Charlies Angels #1

Writer: John Layman Artist: Joe Eisma Publisher: Dynamite Entertainment Release Date: June 27, 2018

The Angels are back, baby! -The original Angels, Jill, Kelly and Sabrina! Travel back to the swingin' 70s, and revisit the butt-kicking, crime-fighting, mold-breaking lady detectives who took 70s TV by storm, ready to do the same to comics 40 years later! Break out your bell-bottoms, feather your hair, and jump back to a era of peanut-farmer presidents, gargantuan gas-guzzlers and foxy female detectives... for a globe-trotting adventure that's simply too big and epic for the 70s-era boob tube. Written by elderly Eisner winner and solicitation-writing former-superstar John Layman, and with art by his scrappy but lovable youngster pal, Joe Eisma. This is one comic you DON'T DARE TO MISS!!!!

  • 6.0
    quadoxide Jun 30, 2018

    This is a perfectly fine first issue that (re)introduces us to the Angels (I didn't know their name before this) as well as sets-up the various plot elements that pushes the story forward into the next few issues. It's definitely fine but I don't like the tone of the book. It's not a dislike but more of a disagreement with the tone which I find too light.



    I understand the gag reflex against the entire dark revival movement that dominated pop culture in the past ten years or so but I feel that in this current political climate that we live in it's very easy to sound tone-deaf if you do things too lightly for a presumably for-adults book.


    All the parts of the issue are done well. We have a lead character that is slowly distinguishing herself from the others (unfortunately it is through a love interest), we have solid comedic timing, an okay first mission, and even a bit of a cliffhanger. However the dialogue feels a bit too simple in parts that betrays some grander nuance or commentary that I prefer in books which I felt it led the reader on to in the first few pages before dissipating completely after the prologue. It will be interesting to see how the book develops and finds its voice over the run, but right now it's not something I can say I'm reserving time for next month.

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