Connect with us
'Marvel All-On-One' #1 offers up nonstop spectacle
Marvel

Comic Books

‘Marvel All-On-One’ #1 offers up nonstop spectacle

A bombastic, all-splash-page experiment that delivers pure visual fun, even if it trades depth for spectacle.

Sometimes comics take big swings for the hell of it, which is definitely the case in Marvel All-On-One #1, out this week. That’s not a diss, far from it, as Ed McGuinness and Ryan North team up to tell an extra-sized issue using only full and double-page splashes. It makes for an epic ride, and one that is reminiscent of the six splash pages by Ditko in Amazing Spider-Man Annual #1.

So how do you tell a story in all full-page splashes, a function in comics that’s used mostly to tell less story and instead wow the reader with art and spectacle? If you do it like Marvel All-On-One #1, you front-load with captions to set up the story, then put the heaviest dialogue scenes at the end to make it all make sense. All in all, North does a good job establishing why and how Thing could fight every Marvel Comics character and see another day. Likely, even he’d tell you this isn’t about thought-provoking character work and deep storytelling, but a structure to allow McGuiness to go nuts on art.

And nuts he goes indeed, with Marvel All-On-One #1 opening with Thing diving out of an exploding rocket ship, tumbling down thanks to the rest of the Fantastic Four destroying his parachute, and eventually taking out Mr. Fantastic first because he smells tomfoolery. From there, he takes on Iron Man, which takes place over many pages, teams up with Spider-Man, fights the Avengers, and…well, a lot of iconic heroes.

Marvel All-On-One' #1 interior art featuring the fantastic four

Damn, that’s low, First Family!
Credit: Marvel

The art in this book doesn’t miss, with McGuinness’ trademark dynamic style maximizing the wow factor on every page. There’s even a kind of gore to it all, although when characters die, it’s green goo spilling out. Some of the best moments take place over double-page splashes, like a giant object hurtling at Thing, or when he’s punched through a building by Captain Marvel.

Standout moments include Thing proving he’s faster than you might think and revealing how he really feels about killing all these heroes in the closing pages. Mark Farmer’s inks and Marcio Menyz’s colors–who has colored Amazing Spider-Man for quite a while–don’t skimp on quality either.

As far as gripes, it’s fairly obvious this can be a fast read, especially if you don’t linger on the art. That’s inherently part of the gimmick at work here, so that’s pretty much on you if that annoys you. As mentioned above, this is a concept executed well rather than a deep lore-building issue.

Marvel All-On-One #1 is a bold experiment that pays off with exhilarating visuals and nonstop spectacle, giving fans a pure art-driven joyride starring the ever-lovin’ blue-eyed Thing. While the story is deliberately light and the read brisk, the creativity and energy make it a memorable big swing worth experiencing.

'Marvel All-On-One' #1 offers up nonstop spectacle
‘Marvel All-On-One’ #1 offers up nonstop spectacle
Marvel All-On-One #1
Marvel All-On-One #1 is a bold experiment that pays off with exhilarating visuals and nonstop spectacle, giving fans a pure art-driven joyride starring the ever-lovin' blue-eyed Thing. While the story is deliberately light and the read brisk, the creativity and energy make it a memorable big swing worth experiencing.
Reader Rating2 Votes
9.2
Clever concept executed well: a full issue told entirely in splash and double-page spreads
Ryan North balances the gimmick with enough captions and dialogue to ground the story
Ed McGuinness delivers high-energy, larger-than-life art that makes every page feel epic
Standout moments like Thing diving from a rocket, fighting Iron Man, and crashing through buildings highlight the visual spectacle
The splash-page format makes this a very quick read if you don’t slow down to take in the art
Light on story and character depth; more of an art showcase than a narrative-driven issue
8
Good
Buy Now

In Case You Missed It

Dan Panosian writes and draws 'Wolverine: Paradise' for Marvel this October 2026 Dan Panosian writes and draws 'Wolverine: Paradise' for Marvel this October 2026

Dan Panosian writes and draws ‘Wolverine: Paradise’ for Marvel this October 2026

Comic Books

Marvel's Midnight Universe gets unified launch as all three titles arrive October 7, and only those titles Marvel's Midnight Universe gets unified launch as all three titles arrive October 7, and only those titles

Marvel’s Midnight Universe gets unified launch as all three titles arrive October 7, and only those titles

Comic Books

Todd McFarlane's original 1977 Spawn design finally arrives in 'Spawn 77' Todd McFarlane's original 1977 Spawn design finally arrives in 'Spawn 77'

Todd McFarlane’s original 1977 Spawn design finally arrives in ‘Spawn 77’

Comic Books

Doctor Doom wages war on Hell in Marvel's 50-page splash-page epic Doctor Doom wages war on Hell in Marvel's 50-page splash-page epic

Doctor Doom wages war on Hell in Marvel’s 50-page splash-page epic

Comic Books

Connect