A LONG-LOST THREAT RE-EMERGES!
• LOGAN is confronted by an enemy from his past!
• And if Logan's past is a dystopian future, you know this can't be good...
• ENTER: The MAESTRO!
• Don't miss the start of an all-new arc by breakout writer ED BRISSON and fan-favorite artist MIKE DEODATO JR.!
Parental Advisory
An action packed extravaganza. Read this one! Read Full Review
A very strong start for the new creative team, who manages to maintain the tone of the series, while stepping into an intriguing new direction. Could we be witnessing the beginning of a new classic run? If they keep this up, most definitely. Read Full Review
OLD MAN LOGAN #25 hits the ground running as the new creative team of Ed Brisson, Mike Deodato, and Frank Martin take over. The characterization is spot on and the art adds a new twist to the series. While the plot is a bit overused at this point in OLD MAN LOGAN, the potential is high. Read Full Review
Old Man Logan is in solid shape as the new creative team takes the helm. This issue doesn't offer a drastically different take on the character, but it does continue nicely from where writer Jeff Lemire ended his run while also drawing in a bit of the weirdness and brutality of the original Old Man Logan story. It's an approach that seems to be paying off nicely so far. Read Full Review
Old Man Logan #25 marks the dawning of a new era for the clawed Avenger, with the new creative team giving us an intriguing new narrative. The choice to revisit the Hulk gang also leaves us plenty to speculate over, as despite not feeling overly original, it is a concept that I'm sure to grow fond of as the story unfolds. Read Full Review
Old Man Logan...Awasome!
This is a strong start to the new creative team; if Brisson's story seems a bit unoriginal at this point (figures emerging from Logan's dystopian future/past for vengeance), it is made up for by Deodato's excellent art. Plus, the Hulk brothers and Maestro are fascinating villains. This is keeps the general tone of Lemire's run and does a good job of following quality up with quality.
Maestro and a pack of hillbilly Banner Boys have somehow followed Logan to the 616. Time for a whole lotta smash'n'slash! Virtually nothing about this new story arc interests me, but it's executed with undeniable skill both visually and narratively. It's a straightforward story of incredible violence leading toward lots more violence and it all works. It's slightly disappointing for Logan to get dragged into another Wasteland tussle after he made peace with his past so nicely in the last arc, but his opponents here certainly need to be put down. Mike Deodato's art looks a bit action-figure-y, but that feels perfectly suited to this simple fightin' tale.
Wow. Quality dropped a bit as writers changed.