From the Random Stack of Unread Comics by way of Free Comic Book Day 2014.
Title: Giant-Size Fantasy
Issue: 0
Publisher: Red Giant Entertainment
Date: May, 2014
Writer: Elaine Lee, David Lawrence, David Campiti
Artist: Francis Nuguit, Jinky Coronado, Larry Tuazon
Colorist: Marlon Ilagan, Katrina Maehao
Letterer: Zach Metheny
Editor: Brian Augustyn, David Lawrence
Flip book.
The companion volumes, Giant-Size Action #0 and Giant-Size Adventure #0 are reviewed here and here.
Pandora's Blogs was an odd story, part medical thriller, part teenage soap opera, and packed with references to Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre Dame. The title character, Pandora is the daughter of a doctor specializing in very unusual cases, and when her mom performs a seeming miraculous cure on her latest case, Pandora and the patient end up having a magical night at a popular dance club. But things soon go terribly wrong. All of the teenaged characters are gorgeous, and the school drama felt a bit mundane. The medical science in this is fantastical nonsense in spite of a liberal sprinkling of jargon, but the creepy, Twilight-Zone ending was fun and unexpected, and it was enough to get me interested in reading more stories of this world.
Flip over the book, and you get Duel Identity, the story of a woman whose extraordinary abilities make her a popular superhero by day, but she has another occupation as a deadly assassin by night. This was a fun take on the secret-identity trope. The main character makes an important decision here, to set up major plotlines, and it felt like it was a little bit rushed and lacking the full necessary motivation, but I still enjoyed the cat-and-mouse game as the assassin dealt with a two friends who happened to show up while she tried to stalk her quarry at a crowded business event. In spite of her powers, there is a lot of bad luck and bad timing that can interfere with the job, and I felt like the creative team did a good job of showing that. This story felt like it had a lot of potential, and felt fresh even employing relatively familiar tropes of superheroes and assassins.
Rating: 7.5/10
Title: Giant-Size Fantasy
Issue: 0
Publisher: Red Giant Entertainment
Date: May, 2014
Writer: Elaine Lee, David Lawrence, David Campiti
Artist: Francis Nuguit, Jinky Coronado, Larry Tuazon
Colorist: Marlon Ilagan, Katrina Maehao
Letterer: Zach Metheny
Editor: Brian Augustyn, David Lawrence
Flip book.
The companion volumes, Giant-Size Action #0 and Giant-Size Adventure #0 are reviewed here and here.
Pandora's Blogs was an odd story, part medical thriller, part teenage soap opera, and packed with references to Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre Dame. The title character, Pandora is the daughter of a doctor specializing in very unusual cases, and when her mom performs a seeming miraculous cure on her latest case, Pandora and the patient end up having a magical night at a popular dance club. But things soon go terribly wrong. All of the teenaged characters are gorgeous, and the school drama felt a bit mundane. The medical science in this is fantastical nonsense in spite of a liberal sprinkling of jargon, but the creepy, Twilight-Zone ending was fun and unexpected, and it was enough to get me interested in reading more stories of this world.
Flip over the book, and you get Duel Identity, the story of a woman whose extraordinary abilities make her a popular superhero by day, but she has another occupation as a deadly assassin by night. This was a fun take on the secret-identity trope. The main character makes an important decision here, to set up major plotlines, and it felt like it was a little bit rushed and lacking the full necessary motivation, but I still enjoyed the cat-and-mouse game as the assassin dealt with a two friends who happened to show up while she tried to stalk her quarry at a crowded business event. In spite of her powers, there is a lot of bad luck and bad timing that can interfere with the job, and I felt like the creative team did a good job of showing that. This story felt like it had a lot of potential, and felt fresh even employing relatively familiar tropes of superheroes and assassins.
Rating: 7.5/10