Fantastic Four #577 (1998)

Fantastic Four #577 (1998)

$5.00
VERY FINE/NEAR MINT
Written by JONATHAN HICKMAN
Penciled by DALE EAGLESHAM
Cover by ALAN DAVIS
On the Blue Area of the Moon, the Fantastic Four discover that the history of the Inhumans runs much deeper, and richer, than previously believed. It's big adventure on a cosmic scale, its Prime Elements part three: Universal Inhumans!
Date Available: 03/31/2010
BONUS REVIEW by GARY OWENS

Hickman, early into his run with the FF, wants to make his stamp. This month it’s on the Inhumans. For those continuity addicts, you will like the historical recap here, and the natural extension that unfolds from it. Interesting, yes, though it’s incomplete; he skips the reason that the Inhumans moved to the Blue Area, and it appears that the Inhumans have been hiding vital information. And Dire Wraths, without ROM? Well, maybe they’re something else, yes, probably. And, for me, ending the comic with text should be an exception, rather than the rule. Overall, it had fine art, most of the issue works, but the bookends needed polishing. I like Hickman, but I’m still waiting for a down-to-earth FF story. Not everything FF needs to span time, space, and/or dimensions.
I give it 6 out of 10 Grahams
VERY FINE/NEAR MINT
Written by JONATHAN HICKMAN
Penciled by DALE EAGLESHAM
Cover by ALAN DAVIS
On the Blue Area of the Moon, the Fantastic Four discover that the history of the Inhumans runs much deeper, and richer, than previously believed. It's big adventure on a cosmic scale, its Prime Elements part three: Universal Inhumans!
Date Available: 03/31/2010
BONUS REVIEW by GARY OWENS

Hickman, early into his run with the FF, wants to make his stamp. This month it’s on the Inhumans. For those continuity addicts, you will like the historical recap here, and the natural extension that unfolds from it. Interesting, yes, though it’s incomplete; he skips the reason that the Inhumans moved to the Blue Area, and it appears that the Inhumans have been hiding vital information. And Dire Wraths, without ROM? Well, maybe they’re something else, yes, probably. And, for me, ending the comic with text should be an exception, rather than the rule. Overall, it had fine art, most of the issue works, but the bookends needed polishing. I like Hickman, but I’m still waiting for a down-to-earth FF story. Not everything FF needs to span time, space, and/or dimensions.
I give it 6 out of 10 Grahams
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