Moon Knight needs information and must rely on his old allies to get it for him. Secrets are ferreted out from the steamiest gutters to the highest seats of power, while Moon Knight must reveal a hidden truth to those closest to him.
Caappuccio delivers some beautifully dark and stylish art throughout the issue. The visual tone of the art perfectly captures the different worlds of these characters and how they live within them. Read Full Review
Frankly, this issue is worth it just for that Reese and Marc scene alone, and as a whole, Moon Knight #15 is one not to be missed. Read Full Review
Moon Knight #15 is a strong entry into the Moon Knight canon, balancing old and new to deliver an entertaining installment in an arc that couldve otherwise felt scattered. Mackays script deftly handles Marcs Dissociative Identity Disorder and its place in the vigilantes characterization. Paired with Cappuccios strong linework and Rosenbergs inspired palettes, the team manages to streamline a story with multiple moving parts, while maintaining various aesthetics and vibes that the series has employed since its first issue. Read Full Review
The information provided by the team gives us some of the basics on Grand Mal and Nemean who Moon Knight has had run-ins recently. Following up on recent events, but playing into larger themes, Moon Knight #15 is a strong standalone issue that isn't a must-read but is sure an entertaining one. Read Full Review
Final Thoughts:Moon Knight #5 gives readers plenty of world- and character-building, but does so at the expense of any action or plot progression. Almost nothing of consequence happens in this issue other than readers learn why Marc Spector developing a cooperative relationship with his other personalities is valuable. If you're looking for fun and excitement, you'll have to wait a bit longer. Read Full Review
Reese is one of my favorite new characters, I hope she gets a nice arc in this vol.
It's a travesty how this series isn't praised enough.
I was sitting on a solid 8.5 for what was a fun and well-written issue, but then we got Marc and Reese’s conversation and embrace at the end of the book. Over the course of this series, Reese has possibly become my favorite supporting character in this series and I’m glad to see her and Marc have a moment like that was just so heartwarming. MacKay and Cappuccio are magic.
It's got the usual bags of visual style and brisk cross-cut scenes. It explains how Moon Knight's alters are working together now and demonstrates them in action. And it hits like a freight train.
The art is very strong, but it's the script that's truly remarkable. It's a master class on quality over quantity and the virtue of simplicity. At its heart, this issue really only does about 4 story developments, all relatively simple. The way they're twined together and perfectly paced is masterful, though.
Seeing all of Marc's personalities work together was really fun.
It was pretty good for the most part. Not really anything exciting, but it handled the characters well. I like this series, it just needs to get back to the excitement it had at first.