Nothing very interesting to comment and the dialogues between the characters are horrible.
It's like Laura was someone else.
The art kind of reminds me of Mike Deodato's work but with worse colouring.
"Cable was right!"
I like the 'mood' of the art...but the art itself isn't doing it for me. I'm not quite sure if it's the pencils or the coloring.
I want to support this book...because I don't want Kwannon to fade into nothingness...and I like where it's going. I just want a different artist.
Psylocke Captain Britain Rictor Dust Moonstar Hellion
It’s not even the regression. There is no charm or nuance to Laura or Cable here. They are beyond boring. They are like lifeless planks trying to imitate themselves at their most basic. Who are restless and “angry” just because.
And new Psylocke I just don’t really care about, and all this pretentious nonsense isn’t really making me care about her.
Last edited by Godlike13; 11-27-2019 at 11:26 AM.
Maybe this is a bit too ahead of its time for certain people, but I love it.
Question: If Kwannon is so unhappy at Krakoa, why stay? Why not just move out of the island and rejoin the Hand? Why not volunteer her services to avenge Xavier’s assasination? I’m sure there’s a lot of opportunities for bloodshed for all three of them. Why force yourself to be with people you never truly consider your own?
Besides those lingering questions, definitely love the artwork, pacing and storyline. Didn’t expect this book to have a strong showing. Feels like an HBO miniseries with lots of violence. Kudos to the creative team.
Weird, people were so positive with the first issue and now are so negative with the second. What happened to have such a sharp turn around?
Sad that this isn’t getting the reception I hoped for butCable’s voice worked for someone that just came out of a childhood of war. Would you expect him to be dancing and partying on Krakoa or going on a mission? And that came through clearly when Psylocke confronted him.