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Cosmic ghost rider art
Cosmic ghost rider art













cosmic ghost rider art

Galactus, injured and humbled, had come to Earth, seeking aid to defeat Thanos.

cosmic ghost rider art

Roaming endlessly, Castle began to lose his mind.

cosmic ghost rider art

Days became years, years became decades, decades became centuries, centuries became millennia. The new Rider spent countless years alone, with nothing to punish or avenge.

cosmic ghost rider art

However, upon his return to the land of the living, he found that Thanos had scoured the planet of nearly all life and the villian was nowhere to be found. Making a deal with Mephisto, he returned to life as a Ghost Rider in order to punish the Mad Titan. The colors also match, creating a book that is in complete union with its visuals and narrative.In this universe, Frank was killed during a battle with Thanos. Every piece of anatomy and background is nearly impossible to pinpoint flaws in, working well with the grounded tone. Juann Cabal’s art in the main story is done with a good amount of realistic rendering without entering an uncanny valley. However, it is a pretty fun story with art that gets the job done clearly. In some ways, the backup story “Cosmic Ghost Stories” attempts this in such a bare-bones way that it doesn’t fully service the reader’s understanding of his placement in the grand scheme of the Marvel Universe. Yes, in the internet age, they can character wiki their way into understanding, but they then miss out on the physical interaction between them and the book itself. That’s just bad planning for the first chapter in a new ongoing. I can’t imagine people who don’t know anything about space Punisher reading this without some level of unintended confusion. You might say, but Tyler! This is a western comic book! Jumping into the deep end and swimming backward is part of the experience! You’d be right to make that point, but for the character’s first ongoing and yet another Marvel number one with the minor goal of catching new readers, it would add to the quality of this issue as a whole. There is very little established about who this character is and his origins. The biggest drawback to this re-launch will be its lack of explanation for who this Frank Castle is. Predictability in a weird space, western mystery might not sound like a positive, but as we leave an era of constant subversion, it is nice to read a comic with ‘plot twists’ that make complete sense as set up by the narrative. The writing is serviceable, with Phillips pulling off some narrative structure tricks to keep the end of the issue reveal a predictable secret. The short pitch for this book is ‘Old Man Cosmic Ghost Rider.’ Whether or not Phillips and her team can execute its interest in a big way is left for the future to decide, but as of right now, the more grounded tone and plot work well. It’s promising in a way that makes me hungry for issue #2. That’s the deepest summary I can give without veering into the book’s big reveal, which is so heavily entwined with its story that talking about it anyway is difficult. The plot kicks off in their saloon when an enraged Sakaraan shows up to kill Frank.

#Cosmic ghost rider art series#

They feel real, and it’s done without being a fact sheet dump of info or a series of monotonous flashbacks that would rip a reader out of the story. Marlow, the father, and Axelle, the daughter, are given many pages to characterize their relationship, their relationship with Frank, and who they are as people. He’s no longer the Ghost Rider we remember, keeping his past a secret from the father and daughter he now works for. Frank wakes up, suggesting the first few pages of violent casino action. This issue introduces two new side characters and a small-time antagonist. After all, this is an ongoing series, and for one to last, it needs to have the foundations necessary to springboard a long-form narrative. However, this grounded tone isn’t being used to ‘legitimize’ the character but to build a believable world for CGR. This is a benefit to the book itself, even if some fans of the character might be a little disappointed in the direction Phillips is taking the character. While he still maintains a trademark of badassery, Stephanie Phillips is clearly giving us a version of Cosmic Ghost Rider that is a little more grounded. Typically his brand of violence is more gonzo than it is in the opening pages of this issue. He’s unhinged and a little darker than we’ve seen him before. We open on an unnamed space station, where good ol’ Frank is working through an entire casino of people in the name of vengeance. COSMIC GHOST RIDER #1 is a surprisingly slow and somber start to an ongoing title based on a character entrenched in black leather and cosmic spikes.















Cosmic ghost rider art