Spidey #7 – REVIEW
Spidey #7 continues to be fun and new-reader-friendly. It also keeps an arm’s length from continuity and gives readers a playful tale that has more than a little classic Marvel Team-Up vibe. Writer
Spidey #7 continues to be fun and new-reader-friendly. It also keeps an arm’s length from continuity and gives readers a playful tale that has more than a little classic Marvel Team-Up vibe. Writer
Usually I talk about the story first, but I have to address this upfront: This is the most beautiful issue of Radioactive Spider-Gwen yet. Robbi Rodriguez sat out for the excellent “Spider-Women”
How do you draw out an event with a slim premise? Lots and lots of posturing. As Iron Man says to Medusa, Bendis and Marvel appear to be saying to
An unsung hallmark of writer Peter David and artist Will Sliney era is on display in Spider-Man 2099 #11: World-building. Ever since Miguel O’Hara returned to comics several years ago, they’ve
The Spider-Man tie-in issues connected to some of Marvel’s more recent big events have ranged from mediocre to downright terrible, but one element that they all have had in common
Jessica Drew and I have a complicated relationship. When I first agreed to start reviewing this series all the way back around “Spider-Verse,” I took a couple of months to
It’s undeniable that Marvel has chosen to put more of a spotlight on female superheroes in recent years, and while there are still improvements that need to happen, there’s been
If nothing else, artist David Marquez and colorist Justin Ponsor make Civil War II #1 a gorgeous looking comic book filled with fantastic imagery. Tony Stark takes a turn or three yelling
With eight issues in the books and sales shrinking in a fashion one should reasonably expect from a series that stars a one-note supervillain who was at his popularity apex in the
Well, after raking Joe Kelly over the coals for giving us the standard “character is dead!” cliffhanger with the previous issue, I’ve got to eat my words a bit here.