With the Watchtower collapsing around her, the Question—and an unexpectedally—must rally her team to take on the mastermind behind the downfall ofthe Justice League Unlimited’s home base! Can Renee not only survive but alsomaintain her new place in the DC Universe? Find out in the epic conclusion toThe Question: All Along the Watchtower!
The series comes to an end all too soon. Rene has made a tremendous amount of progress over the course of the series. She lands as one of the more interesting mainstream characters to be featured in her own book this year. Its going to be kind of a disappointment to see her featured in a series of cameos in the near future. Segura and Tormey did such a good job of making a case for her own ongoing series. Read Full Review
But where this issue was at its strongest was in scenes that confront Renee's dark past and her battles with mental health. There's an amazing segment that shows Renee confronted by the ghosts of the people she's lost or let down, and that's where Segura's noir roots really shine. Read Full Review
The last stand of Renee Montoya concludes on steady ground in its closing chapter. Seguras writing leans into the personal pressures of the Question. Tormey and Fajardo jr. give a very traditional superhero throwdown its due with the art. After this conclusion, there will be no question on where Montoya ranks amongst the DCs finest. Read Full Review
The main draw for this series was Renee herself and the position, which certainly felt like an interesting area to explore on the Watchtower. The first issue and her uncertainty was a lot of fun to watch and we got glimpses of that throughout even as we got to deal with the real threat. It's definitely fun throughout but it felt like it needed to be more of a tight five or even four to some degree than decompressed to a six-issue run. It had a lot of good dialogue and some fun character material along the way. Similar to the Challengers of the Unknown book, I liked getting these kinds of characters into this setting and seeing how they can fit into the picture. Renee definitely has that outsider thing going for her when it comes to being the sheriff of the station, and her distance from so many heroes is a nice touch as well. And her being more of a Gothamite certainly adds its own flair in this mostly sterilized kind of place. I think she, and those she deals with, could make this a f Read Full Review
In my time here at Batman News, I have reviewed sub-par anthologies, underwhelming attempts at social commentary, and books that won't end thanks to endless delays (yes I'm talking about you Batman 89' Echoes). But as of this moment, there is no title that has frustrated me to the point of not even wanting to read it for review purposes than The Question: All Along the Watchtower. Read Full Review
This entire series was pointless.
I finished this series trying to be positive cuz I love Rene but this was one of the dumbest comics I've read with so many resolutions that made no sense at all. I'm very concerned for Segura's upcoming Star Wars run.