• Black Panther and the Crew finally crack the case surrounding the mysterious death of Harlem community pillar Ezra Keith!
• In the wake of Ezra's life one thing is certain: the world needs the Crew now more than ever!
Rated T+
All these aside, Black Panther and the Crew #6 is a rather straightforward but deeply meaningful part of the story of the comic and the characters involved. From overt to subtle themes and techniques, we see the range of each of the people involved in the comic. Being able to read this kind of story is a blessing, and its comforting to feel as though someone sees what goes on around us and the fact that this kind of reality can be reflected in invulnerable skin, weather control, teleportation, or bionic arms. Read Full Review
At least Coates is still doing a fantastic job on Black Panther. Hopefully the Crew will cross over into that comic in the future. Read Full Review
This issue wasn't as great as the five previous, I suspect because it was forced to be a premature ending for the series. Despite that, the creators continued with great characterization, and great art. Worthy successor to original Crew. Shame it suffered the same BS fate.
An obviously rushed ending.
This abrupt end shows the Crew at last expunging the multi-generational infection Hydra has injected into Harlem … maybe. I can't imagine the creators felt great about cancellation undercutting their big "break the cycle" theme the way it did, but they certainly didn't step up and deliver a blow-the-doors-off finale. This feels like a low-energy epilogue to issue 5; the end offered for Ezra's flashback story was especially underwhelming both visually and narratively.
If I could give it a 0 I would. The fact that people are saying this is a great book makes me lose faith in todays comic readers. This is as bad as comics get. SJW, political, boring trash.