A TITANIC 60TH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE!
The entire Kang bloodline is out to destroy every era of the Fantastic Four! How can Reed, Sue, Ben and Johnny hope to survive simultaneous attacks across their lifetimes by Rama Tut, the Scarlet Centurion, Kang the Conqueror and Kang's final descendant, the sinister Scion?! Join the FF and some special surprise guest stars as John Romita Jr. returns to Marvel and joins forces with writer Dan Slott for this celebratory adventure! Marvel's First Family will literally never be the same again!
Plus: Mark Waid and Paul Renaud deliver dramatic new insights into the origin of the fabulous foursome in an all more
This was a superb book from cover to cover, well written, well drawn, and well edited. Did I say superb? Read Full Review
The FF has been hit-and-miss with me in recent years, but it's been good enough to keep me picking up the new issues, and not many series can say that. Read Full Review
This issue is a love letter to Marvels first and best creation. It would be impossible to encapsulate everything that is great about The Fantastic Four in one 60-page story, but FF #35 captures the spirit of it. Its a fun read and great to look at, and may be the best thing Marvel will do in 2021. Read Full Review
Fantastic Four #35 is a great way to celebrate the first family while supplying some new wrinkles too. The main story is like a celebration of Kang the Conqueror, which is fitting given his recent return to the Loki television show. For that reason and the new wrinkles in the Waid story, this Fantastic Four anniversary does a good job blending new and old elements for new and old readers alike. Read Full Review
Truth be told, I picked this up as I wanted to catch up on the Torch storyline. had I know it was a big time travel type of thing, I may have not bothered. But thats just me. The book demonstrates everything that fans of the Four enjoy; grandiose schemes, twists and turns and a fragile hero. Maybe its not the Fantastic I remember, buts it's still a damn good read (no pun intended!) Read Full Review
Fantastic Four #35 does its best to celebrate 60 years of stories with Marvel's first family in comic books. However, not all of the stories are big winners, the best would likely be the last story just by default. The main story is a campy tale that's fun on paper but ends up being a flawed 70s Fantastic Four story told today. The second story is too short but fine enough while the third story has great art from Paul Renaud with a serviceable story. This anniversary issue is fine but not great. Read Full Review
There are some great family moments sprinkled throughout and, if nothing else, this is a wonderful reminder of what makes Kang such a good villain (and why his variants will never be able to compare). Read Full Review
Perfect, the art, the story its narrative. It was worth the expense.
Slott & Romita did a fantastic job!
Great issue! Too often publishers use anniversaries to sell you a bloated comic that isn’t rooted in continuity and has a bunch of creative teams that suck. Not the case here at all…
The lead story was extra-sized and a great celebration of FF history. Did find it funny how it reminded me of the Venture Bros episode, “Twenty Years to Midnight.”
The back-up by former FF writer, Mark Waid, was also great.
Only thing holding me back from a 10 was the two-page filler story in between.
Yes sr that the way.
A fitting issue to Celebrate Marvel's first family 60 year publication history with a collection of stories from the FFs most iconic eras told by one of their most iconic foe with art by John Romita Jr.
This was enjoyable. I was afraid it would be a 20 page story with 80 pages filler but really glad it was a proper anniversary issue story done right. Romita Jr is a hit or miss and his art can be so good in one page and then rushed and lifeless the next but overall it fits the story well to give it that classic feel.
I loved this! Both stories are great. Slott's dialogue still suffers but I still liked it even if I'm not a fan of Romita's art. Waid's was somehow even better.
Multiple iterations of Kang compete to kill the Fantastic Four at multiple points in their history. Reed Richards, of course, outwits and defeats them. I appreciate the care and cleverness with which this is put together, but it manages to replicate some of my least-favorite features of late Silver Age anniversary issues and Kang stories. And JRJR was an unfortunate choice for the main artist; one thing he absolutely cannot do (even with all these collaborators) is adjust his style to reflect past eras. And that's the one thing the A strip art really needed to do. I enjoyed the C strip more, which had some heartwarming insight and really fleshed out this volume's revised FF origin story.
This wasn't a bad issue. I liked the main story, it was very fun, and the Mark Waid retelling of the origin was really good. It just suffers from maybe going on too long and the Romita Jr's art.
First Story was mediocre. It is just wierd filler between Bride of Doom story and Reckoning War event.
And WTH. Reed also has long sister. So first Tony had long lost brother and he was adopted. After that Peter had a long lost sister. Hank Pym had a long lost daughter. Thor also got a long lost sister,Angela. Now it's time for Reed to have long lost sister. I wonder who's next?
Back Up Story was quite good and charm of issue. Most of writer don't focus on Johnny efforts in controlling over fire. That's second time I remember this has been put to focus.
Ben issue was focussed on. Reed and Sue don't have power that directly puts anyone close to them in danger.
Ben, due to his look, faces issues. He has been called M more