SDCC

UNCANNY X-MEN #1 (MARVEL COMICS 2024)

Welcome to an all-new edition of Parlay Points!

With the Krakoan Era over, fans have been waiting to see what happens now with the Children of The Atom. Hiding on a pop culture high with such hits as "Deadpool and Wolverine" to "X-Men '97", Marvel's favorite mutants are making a push to become the premier franchise in all of comics.

Taking a page out of their 90's playbook, the X-Men have been rolling out a multiple of new titles. Having some of the industry's top creators signifies the commitment Marvel is making to the comic line. With each new title, there is an air of wonder and curiosity surrounding their release. However, one book has be standing out slightly more than others as far as hype goes.

UNCANNY X-MEN #1 by Gail Simone, David Marquez, Matt Wilson and Clayton Cowles looks to bring back the flagship title in a most marvelous manner.

Let’s take a closer look at how the X-Men’s latest outing goes.

UNCANNY X-MEN #1 by Gail Simone, David Marquez, Matt Wilson and Clayton Cowles (Marvel Comics - Cover: Andy Kubert)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

IN SIMONE WE TRUST! Bringing in the architect behind some of the best team book stories in comics (Secret Six, Birds Of Prey), the X-Men start their new stat quo on a very strong note. With the new "Trinity of X" put in place, the story reminds readers why the X-Men are heroes at the very core.

Once the trio of Rogue, Gambit and Wolverine link up, there is a familiar theme of comradery that defines their dream. Even with unsurmountable odds against them, the writing showcases each member in their role on this team.

One character that stands out head and shoulders above everyone else in this issue is Rogue. Simone writes her in a very grounded manner. While other X-Men blindly grasp for Xavier's dream, Rogue is someone that is trying to define her own version.

This is driven home after an encounter that transcends the world of spandex suits and powers. The events wear heavy on Rogue's soul and heart. It is a powerful moment that is clearly the catalyst for her moving forward. Factor in the surprise ending and readers literally have a blueprint for how the X-Men should be written.

Marquez and Wilson bring out a great deal of emotions in Rogue AND Wolverine throughout the issue. With the subtle read of Logan's eyes, readers can sense his internal anguish. This disappears when their challenge awakens. The threat is gifted multiple full page images. It is fitting as to its' size and power scale. The action sequence play out to fan delight. There is big action, but what makes this story is the more "human" factor featured.

The visit to a children's hospital hits on many levels. The wide spectrum of feeling displayed instantly hit readers. Rogue's stages of acceptance shine as she begins her new era. It is balanced out with a closing image that raises many questions. The art team stepped up to the assignment and presented a version of Xavier's squad you can't help but to root for.

FINAL POINT: 9

Without question, Marvel's mutant flagship title has returned with a renewed energy fans won't get enough of. Simone pens a superb script filled with heroics and heart. Marquez and Wilson construct exciting moments that reinforce the best elements incorporated in the DNA of the Children of the Atom. The future is bright for the latest incarnation of the Uncanny X-Men.

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on Uncanny X-Men #1. Thanks for reading!

BLOOD HUNT #5 (MARVEL COMICS)

Welcome to an all-new edition of Parlay Points!

For this entry, Marvel’s bloodiest hour has arrived. An ancient evil has taken down the Avengers. Vampires are running wild. The world is in darkness. Desperate times call for desperate measures.

Dr. Strange made a deal with a devil. The heroes have difficult choices to make. Will it be enough to save the 616?

BLOOD HUNT #5 by Jed MacKay, Pepe Larraz, Marte Gracia, Fer Sifuentes-Sujo and Cory Petit (Marvel Entertainment) brings forth the last stand of hope.

Let’s see who’s left standing in this concluding chapter!

BLOOD HUNT #5 by Jed MacKay, Pepe Larraz, Marte Gracia, Fer Sifuentes-Sujo and Cory Petit (Marvel Entertainment)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

MacKay pulls out all the stops for an action packed finale. The Avengers last stand comes across as larger than life. It mirrors the stakes at hand. Seeing the rally cry is an easy win for readers. MacKay also mixes in some solid surprises to help the heroes.

That said, one character (literally) steals this issue. Doom’s portrayal pours of the self beliefs he always carries. The banter between him and Dr. Strange leaves readers knowing that a cost was paid that may be too high to overcome. MacKay throws in a predictable but impactful swerve in leading to the conclusion. Once the last page hits, the writing gives one more stunning mic drop moment before it bows out.

Larraz, Gracia and Sifuentes-Sujo provide iconic panels bringing the dire gravity of the event to life. The full page splash of the Avengers flying into action kicks events off in a monster way. The face off with Thor and Varnae/Blade feels of a true battle of titans.

Once Doom and Strange agree to their deal, the near full page unveiling screams excitement. This funnels into the action unfolding. Panels pick up a faster pace with the non-stop chaos taking place. It only slows down when Doom seizes a chance with a vibrant image. Even with a heroic shot of the survivors, happiness is short lived. The closing panel caps off what an anguished call Strange made and its’ upcoming repercussions will have.

FINAL POINT: 8.6

Marvel’s Bloodiest event concludes on a solid yet predictable landing spot. MacKay’s writing centers the big action with an intriguing sub plot. Larraz and the team bring amazing action sequences to life from start to finish. From here, a shift of power will be taking place that opens up many creative doors. Brace for it.

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on Blood Hunt #5. Thanks for reading!

PAPER GIRLS (PRIME VIDEO - AMAZON STUDIOS)

Welcome to a special edition of Parlay Points, the complementary comic book blog section of the ODPH podcast. For this edition, we’re checking out a brand new comic series heading to the small screen on July 29th. Paper Girls is the latest addition to what is slowly becoming the go-to landing spot for independent comics on TV/streaming via Prime Video. The 2015 Image Comic, created by Brian K. Vaughan (known for Saga, Runaways and Y: the Last Man to name a few) & Cliff Chiang , is a former Eisner winner and now joins the ranks of The Boys and Invincible as the latest independent comics to cross over to Amazon Studios along with Legendary Television, in connection with Plan B.

“Paper Girls” ran until July 2019. Shortly there after, a TV production deal was announced. The show was met with a very positive 2022 San Diego Comic Con panel and is set to premiere (all 8 episodes) with a ton of hype behind it. The ODPHpod was granted early screening privileges to the series so here is out SPOILER FREE review!

Paper Girls - Prime Video starting July 29th

Credit: Amazon Studios and Legendary Television, in association with Plan B

Copyright: Amazon Studios

The plot synopsis (quote courtesy of Amazon studios) reads as follows: “In the early morning hours after Halloween 1988, four paper girls—Erin, Mac, Tiffany, and KJ—are out on their delivery route when they become caught in the crossfire between warring time-travelers, changing the course of their lives forever. Transported into the future, these girls must figure out a way to get back home to the past, a journey that will bring them face-to-face with the grown-up versions of themselves. While reconciling that their futures are far different than their 12-year-old selves imagined, they are being hunted by a militant faction of time-travelers known as the Old Watch, who have outlawed time travel so that they can stay in power. In order to survive, the girls will need to overcome their differences and learn to trust each other, and themselves.”

The show stars Camryn Jones (playing Tiffany Quilkin), Sofia Rosinsky (Mac Coyle), Riley Lai Nelet (Erin Tieng) and Fina Strazza (KJ Brandman) as the four paper girls in the center of this story. The rest of the cast is filled out by Nate Corddry, Ali Wong and Adina Porter.

Paper Girls - Prime Video July 29th

Riley Lai Nelet (Erin), Camryn Jones (Tiffany), Fina Strazza (KJ), Sofia Rosinsky (Mac)

Credit: Anjali Pinto/Prime Video Copywright: Amazon Studios

Being that this a SPOILER-FREE review, trust me when I say: The show lives up to the early buzz behind it. Whenever time travel is used as a major plot point in a series, it can always be tricky to pull off. Where “Paper Girls” does things right with the series is that it doesn’t focus viewers on the issue at hand. Where this show finds its strength is in the four young actresses who make the show about their journeys finding themselves more than the travel in time. The show allows all four to have their own individual moments without feeling like one overshadows the other.

However, the two actresses that will make strong cases for breakout stars from this season will be Fina Strazza (KJ) and Sofia Rosinsky (Mac). Due to the nature of each of their character’s journeys, both have very impactful performances once the show starts heading into the middle act. This especially holds true for Rosinsky as she shows many different sides to her character. For being only 16 years old, this was a very noteworthy performance from first episode to last. In comparison, Nelet (Erin) and Jones (Tiffany)’s respective arcs tie more into the overall story.

The rest of the cast does a great job bringing the sci-fi aspect to life in this series. There are excellent performances from Porter, Corddry, and Wong who bring the uniqueness of a time traveled world to the viewers. The overall story is one that will have non-readers of the comics engaged but (imo) never feeling lost in where the show is moving. The handling of time travel moments never feels too much and are spaced out well to showcase the leads.

Paper Girls - Prime Video July 29th

Riley Lai Nelet (Erin), Ali Wong (adult Erin)

Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video Copyright: Amazon Studios

The show does an excellent job with capturing the time periods that they are in as well. For being in 1988 to start, everything from the images surrounding to the music gives the story solid footing. The only “drawback” that might be wrongly mentioned is viewer’s claims that this is too much like Netflix’s “Stranger Things”. In a time period where most of pop culture had its attention drawn into, everything remotely close is being compared to the smash streaming hit. While I can see the comparisons’ idea: (4 young kids fighting something in the 1980’s, weird colorful imagery in the skies), that’s where the arguments end.

“Paper Girls” stands more on the strengths of the leads finding themselves more than fighting monsters in the Upside Down. Once the story gets moving, the direction the story heads is one that is more character driven than most viewers might realize. Sure, there are very noticeable sci-fi elements throughout the show. Do they take anything away form the show. Absolutely not. If anything, they serve as a break from the internal discovery of the leads. At some points, it may not seem to mesh as well, but once you near the conclusion of this run, it pays off. There are a few moments that viewers will be very amped to talk about in that aspect.

Paper Girls - July 29th Prime Video

Camryn Jones (Tiffany)

Credit: Anjali Pinto/Prime Video Copyright: Amazon Studios

Overall, “Paper Girls” presents a strong character driven view into an ever changing landscape of time travel. Viewers will be immersed with the character portrayals of such a young cast. Each display their stories with many moving parts. It’s equally balanced out by a supporting cast that makes the fiction element feel somewhat normal without making the viewers disenfranchised to the overall theme.

As David Bowie once said: “Time may change me … But I can't trace time”

Don’t miss “Paper Girls” debuting all 8 episodes on Prime Video on July 29th

Hit me up on Twitter and let me know what you thought of the series. Thanks for reading!

CANARY #1 (COMIXOLOGY ORIGINALS/BEST JACKETT PRESS)

Welcome to an all new edition of Parlay points, the complementary comic book blog to the ODPH podcast! On this edition, we’re taking a look at the return to Comixology Originals (via Best Jackett Press) for the one and only Scott Snyder! Last October, Snyder (along with Greg Capullo, Francis Manupal & Francesco Francavilla kicked off “Scottober”, with such releases as “We Have Demons”, ”Clear” & “Night Of the Ghoul”. All three books are fantastic reads and generated much excitement for comic book fans into checking this line of books out. All three of those series have wrapped (for now) but that wasn’t the end of what Snyder had started with Comixiology.

This week, It’s Scottober 2.0 as Snyder has three NEW books that are perfectly timed to drop for San Diego Comic Con (SDCC). One of those books is Canary #1 by Snyder, Dan Panosian, Richard Starkings and Will Dennis. Let’s check out the latest entry into the Comixology Originals line and see what fans will be buzzing about this weekend at SDCC, shall we?

Canary #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Dan Panosian and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

This story kicks off in 1891 in Utah. Marshall Holt is investigating a murder of a school teacher. The panels pulls no punches in how violent of a crime this was. After talking with the local sheriff , Holt gets a sense where to go to find the alleged killer: a young boy by the name of Johnny Apple. Holt’s reputation draws a following to join him, but he declines and sets out to find the killer by himself. It’s bold but Holt doesn’t show any sense of worry as he sets out to find the child.

What he stumbles upon appears to have more than he bargained for. Readers will see how this mystery might be connected to something more sinister. How does
”Canary” play a role in this story? Can Holt solve this case? If he can, at what cost? The tension and drama is built so perfectly that after finishing the issue, you know there’s something special happening here.

Canary #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Dan Panosian and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Canary #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Dan Panosian and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Canary #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Dan Panosian and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Canary #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Dan Panosian and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

A Horror Western story? Sign me up! Snyder welcomes readers into a very interesting world. Marshall Holt seems like the stoic lawman of the old west. Once the layers of the issue start peeling, readers see that there might be more going on with him and a past experience that meets the public eye. It’s a great counter balance to his celebrity status as the “dime novel cover model” that people know him as. This point is driven home when he is asked about his mask that he wears. The mood seems dark and when we see a flashback of Holt, it adds a great element to the direction of whats to come. Excellent storytelling.

Panosian crafts a gritty old western town to the letter within these pages. The imagery from the initial murder readers see to the gunfight that happens later captures that energy throughout this issue. How the facial depictions of Holt and Apple’s emotion are done this issue gives more impact to the story. Seeing how the young boy reacts to what’s happening and Holt’s flashback moments to current time, there’s much happening here with both. Can’t wait to see where this story goes next!

Canary #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Dan Panosian and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Canary #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Dan Panosian and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Overall, Canary #1 delivers on a debut issue that will have fans talking. Snyder and Panosian present a captivating tale of the old West with a strong horror element added in. Marshall Holt's story is just beginning but the opening chapter is one not to miss adding to your collection. Make plans to pick up a copy on comiXology this week!

If you are in attendance for this year’s SDCC, make plans to stop by the Comixology Booth for some great events and check out the Comixology “Scottober: West Coast edition” panel on Sunday July 24th - Room 6DE - 12:30PST!

Hit me up on Twitter and let me know what you thought of Canary #1. Thanks for reading.

BARNSTORMERS #1 (COMIXOLOGY ORIGINALS/BEST JACKETT PRESS)

Welcome to an all new edition of Parlay points, the complementary comic book blog to the ODPH podcast! On this edition, we’re taking a look at one of the THREE new series coming out on the Comixology Originals line (via Best Jackett Press) written by the one and only Scott Snyder! Last year, Snyder (along with Greg Capullo - “We Have Demons”, Francis Manupal - “Clear”, Francesco Francavilla - “Night Of The Ghoul” & their creative teams) generated such a buzz with these books, October became “Scottober” at New York Comic Con (NYCC). If you were in attendance for NYCC21, you know the hype for these comics was electric & matched with an incredible panel discussing the books which I was in attendance for.

This week, It’s Scottober 2.0 as the new books are perfectly timed to drop for San Diego Comic Con (SDCC). Leading the way is Barnstormers #1 by Snyder, along with Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, Richard Starkings & Will Dennis. Let’s not waste any more time and jump right into the next phase of Scottober on Comixolgy Originals shall we?

Barnstormers #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Barnstormers #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

This book is set in 1927 and is centered around a pilot named Hawk E. Baron. Baron has returned from World War 1 and now is paying the bills via barnstorming people in the sky for a small cost. Where this story begins, Baron is not having the best of luck with his line of work. His last few stops haven’t been anything to write home about but he’s told about this place called “Barnville.” There he is told about many people that will be waiting & thinks this will be the place where his luck changes. Upon arrival, his hope looks to be answered correctly. However, like most things too good to be true, it appears Hawk might be in way over his head.

A few hours prior, Hawk is in Whempy, Tennessee. Hawk provides the readers an insight on how the “Barnstorming” hustle works. Hawk runs into an operator girl who he’s trying to convince her to help announce his arrival in the next town. However, something halts that conversation for a bit. When it resumes, the operator agrees to terms but Hawk’s arrival is anything but a warm welcome. A minor mistake has now spiraled into Hawk meeting some of the town’s people in an unwelcome manner. This has now set him on a new adventure with mystery, love and murder creeping around the corner. What does it have to do with a woman by the name of Tillie? You’ll have to pick up the issue and find out!

Barnstormers #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Barnstormers #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Barnstormers #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

What an incredible first issue! Barnstormers hits the ground running with hooking readers into Hawk’s problems from an impromptu introduction to some of the Barnville residents. Synder presents the readers with a very flawed character that finds himself in way over his head & basically no time to assess the danger he’s in. This goes into what Tillie brings to the story. Snyder shows a little bit to her character but not enough where readers can make a call on her motives just yet. From the initial panel. Hawk’s seemed like he’s never too sure of what he’s doing and by issue’s end, this is brought right to the forefront. The final narration on the last page drives home that there is so much more to this story & it’s definitely going to hook fans until its conclusion.

Lotay delivers some breathtaking images within this issue. Taking readers back into the 1920’s is made to look easy with the artwork here. The facial expressions from the characters really pop off the pages to add something extra to the story at hand. Look no further than the full page panel of Tillie near the end of the book. It’s absolutely impressive work. Everything about this book has a unique retro feel to it with maybe one exception but it’s a noteworthy moment in the book. It’s still too early to tell what Hawk witnessed in the pausing moment between the operator woman’s conversation but it adds a nice pace-changing visual to what’s being created here. Readers will have much to rave about with the art.

Barnstormers #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Barnstormers #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Barnstormers #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Tula Lotay, Dee Cunniffe, and Richard Starkings

Credit: Comixology Originals/Best Jackett Press

Overall, Barnstormers #1 kicks off a suspenseful thriller which will leave readers guessing at how this story will play out. Snyder brings excellent storytelling to this issue & is matched perfectly by the stunning art style of Lotay. Get on board now at Comixology & do not let this issue pass you by. Excellent read!

And if you are in attendance for this year’s SDCC, make plans to stop by the Comixology Booth for some great events and check out the Comixology “Scottober: West Coast edition” panel on Sunday July 24th - Room 6DE - 12:30PST!

Hit me up on Twitter and let me know what you thought of Barnstormers #1. Thanks for reading!

DUDLEY DATSON AND THE FOREVER MACHINE #1 (COMIXOLOGY ORIGINALS/BEST JACKETT PRESS)

Welcome to an all new edition of Parlay Points, the complementary comic book blog to the ODPH Podcast! for this edition, It’s “Scottober” In July on the Comixology Originals line (Via Best Jackett Press) as Scott Snyder returns with THREE brand new series! Last time Synder unveiled new books on the CO line on October of 2021, fans were treated to “We Have Demons” with Greg Capullo, ”Clear” with Francis Manupal & “Night Of the Ghoul” with Francesco Francavilla! All three books are incredible reads and are must owns on Comixology and print form for “We Have Demons” (currently) via Dark Horse Comics. There was a great panel at New York Comic Con (NYCC) which I was in attendance for that broke down the movement to Comixology and plans for the comic line.

This week, Scottober 2.0 kicks off as Snyder has three NEW books that are perfectly timed to drop for San Diego Comic Con (SDCC). One of which has Snyder working with Jamal Igle, Juan Castro, Chris Sotomayor, Tom Napolitano and Will Dennis on Dudley Datson and the Forever Machine #1! Let’s jump into this issue and chck out the next wave of “Scottober” on Comixology, shall we?

Dudley Datson and the Forever Machine #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Jamal Igle, Juan Castro, Chris Sotomayor and Tom Napolitano

Credit: Comixology Originals/ Best Jackett Press

*** POSSIBLE SPOILERS WARNING ***

The story opens up with a very quirky narration: did you know that every great inventor has something very similar in each of their own stories? They all have a pet. However, in one inventor’s case, that always doesn’t guarantee anything. His name is Dudley Datson, a young man who’s life is anything but normal.

Datson is about to have a huge presentation, with his father, who is dealing with some health issues, claiming to in attendance. This is giving our lead much anxiety as you would expect. From here, readers are introduced to other major players in Dudley’s universe. Ohno, his best friend, Dr, Shae and Daedalus, a lovable dog ….. to everyone but Dudley all join the fray as Datson prepares his invention of “Duds” as he refers to them as. “Duds” are L.C.D. integrated fiber clothing (to sum it up quickly). However the presentation doesn’t exactly go according to plan and it makes for quite the awkward moment.

From this fallout becomes another issue that Dudley will not see coming. The misfire of the presentation has now become the least of his problems. Readers will be very invested to see which way the story goes from here. No spoiler talk of what happens for the latter part of this story. All I will say is readers are in for a fun ride and a last panel curve ball they arguably won’t see coming. Get ready!

Dudley Datson and the Forever Machine #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Jamal Igle, Juan Castro, Chris Sotomayor and Tom Napolitano

Credit: Comixology Originals/ Best Jackett Press

Dudley Datson and the Forever Machine #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Jamal Igle, Juan Castro, Chris Sotomayor and Tom Napolitano

Credit: Comixology Originals/ Best Jackett Press

Dudley Datson and the Forever Machine #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Jamal Igle, Juan Castro, Chris Sotomayor and Tom Napolitano

Credit: Comixology Originals/ Best Jackett Press

This book was such a fun read. Snyder brings to life all the anxiety of a young genius that one would expect. Seeing the stumbling in social settings felt natural for a kid feeling the weight of the world on his back. How the story shifts will be an entertaining turn for the young lead. The book might mislead to a degree where readers think its going, but once the new direction of events are established, this is gonna be something to be buzzing about. The supporting cast is one to watch as well. The back and forth between Ohno and Dudley is light hearted and breaks from the more “normal” tone of the book. This world created will lock readers in for the ride after first read. No doubt about that.

Igle’s art is stellar for this issue. From the detail work in the opening pages “History lesson” to the lab where Datson made his invention, the arts is very fine and makes the pages pop off. There’s another scene later where a big surprise is unveiled but Igle’s art needs to be acknowledged for it. The final panel is so well done. The energy of a young man in NYC is brought to life with much to rave about. Tremendous job.

Dudley Datson and the Forever Machine #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Jamal Igle, Juan Castro, Chris Sotomayor and Tom Napolitano

Credit: Comixology Originals/ Best Jackett Press

Dudley Datson and the Forever Machine #1 - On Sale July 19th

Creative: Scott Snyder, Jamal Igle, Juan Castro, Chris Sotomayor and Tom Napolitano

Credit: Comixology Originals/ Best Jackett Press

Overall, Dudley Datson & the Forever Machine #1 is a big hit. There’s a lot of elements happening with this story but Snyder, Igle and the rest of the creative team present it with such energy and enjoyment. After that final page, expect to be locked in for the ride cause it’s only going up from here. Make a point to check this out on Comixology this week! Highly recommended!

If you are in attendance for this year’s SDCC, make plans to stop by the Comixology Booth for some great events and check out the Comixology “Scottober: West Coast edition” panel on Sunday July 24th - Room 6DE - 12:30PST!

Hit me up on Twitter and let me know what you thought of Dudley Datson & the Forever Machine #1 !

Thanks for reading!