For big Edwyn, life suddenly becomes complicated. FBI agents show up, curious about the recent uptick in decapitations on the same day vicious human traffickers begin harassing his diner patrons. On the Lil' Edwyn front, he finds a rusty old handsaw... just as his mom introduces her new boyfriend.
Little gets delivered inside a single issue of this series. It difficult to really get a full perspective on what's going on. And so it ultimately feels like something is missing. And what's missing they actually be coming in issues to come. It certainly is difficult to put down. The that delivered here is delivered in a way that is guaranteed to grab the reader and push them through every single panel of every single page. Fun stuff. It'll be interesting to see if it actually amounts to anything in the long run. Read Full Review
Maybe it ain't the best issue thus far, but #3 really does crystallize some big ideas within the overarching 'Plastic' story. Read Full Review
This issue was light on content or spectacle making for an average installment just as the series is nearing its conclusion. Read Full Review
There's an on-the-nose style that makes the writing a little grating in Plastic: Death and Dolls, it seems to be operating solely at a level of aesthetic assumption, with archetypes in characters and story that are present because they're "supposed to be there." It's quickly growing thin. Read Full Review
Joyless critics bashing a fun little run.
If you dig Wagners writing style, you'll love this.
I hate when websites assign people to review the works ofwriters they don't know or like.