Detective Comics #1005: The Sun Always Rises
Detective Comics #1005
‘Detective Comics #1005’ is a methodical conclusion to the Arkham Knight story that is entertaining at the very least, even if it doesn’t always make sense.
DetailsDetective Comics #1005
‘Detective Comics #1005’ is a methodical conclusion to the Arkham Knight story that is entertaining at the very least, even if it doesn’t always make sense.
DetailsSome Tencent, new “Boondocks”, and a lot of Tartakovsky are coming to Sony Pictures Animation
DetailsGuardians of the Galaxy Annual #1
The castaways from issue 1 aren’t dead, they’re merely scattered across the cosmos, here are there stories
DetailsWitness Eliot Ness and the Untouchables as you’ve never seen them before in this world of crime and sorcery.
DetailsDeathstroke #44
Deathstroke #44 is a fitting end to the life of Slade Wilson while also contemplating the future. The Terminator is dead; long live the Terminator.
DetailsBanner’s Egos are Immortalized with these TRUE BELIEVERS: HULK Comics!
DetailsMORE “ALIENS” STORIES FROM DARK HORSE AND TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX
DetailsDeadpool #13
‘Deadpool #13’ is an outlandishly hilarious story packed full of classic Wade Wilson antics. What it lacks in seriousness, it more than makes up for with pure unadulterated fun!
DetailsDial H for Hero #3
“Dial H for Hero #3” continues to deliver interesting experiments with art and form while also developing the characters, particularly Summer, into something more than just a throw-away name in a wikipedia article.
DetailsCaptain Marvel #6
‘Captain Marvel #6’ struggles to maintain the momentum established during the highly enjoyable first arc, but the War of the Realms tie-in still manages to find its moments to feel worthwhile.
DetailsEvent Leviathan #1
I am Leviathan, you are Leviathan, we all are Leviathan
DetailsThe Tempest, the final volume of Kevin O’Neill and Alan Moore’s League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is a six-issue illustration of how language infects and affects us, a strange mix of how fiction and telling can harm us and indulgence in “harmful” representation as harmless fun.
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