THIS SERIES WILL BE $1.99. TAKE THAT, MARVEL AND DC!
You're 17 years old and you've been bitten by a vampire. Do you live in the shadows and drink human blood, or do you use your newfound gifts for the dream costumed superhero life you've always wanted?
You're bulletproof, you can crawl up walls, and you can turn to mist, bats, or even a wolf. Why not have a little fun?
Mark Millar and Juanan Ramez's ‘Night Club' #1 has a lot to sink your teeth into. While, as the evidence of most of the first issue suggests, it seems to be offering up yet another tale of vampires in the modern world, our hero and newly-turned vampire, Danny Garcia, has other plans. A fun, thrilling, blood-spilling debut issue with plenty of bite and promise. And just $1.99 an issue! Read Full Review
Night Club makes a strong debut with some fun twists that gets right into the various ideas at play. This seems like another winner for the Millarverse with its eclectic and entertaining series of books. Read Full Review
Night Club #1 is a good introduction to a vampire hero starting a career that may end up being part of a vampire super team. That concept is intriguing while being delivered in a well-paced, cinematic, and believable first issue. Read Full Review
'Night Club' is like comfort food for the comic book nerd soul. A young man turned into a vampire to fight some upcoming war needs to learn the ropes fast through his mentor when all he really wants to do is chase social media fame. When you have a potent mix of Millar's exciting storytelling and the brilliant kinetic art of Ramirez and Mascolo, 'Night Club' is a can't-miss crowd-pleasing adventure that's just getting started. Read Full Review
Like much Millarworld of late, Night Club feels like it was written with one eye on the TV/movie adaptation (Millarworld owners Netflix even get a name-drop in the credits), which does make it feel like a cynical exercise in Content Creation. It's a slick, quick and fun read, but a surprisingly toothless one. Read Full Review
The story is predictable, bland and without any real stakes, leaving Ramirez' art to pull it through. I won't be coming back for issue #2. Read Full Review
Mark is very good showing a power fantasy for a kid who just want to be Web Famous. So he uses his vampire powers to fight crime and make Youtube videos.
Remember when comics were fun? Mark Millar does. Also I enjoyed Juanan Ramirez's art style in this issue. There is a nice fluidity to the action scenes.
Millard doesn't waste time getting into premise of story. Curious if next issue will be less cliche and take off.
The only redeeming part is Ramirez kinetic art. The protagonist is a lame moron and his friends are a bunch of demented loosers.
Cliche vampire story. At one point, one of the vampires says you can do pretty much everything a vampire does in the movies, way to make it unique. And the main character wants to be a influencer on YouTube. Dear God. Just bad.