"HARLEM BURNS" STARTS NOW!
The battle for Harlem begins here! As Luke and Danny struggle to pick up the pieces of Civil War II, the ultimate turf war erupts right under their noses! Tombstone, Mr. Fish, Piranha, Cottonmouth, Black Cat, and a mysterious new player are all vying for a piece of the pie - and the citizens of New York are caught in the crossfire! Can Power Man and Iron Fist help former prisoners and protect the innocent all at the same time?
Rated T+
Luke and Danny round up the Avengers to inform them of Agnitus, and there's new developments in terms of who's running it. This arc is shaping up to be a good one, especially when The New Pride could clash with the Heroes for Hire AND Black Cat. Or perhaps the villains will team up? Either way, Luke and Danny have a lot on their plates, and we're going to enjoy it. Read Full Review
Fortunately, everything else was wonderful. Power Man and Iron Fist is one of Marvel's best comics right now, and this new issue brings us back to what makes it so great: a great couple of lead characters, an entertaining and enriching world and rogues gallery, and some honest, solid street-level superheroics. Read Full Review
Power Man and Iron Fist#10 ismostly setup for more intriguing events down the road thanks to a powerful cliffhanger, but itssense of humor, social responsibility, and idiosyncratic art and coloring style is still firmly intact. It hits that right sweet spot between crime comic and buddy comedy, and Sanford Greene continues to draw bodies of all shapes, sizes, and skin colors kicking ass, telling jokes, or being menacing in the villains' cases in his Bronze Age meets animation art style. Read Full Review
David Walker is telling us something as clearly as he possibly can " our process of imprisonment is suspect and possibly corrupt. It is braver than I ever expected a Marvel comic to be, and I am blown away. Read Full Review
Fun issue. Now that Civil War II is finished (in these pages at least) the creative team can get back to what made this series special in the first place. And I laughed out loud at "Hey diddle diddle the cat and the fiddle."