Wolverine and the X-Men #26
Andrew Sadowski
Wolverine and the X-Men has easily been the most fun out of any X-Book since the ending of Pete Milligan and Michael Allred's X-Statix years ago. But, unfortunately, Issue #26 is
Wolverine and the X-Men has easily been the most fun out of any X-Book since the ending of Pete Milligan and Michael Allred's X-Statix years ago. But, unfortunately, Issue #26 is
Secret Avengers is certainly picking up in terms of levels of entertainment. It’s not on a large scale for a title but it holds on its own just the same, and while it’s still a little
2013 is going to be a big year for Mike Mignola and his Hellboy franchise. Hellboy himself is back in the limelight with the excellent Hellboy in Hell series, BPRD Hell on Ea
I am a child of the nineties, a proper one; I actually came into my teens in the nineties, so I remember things, things like Spawn. Oh, those we’re the glory days of Spawn,
Age of Ultron has been in the making for years, and now that it’s here, we were all waiting with bated breath to see if all this waiting was going to turn out to be a great Marvel event or i
Bedlam is shaping up to be the best crime book on the stands. The characterization that Nick Spencer gives to his protagonist, Fillmore Press, is extremely unsettling. No book has ever made me
Sex is a bit of a mixed bag.
The storyline is certainly intriguing enough, following one Simon Cooke, a retired superhero as he returns to Saturn City, his former pro
Normally, I hate Avengers books. I'd rather read every single one of their solo titles, because an actual team book usually bores me. I'm a street-level hero kind of guy, and most of th
Glory has been the most surprising book of the extreme relaunch. The character that was once a poster child for cheesecake art and a obvious swipe of Wonder Woman has been transformed into bulky c
About freaking time. I was waiting for all this craziness to finally happen. It’s no longer filler dialogue but genuinely good dialogue that moves the story and is outright entertaining.
And thus concludes the Hidden Kingdom – Rapunzel arc of Fairest. It was jam packed with a lot of Japanese lore (which is a little unusual for a Rapunzel story which normally refers to its Ge