She-Hulk Sensational #1 review

It’s the 30th anniversary of She-Hulk’s first publication and while she doesn’t have an ongoing to celebrate the fact, Marvel have been generous enough to provide a one-shot. I wouldn’t have bothered, what with most of this $4.99 publication being irrelevant or reheated. First off, Gary Frank’s cover, coloured by Emily Warren, is a beaut. […]

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Superman #698 review

There’s some kind of comic book law that says that as soon as a writer divests themselves of teething problems on a book, they’re off it. At the moment it’s happening with Gail Simone on Wonder Woman, and here it is again with James Robinson. In my review of last issue I mentioned that I […]

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Wonder Woman #42 review

It’s alien invasion time on DC Earth … actually, that’s not quite right, it’s alien feeding time as a shipful of space scavengers prepare to unleash some predatory little buggers on the citizenry. Before that, though, there’s a scene establishing the nature of the threat, via a visit with members of the Green Lanterns Corps. […]

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Cloak and Dagger #1 review

Cloak and Dagger are a study in contrasts: light/dark; female/male; white/black; rich/poor; covered/flashing … goodness me, that Dagger girl really is flaunting it – outside of fan art I can’t recall the shapely slits of her costume ever being quite so slitty (I said slitty). She’s positively Emma Frosting, here. No wonder the Young X-Men […]

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Blackest Night #8 review

Phew. That was a busy comic. Black Hand, Nekron and the Anti-Monitor no longer a threat, a horde of dead heroes brought back to life, the revelation that macho pilot Hal Jordan quotes Latin poetry … it’s certainly a page turner. And also a page lifter, given the presence of a flappy foldout showing just […]

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Mighty Avengers #35 review

Ultron is the number one Avengers foe, with twisted familial ties to numerous members. Most of all, though, he’s linked to Hank Pym, seeing himself as the son who, in the manner of ancient gods, must kill the father. Being the number one bad guy means he’s had numerous encounters with the team, each more […]

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Uncanny X-Men #522 review

Kitty’s coming home. That’s the message of Terry and Rachel Dodson’s pretty cover, and it persuaded me to buy. After all, Kitty Pryde has long been one of my favourites, from the day she was introduced as a gawky 13-year-old. She’s grown a lot since then, and not just in the predictable ways of comic […]

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