M.A.S.K. #1 Review
Wait, David. You’re going to review M.A.S.K. #1 after you disliked M.A.S.K. Revolution that was recently released? Yes, yes I am.
Wait, David. You’re going to review M.A.S.K. #1 after you disliked M.A.S.K. Revolution that was recently released? Yes, yes I am.
The Electric Sublime #2 carries on the story introduced in issue #1 in a dreamy, languid, hypnotic manner that is difficult to resist!
You won’t find a comic with an easier pitch than IDW’s Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures #1! If that sounds like something just crazy enough to work, the good news is writer Matthew K. Manning doesn’t disappoint with this first issue!
The question that has persisted over the last two decades is whether or not Kurt Cobain took his own life. Conspiracy theories abound, and while this might seem like well-worn territory, Nicolas Otero’s “Who Killed Kurt Cobain? The Story of Boddah” is a refreshingly different take on the Kurt Cobain story.
The Electric Sublime #1 is the first issue in a promising new series from IDW that unabashedly tackles the subject of mental health and art.
Revolution #2 Writers: John Barber and Cullen Bunn Artist: Fico Ossio Colors: Sebastian Cheng Letters: Tom B Long Publisher: IDW Reviewed by David Hildebrand
In honour of the spookiest month (and to get the horrible taste of 2016’s The Forest out of her mouth) Amelia picked up the 2011 comic The Suicide Forest!
I have read M.A.S.K. Revolution twice trying to find positives. If you are an old school M.A.S.K. fan, chances are you might end up like me.
IDW Publishing and DC are partnering together to honour the victims of Orlando’s Pulse Nightclub tragedy by publishing Love is Love.