BLIND SPOT Part 1! Jessica Jones was once the costumed super hero known as Jewel. She sucked at it. Now she's a private investigator at her own firm, Alias Investigations. She sucks less at that. With the Purple Man gone, her relationship with her husband, Luke Cage, and their daughter, Danielle, is better than ever. But her past always comes knocking, and when a woman whose case she fumbled winds up dead on her office floor, Jessica goes from private investigator to prime suspect. Can she find the real killer and clear her name?
A DOUBLE-SIZED Marvel Digital Original you don't want to miss!
With great storytelling and stellar artwork, Jessica Jones's new creative team knocks it out of the park. An interesting mystery packed with familiar faces is complemented by colorful artwork that seems like it shouldn't work for such a gritty series, but absolutely does. If "Blind Spot" is any indication of the quality of books to come out of the Marvel Digital Originals line, count me in for all of them. Read Full Review
There is simply a lot to like about this comic that serves as both an introduction and continuation of one of Marvel's best. What a pleasant surprise. Read Full Review
With a good creative team behind it, Jessica Jones #1 & 2 give us an interesting story that keeps the interest and mystery high, with art that matches. Read Full Review
Marvel is really on to something with this format. It offers a lot of value is likely a better model for these books continuing on a longer path. For those who don't know. Each issue is two chapters and a digital exclusive. At the end of a story arc a trade is offered in print of the complete stories. This idea will be used for all the current Netflix marvel heroes. Jessica Jones is first and Luke Cage is available as well. Cloak and Dagger, which was already a digital exclusive, will follow the same format even though it already comes out as a monthly. Once an arc is finished the trade comes out while the comic takes a break just like a season finally.
With that out of the way. You can expect a wonderful mystery out of these b more
Somebody in New York is killing women, most (but not all) of them superpowered. Jessica Jones lands firmly in the middle of the mystery, and these two chapters take her through being killed herself (makes sense in context (sort of)) and finding a killer team-up opportunity. Some stellar art and superb writing make this a treat and an instant contender for greatness. The art aspires to David Marquez levels of character detail and achieves it an awful lot of the time. The script is very close to flawless - formidable characterization, natural voices, compelling & mysterious plot development, outstanding pacing, exceptional salty humor.