RED ROOM BY MORNING, SPIES TAKE WARNING
• The Weeping Lion has Black Widow under his thumb.
• Until Natasha learns his true motivations, she's trapped playing his personal weapon and spy...
• He's controlling the best in the world, and sending her to the place she never wanted to go: home.
Rated T+
Tense and excellent, with a look into Natasha's dark past and a truly surprising final page... Read Full Review
Black Widow #3 may have had some sketchy moments, but overall it moves the story forward in a bold and engaging manner. It also mixed past and present well, even if sometimes it feels a little muddled. Read Full Review
Few books can rely as heavily on visual storytelling alone as Black Widow, but then again, few collaborations are as strong as the one shared by Mark Waid and Chris Samnee. Read Full Review
Definitely not enough dialogue for Natasha and I hope all this buildups payoff. Better than Liu’s Black Widow so far but not quite as good as Edmondson’s.
The thing about this book. It does make you go wtf and want more. I'm intrigued in what happens next. I just hope it's something good because this build up is killing me. Also the opening street scene is pretty special. The art is on point and the light writing is good. I just hope this is building up to something good.
Mark Waid has done a very good job with this Black Widow series considering how little dialogue there is but this is the issue where it hits a bit of a snag. The story is progressing but we haven't got a lot from Black Widow to make us care about what happens in this issue. Its still fun but it needs a bit more substance.
Its a well crafted book that's done nothing to get me to care about it at all. I'll be dropping this.