More Comics
The Almighties #0 (R Rated Variant Edition) comics review
By Leroy Douresseaux
June 6, 2016 - 11:51

Actuality Press
Writer(s): Sam Johnson, Mike Gagnon
Penciller(s): Pablo Zambrano, Eleonora Kortsarz, Ron Gravelle, Fran Jung, Graham Pearce
Colourist(s): Jennifer Scott, Lisa Lamb, Giuseppe Pica, Miguel Marques, Nimesh Morarji
Letterer(s): Kris Johnson, Jacob Bascle
Cover Artist(s): Eleonora Kortsarz, Miguel Marques
$2.99 U.S. 24pp, Color




Almighties_0ARratedCover.jpg
THE ALMIGHTIES #0 (R Rated Variant Edition) cover image


The Almighties is a superhero comic book series published by Actuality Press.  The book features characters mostly created by two individuals, Sam Johnson (who is also series editor) and Mike Gagnon.  The Almighties is a superhero comedy, but is not a parody, although it takes plenty of digs at Marvel's Avengers film series.

The Almighties #0 is written by Johnson and Gagnon with a group of pencillers, inkers, and colorists providing the art for various chapters.  The story focuses on the machinations of Joe Cyborg, who has an office in what seems to be the White House.  He wants to take the superhero team, The Almighties, and turn them into his own personal “strike force.”

To that end, Joe interviews Stefanos, a member of The Almighties, about his teammates.  So, are the werewolf, Night Fang; the Supergirl-like Mrs. F; the super-tech armored Maxi-Tron, the psychotic mercenary, Mason, and few others ready for prime time Joe Cyborg-style?

THE LOWDOWN:  Upon first glance, The Almighties #0 does not look impressive.  The art is hit-or-miss; after all, the artist here are not masters of composition, at least not yet.  These artists' graphical storytelling, however, is quite clear, which is surprisingly not the case with quite a few books published by Diamond Distributors' “premiere” publishers.  The coloring is nice and makes the art seem to pop off the page.  Of all the artists here, Eleonora Kortsarz is the standout.  If a veteran comic book artist were to mentor her, she would be ready to draw for a major publisher in less than two years, easily.

The Almighties is surprisingly funny.  I say “surprisingly” because, at first glance, it does not look like a superhero comedy.  For the most part, Johnson and Gagnon play the superheroes straight.  The humor works because The Almighties works as a superhero comic, and at times, this story is even droll and witty – another surprise.

I guess that I'm trying to say that The Almighties #0 is more than it appears.  Don't judge a comic book by its cover because this cover captures neither the story nor the spirit of this comic book.  If the creators have the resources to keep this going, they might actually be onto something that could capture a steadily growing audience.

POSSIBLE AUDIENCE:  Fans of comic superhero comics will want to try The Almighties #0.

B

The Almighties #0 is Out Now and available at www.almightiesamass.com and www.comixology.com



Rating: B/10

Related Articles:
Sequart Releases Comic Criticism Book “How to Analyze and Review Comics”
Ectyron: The Invasion from the Red Star Nebula comics review
Ectyron: Rise of Nemehiss comics review
The Cartoon Guide to Biology comics review
Man is Vox: Paingels (Expanded Edition) comics review
Review: Detective Comics #1008
Review: Action Comics #1013
Review: Detective Comics #1007
Simpson Comics Colossal Compendium Volume 7 comics review
Review: Detective Comics #1006