If there’s one thing that superheroes have a hard time copying from comics – from the Marvel Cinematic Universe Justice League – It is that superheroes are not just pawns who fight crime and prevent disasters. They are more than flying or laser beams or crossovers or space aliens.
Superhero soap operas are about mess. And I’ve never had so much pride in delivering Monday, when I promise to bring the pages of society to superheroes when I say: Doctor Strange and Captain Marvel worked until this week.
What else is happening in the pages of our favorite comics? We will tell you Welcome to Monday Funnies, the weekly list of report dorms that our comics editor took last week. This is part of the life of superheroes, reading recommendations, part “Look at this cool art.” Some may be defective. There may not be enough reference. But there will be big comics. (And if you missed the previous version, read it.)
Carol is having a hard time during her breakup with Rhodey “War Machine” Rhodes, which she therefore started [checks notes
] She just comes back from an adventure in a future where she met Roddy’s daughter with another woman and does not want to get in the way of the birth of that wonderful future man.
Say so much Stephen Strange, sloppy rebound. More power from both of you, if you ask me.
You can read our full review of the first issue of Brian Michael Bendis Justice League Here, but I would like to give a shout out to artist David Marquez and his wonderfully sensitive-faced Superman.
Gosh, Superman, stopping Black Adam’s butt.
James Harren debuted his Tokatsu Dream Project this week, full of body horror Ultramega. If you want to read a series that wants to combine Crazy max With Ultraman With lots of guts, gore, and mutant development, this is for you.
C Sperrier and Sergio Davila black Knight This week, a book about Marvel superheroes, whose sword is filled with his emotional problems. But I am here for my goat led butler.
It has been a stony path for Nightwing fans, who develop amnesia through brain trauma, deciding that he had been calling himself Rick for a few years. But Dick Grayson is back, he is in a blue dress, he is in Bluedven, and just Tom Taylor, Bruno Redondo, and especially the colorist Adriano Lucas are working in this book. Art work
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