Are you reading it? Thoughts after 2 issues? Think you'll keep picking it up?
Are you reading it? Thoughts after 2 issues? Think you'll keep picking it up?
I've enjoyed the first two issues. A nice sense of mystery trying to figure out what is going on, a few nods/easter eggs to the original Inferior Five, and I am digging the Peacemaker back up (which was the main reason I decided to get this as individual issues rather than trade wait). I am a bigger fan of Lemire's creator-owned stuff than I am of his big 2 work so far in his career, and this has more of the vibe his creator-owned and better work-for-hire stuff does, so I am in for the whole run.
-M
Comic fans get the comics their buying habits deserve.
"Opinion is the lowest form of human knowledge. It requires no accountability, no understanding." -Plato
It was not at all what I expected, and that's a plus. I'm in for the run.
So far is... eh.
It seems like Giffen is taking his time setting-up this universe, story and cast but he might be taking too long at doing so since is better for titles with obscure characters to start with a bang, not to mention that Giffen books tend to work better when they catch you from the beginning since Lord knows that he's not the best in the long term. And yes, I'm calling Inferior Five a "Giffen book" despite that Jeff Lemire is co-writing it because the style is all pure Giffen and at this point it might be a bit too predictable since he has this tendency of deconstructing original creations he considers silly into new versions that might be too different for their own good, sometimes Giffen tries too hard.
Lemire's Peacemaker story rocks though.
I'm definitely on board. I like Giffen, but I'm really buying it for Peacemaker and I just started Lemire's Black Hammer, which is really good. I'm glad that we know the two stories are going to connect otherwise I'm not as interested in the IF, though the story itself is interesting.
Read the first issue and I can't quite get into. I'll probably just trade wait this thing.
The Gypsies had no home. The Doors had no bass.
Does our reality determine our fiction or does our fiction determine our reality?
Whenever the question comes up about who some mysterious person is or who is behind something the answer will always be Frank Stallone.
"This isn't a locking the barn doors after the horses ran way situation this is a burn the barn down after the horses ran away situation."