Moon Knight delves into the depths of the Earth to bring vengeance and justice to the subterranean seas of New York City while wrestling with new revelations brought to light by savage murder. Meanwhile, what exactly has Zodiac been up to all this time...?
Rated T+
Sabbatini delivers some exciting art throughout the issue. The art manages to add as much visual tension to the action scenes as the therapy scenes. A great looking issue. Read Full Review
Jed MacKay's ability to hone in on small aspects of Moon Knight's mythology that haven't really been explored yet is second to none, and that once again fuels the series in Moon Knight #19. Read Full Review
Basic villain monologuing here that I don't know needs to take up so many pages (but then again its not like there is more meat left on the bone in the Moon Knight thread either). Read Full Review
Moon Knight #19 is a transition issue that wastes a lot of time with pointless action and very few revelations while MacKay transitions into the next arc. Honestly, this issue does little more than take up space, and the one or two revelations are not worth the cover price. Read Full Review
Not a bad issue by any means, but probably the weakest of the series so far. I feel like Zodiac's conversation with Doctor Plesko could have been a bit better, but it was still pretty enjoyable. Moon Knight and Hunter's Moon had a fun adventure with a twist at the end, and I'm looking forward to seeing what comes of that. While I will say, once again, that I'm missing Alessandro Cappuccio, I do think this was a good issue for him to take a break on.
Oh god, I saw the lower than usual review scores and I thought, in keeping with my own, that it represented a slight downturn in the comic's quality. Only to see people complaining about one line because they're stupid.
An absurdly deep cut is a tricky thing. Sometimes I love it, sometimes I hate it, and I struggle to define the difference. This is a case where I hate it; Commodore @#$% Planet's 3rd appearance after 40+ years is one small step above a generic goon as an antagonist.
That being said, this issue still offers the title's high standards of dynamic visuals and snappy prose. The fact that most of the latter is coming out of Zodiac promises interesting developments ahead--and a little Khonshu-philosophy from Hunter's Moon is welcome, too.
The phrase “boys, girls, and non-binaries” was so stupid. Zodiac embraces villainy and rejects guilt but at the same time he makes sure to use the latest socially acceptable neologisms? But aside from that brief moment of ridiculousness, the rest of the story wasn’t bad.
Just some corny blabbering by Zodiac for the most part, some unnatural feeling dialogue between Hunter's Moon and Moon Knight just made this unremarkable. Dissapointing considering last issue kicked ass.