LIKE A CLASSIC BLACK & WHITE MOVIE, BUT WITH WAY MORE BLOOD!
What's black, white, and red all over? Three blood-drenched tales of violence and mayhem led by Marvel's Mirthful Mercenary himself, Deadpool! You want to see today's top talent take it to the hilt to bring you the wildest Wade Wilson adventures yet?! This is the book for you! It's as plain as black and white. And red.
Parental Advisory
If you want to read a trio of hilarious, bloody, intestine-filled Deadpool stories, this is the book for you! Read Full Review
Deadpool: Black, White, & Blood came out swinging and, if this holds up, the future is quite bright for everyone's favorite merc' with a mouth. Read Full Review
Deadpool: Black, White & Blood #1 is a natural fit for this series that loves its blood and action. The opening issue features some of the best talents in comics and it shows. You'll laugh, you'll gasp, and you'll find plenty here to enjoy. Read Full Review
Fans of Deadpool should enjoy the various antics found in these disconnected tales involving some unusual cameos, the character's obsessive compulsions, and a lot of blood. Read Full Review
I actually like this anthology series. It's definitely in my pull list. Read this if you have time, HIGHLY recommend it.
Honestly, I thought this was pretty good. I thought these were funny and dumb, with the Tom Taylor story taking itself the most seriously. Deadpool is a very hard character to write, but I think everyone here does a fine enough job.
That was a fun read.
Pretty fun little issue! The standout for me was the Stokoe story, which was delightfully weird and exquisitely drawn. I loved all the little details like Deadpool's fur hat and I thought the Canadian jokes were pretty fun, particularly the one with Puck and Sasquatch. Taylor's story was my next favorite of the trio. I'll read anything he writes with Gabby and the opening joke on the first few pages had me laughing. I thought the Brisson story was just ok and dragged a bit but the art was solid. Overall a fun package of stories with the right tone for the character.
Deadpool's trip through the BWB wringer kicks off with three strips that offer decent "wacky for the sake of wackiness" hijinx. The art's nicely executed throughout, though not all the styles align with my personal taste. On the scripting side, though … Stories like these are exactly why Gwenpool finds Deadpool to be "too LOL memes." And the best of the strips, the Honey Badger one, is tarnished by being an undeniable retread of All-New Wolverine #31.
I only picked this book up because of Tom Taylor, and his part of the book was the only good one. And even his part was kind of lack luster. With deadpool telling the reader that this book isn't for kids, which was the only funny part to me, the rest of Taylor's arch was kind of boring. The other arch's I did not care about. This book is meant to be gory, violent and action packed. It did not show any of that. To me, I felt like I was conned a bit.
Two very boring stories from Taylor and Brisson that tried to be fun but were actually very dull, a third one that was ridiculously dumb but actually pretty fun.
I did not enjoy this issue even a little. It tried so hard to be funny that it wasn't. The plot was dumb and boring. Tom Taylor is very over rated, injustice and Nightwing are good but that's about it.