Last week, Miriam Roberts was a normal college student. Now, she's wanted by the FBI in
connection with a series of terrorist attacks involving psychically powered Russian sleeper agents. Just when Miriam believes things couldn't get worse, secrets about her long-lost
parents resurface, and she realizes that she might have powers of her own.
There are elements of Red Atlantis that verge on being too relevant for today's current events"but the story itself is compelling enough to not make that the only schtick or focus. Read Full Review
While I will always love comics for what they are, and will always be a huge advocate of them as an important form of literature and a gateway to feeding our minds and fuelling our creativity, I am seeing an increasing number of series that are crying out to have screen adaptations. Red Atlantis is a series that could easily be adapted into a TV series, and thats personally something I would love to see. Read Full Review
Red Atlantis continues to feel like an odd kind of throwback to the things I grew up on with sleeper agents and all that jazz so there's a definitely level of enjoyment to it for me. Read Full Review
NOW we're cooking! Miriam's strange powers explained. Mole agents exposed, and the FBI agents orginally on the case are sidelined. Even a nice little action sequence.
The art isn't my favorite, but it's good enough to tell the story.
At this point, I'd suggest trade waiting on this "kinda sorta rooted in reality" spy thriller if such things interest you.