JEN WALTERS ENTERS THE SCENE AS "SUPREME" CONTINUES!
• MATT MURDOCK'S risky move is garnering attention...
• ...and not everyone sees it in a positive light...
• It's a battle on two fronts as Matt defends his new legislation and DAREDEVIL comes under attack!
Rated T+
This comic was decent. It didnt add much to the overall plot, but it did bring in a neat little team-up with a rocking, if short, fight between Tombstone and She-Hulk. Give this a read if youre a fan of the Man Without Fear or the Savage She-Hulk. Read Full Review
Not an aggressively terrible issue, but super boring. Which is probably worse. This storyline needs something, anything, to happen ASAP. Read Full Review
Absolutely nothing happens in this issue worth reading. Fisk hires a lawyer the end. The art was painful to look at. Read Full Review
Morgan is possibly the best artist on this title yet, even better than Ron Garney. Matt temporarily teams up with Jen Walters this issue and I can’t believe Wilson is back! Wilson Fisk makes this series so much better and I can’t wait for more
This was not action packed, but had plenty to chew on. It was all about Matt in the court room. I enjoyed the story and the art. It was just a decent filler issue.
It felt like filler but it was pretty good overall. Alec Morgan in my opinion is an upgrade from Garney though.
Its a filler issue, sort of boring, but still necessary (I think)
So Kingpin hires Legal, Tony Stark’s former lawyer, to fight Matt Murdock in court. Meanwhile Tombstone is also hired to get rid off Matt but is stopped by She-Hulk. Not much happened this issue but it was well written and did a good job setting up the next issue. Biggest flaw of this issue is the art, I didn’t enjoy it at all.
Art: 3/5
Story: 3/5
Total: 6/10
I love the idea of a super villain lawyer, complete with his own moniker. The plot doesn't advance far though.
The Kingpin brings legal and criminal muscle to bear. Jen Walters in Hulk mode helps with the latter, but what's Matt going to do about the former? Guest artist Alec Morgan's work lowers the quality of this comic significantly. If Mr. Morgan had been on the job longer and made his style an integral part of the Daredevil experience, it *might* be tolerable. Getting blindsided with this cheap Nick Pitarra imitation is a painful slap to readers already dizzied by the high-stakes game of artist roulette this title has played in the past. The unpleasant visuals spoil some fascinating legal and extra-legal storytelling; this issue might have been all-time great if it looked better.