

Comic Books
‘Crossover’ #3 review
Crossover is moving places, but there are some fundamental problems that keep the series from fully gripping.
Crossover is moving places, but there are some fundamental problems that keep the series from fully gripping.
Very little plot or story happens in this first issue.
The art and irreverent tone make for an engaging read.
Crossover has an ambitious premise, but Cates’ limiting of scope chains the story and his artistic team to mundanity.
This comic continues to feel like snapshots instead of a unified whole.
While not quite as lecherous as he is in #1, Ernie is still an uncomfortable parallel to Trump.
20XX is unable to rise above its tired, desperately topical premise.
Spurrier and Wildgoose take the premise of 'E.T.' and supercharge it.
Maids is another striking visual piece from Katie Skelly.
I’m sure there’s a way to play in the Dune universe with comics, but this dull, flat attempt isn’t it.
Anthologies can be a great sampling of the good and the bad, but Stairway Anthology is stuck in the middle.
Ryan North and Albert Monteys preserve the excitement, strangeness, and biting philosophical comedy at the heart of Vonnegut’s iconic work.