
It was said that studying to become a Jedi master was a hard life with danger and uncertainty. In Star Wars: Darth Vader #6, we see that the instructional
Seven Secrets #3 is better than the issue before it, which was better than the debut, this series is on an impossibly fantastic arc that you’ve gotta see.
REVIEW: Bliss #3 is a visual poem & a challenging, engaging narrative by Sean Lewis & Caitlin Yarsky that shows how dynamic comics can be.
I've enjoyed some of Steve Orlando's previous Image works (Virgil leaps to mind), but this first issue of Commanders In Crisis #1 just did not click.
J. Michael Straczynski also created Babylon 5 and several comics were created to "fill in the cracks" for the show like Babylon 5 The Lost Tales Comic #1.
REVIEW: The Vain #1 from Eliot Rahal and Emily Pearson is a beautifully drawn vampire comic that plays against the readers' expectations.
Marvel Universe LIVE! as a show has been going since 2014, but in 2017 the second phase began with Marvel Universe LIVE! Age of Heroes Prequel #2.
REVIEW: Angel & Spike #14 is Zac Thompson's debut as writer of the Buffy the Vampire Slayer spinoff, reinventing the Joss Whedon classic.
Much like this week's Batman #100, Amazing Spider-Man #49 is a "landmark" issue (if you add the old numbering this is #850, but they restarted it, so does
With a comical slant and a hard science fiction edge, this fast-paced, The Orville: Launch Day #2 is an enjoyable issue that gives you many of the thrills
In Marauders #13, Ororo heads back to Wakanda to get herself geared up for the crossover, but will the cost for this blade be too high?
From Hell is getting a new Master Edition from IDW's Top Shelf, featuring Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell's iconic graphic novel in color.
IDW Publishing has announced a new Transformers: Beast Wars comic from Erik Burnham and Josh Burcham to celebrate the series' 25th Anniversary.
After the breathtaking debut issue, this installment of the new espionage send-up takes its foot off the accelerator and coasts, which is a troubling
In a genuinely depressing kind of jack-in-the-box sense, in Batman #100 the Joker War goes a long way to press DC Comics' favorite button, the one on the
This issue takes a close look at an Imperial commander who lost her guiding star and knows exactly who is to blame. Ellian Zahra is a ruthlessly competent
REVIEW: Giant-Size X-Men: Storm #1 sees its lead character tackle an existential crisis: if I'm going to come back to life, why fight death?
When DC Comics chose to no longer be distributed by Diamond Comic Distributors, in favour of two US comic book shops-turned-distributors, it caused real
Harvey Bullock first appeared in Detective Comics #441 in 1974 and was created by Archie Goodwin and Howard Chaykin before reappearing in 1983 from Doug
REVIEW: X-Men: Marvel Snapshots #1 by Jay Edidin & Tom Reilly is a perfect Cyclops comic that tells a tightly-plotted, character-driven story.
REVIEW: Iron Man #1 (2020) follows Tony Stark as he enters into a midlife crisis. A compelling idea, but does this Marvel comic explain why?
Unlike most comic book stores, when Aaron Haaland of A Comic Shop in Orlando, Florida got the mystery Hero Trade #1 ashcan, not knowing it was actually by
REVIEW: Big Girls #2 from Jason Howard, a sci-fi thriller teeming with moral ambiguity, surprises with its killer second issue.
Chu #3 is a little goofier than your average crime comic and nowhere near as imaginative, and that cognitive dissonance can be challenging in some ways.
REVIEW: Stillwater #1, the new Image/Skybound comic, from Chip Zdarsky and Ramon K. Perez is an incredible debut that subverts expectation.
If you love the FF or this kind of wholesome, family adventuring, Fantastic Four #24 will be right up your alley.