Marvel either needed to get more brutal, or less. (And to be honest, given the rest of this series? More brutal would have been the most appropriate!) That being said, this felt... off. The mixture of brutal and hopeful at the ending was gut wrenching - but didn't seem to fit the premise of ...
And they do here. I've been wondering when they're going to kill people off with something called "Death of the Inhumans." I mean, there was the huge death count in one, but very few of the royal family? Esepcaily with them on all the covers. Arguably the royals are the Inhumans franchise as t...
The characters are making hard decisions, and I just feel so badly for them all. I really, really just hope Black Bolt actually survives this mini-series at this point, although I think it looks like it's likely that he'll be killed off at this point. Sighs. Just what I needed today :(
That ending is heartbreaking. This is an excellent, tense read. Black Bolt must make a decision: the Inhumans can join the Kree - or die. So they've decreed. When he sends Karnak to discuss the terms of surrender, things start getting more and more tense. Beautifully told story, gorgeous ...
The variant cover I have is very misleading, as it has a grave of a certain character on it and I suspected they wouldn't die - yet. There is death in this issue, as promised, and I"m a bit devastated over it, but I'm willing to see where this goes. I am unhappy that they're killing off the Inh...
The principle behind this comic collection is that the richest 1% of the population (of the USA) can do what they like to whom they like without repercussions. Renato Jones, himself one of the 1%, takes on the role of the Freelancer to put an end to this domination. With flashbacks to explain his ...
The X-Men travel to Africa to investigate the anomalous births of what seem to be infants with mutant abilities that are active at birth.It’s been a long time since I was a regular reader of Marvel Comics, so it took a little while to get oriented in the convoluted history of their mutants, but once...
The story wasn't bad, interdimensional travel, radiation, solving issues, but the artwork made me extremely irritated and uncomfortable. It reeked of gratituous boob shots.
Collecting issues #1-5 of The Astonishing X-Men, the X-Men go to Africa to investigate what might possibly be a rash of mutant births, but it turns out to be something else entirely. What that was I didn't quite get and it seemed to me that the book ended with an abrupt and dissatisfying conclusion....
The story wasn't bad, interdimensional travel, radiation, solving issues, but the artwork made me extremely irritated and uncomfortable. It reeked of gratituous boob shots.
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