Writer: Brian Michael Bendis
Artist: Butch Guice
Colors: Justin Ponsor
Publisher: Marvel Comics
My secret origins: back when the Marvel website offered free Dot.Comics, I was about 12 and geeky and hungry for a new obsession. The Ultimate Universe was, for as long as the scant issues they offered could last me, that obsession. When it came to laying [...]
Geoff Johns rebels against Final Crisis in the last issue of this Flash spin-off.
A comparison of the third and fourth issues of Final Crisis in which we examine how the book is affected by the month-ahead time jump.
More reviews, this week Secret 6 is mid-arc, JSA brings more awesome, we tie up some dangling threads for Avengers: Initiatve, and those who still have their brain Resist Final Crisis.
X-Force hunt down The Vanisher, who last issue stole the mutant-killing Legacy Virus, but fail in their initial attempt as a the mission is compromised by a meeting with Domino, a member of the previous incarnation of X-Force. Putting their differences aside, the team eventually capture their prey through rather extreme measures, which is of course this team’s MO.
Following the mix-tape analogy, Popgun is more a collection of very good pop songs with a few indie tunes thrown in; the rather more progressive and heavier elements do permeate through occasionally but the general tone is definitely on the lighter side.
Welcome to the capsuliest capsule reviews to ever fit inside a capsule. This Week: Teen Titans, Astonishing X-Men, Justice League, Avengers: Initiative, Incredible Herc, Project Superpowers, and Nova.
Welcome to the inside of my thought bubbles. I’m Aaron Glazer, as you no doubt noticed (giving you a bit of credit to start) and I used to write East of Gotham and comic reviews for the Nexus. Well, after awhile that all fell apart because, you see, despite a passion for comics and some really great feedback, I always thought I kind of sucked. So, never one to settle for mediocrity, I took a hiatus and focused on my Pulse Wrestling writing for the time being.
Writers: Aron E. Coleite & Joe Pkaski
Pencils: Dan Panosian & Mark Brooks
The X-Men of the future hunt the Fantastic Four of today! In the future, mutantkind is on the run, and what remains of the X-Men make a move, not unknown to the regular MU X-Men. They go back in time and try to [...]
Cable is still on the run from Bishop, carrying the mutant girl who is either the last hope of mutantkind (according to the X-Men) or the harbinger of the end of the world (according to Bishop). He and the girl are hiding out in a hidden valley somewhere in the near future.Meanwhile, back in the present, X-Force have captured Bishop, and the X-Men spend a large part of the issue interrogating him and arguing over the significance of the child.