Full description not available
R**S
Headlining arc is the best part
I bought this for the premise of Daredevil dealing with a snowstorm and I certainly got that. There are some great panels for the art style to work with. The story is about Daredevil trying to get a heart to a little girl that needs the transfer while the city is buried in snow. It's a nice little mini arc. The other issues that are included in this trade are rather forgettable sadly. I read this maybe a month ago and don't remember what those other issues are about, save from maybe a panel or two.
J**O
Marvel should make more Dark Nights...
Lee Weeks, David Lapham, and Jimmy Palmiotti give you three distinct stand alone tales of Daredevil that are sure to have you wanting another collection of Dark Nights from Marvel. Overall, the writing is good, and the art is great all around. Weeks' writes and draws the first story, Lapham does the same for the second, and Palmiotti and Thony Silas take care of the third. The first two stories were great, I couldn't pick a favorite really, but the last was just ok. I would of given this book a higher rating if the last story was better.
P**R
Mixed bags within mixed bags
If this was an attempt at an ongoing Daredevil anthology, you can see why it was canceled.All three stories in this collection vary significantly in atmosphere between each other, and then each one varies significantly within itself in quality.Lee Weeks efforts are much like his DD work long since passed when he was tagged alongside bad writers, the art is AWESOME, evocative, humanist, a prime example of that ineffable 80s style. But the writing meanders and drags as slow as if you were knee deep in snow.The next story is the first lackluster thing I've read from David Lapham. It's an obvious throwback to Silver Age Marvel with a handful of modern grit tossed in, but it just doesn't work. Not as comedic and not as serious. It's shining point is it has a perfect ending that's so good, it makes the entire thing worth reading.The last story is probably the best and most even. Jimmy Palmiotti writes a sort of fun and fast-paced adventure whose only dip in quality lies in its by-the-numbers approach.None of these are great, and I think when you read Daredevil, a quality of greatness is what you expect.
A**N
Lee Weeks returns Christian morals to Daredevil
I found Weeks' story to be refreshing in an age where every superhero is an "anti-hero." The stories in this anthology, especially the Weeks tale, present a character who strives to do everything he can to help those in need. There are no in Weeks' story. It's about Daredevil's trek through the blizzard to help a family in crisis. Weeks provides quotes from scripture to present the Christian morals that drive Daredevil. This is something most writers (and publishers) don't touch anymore, likely because they don't want to offend non-Christian readers. However, in an age when Captain America is Christian but never talks about it or goes to church, I'm glad Marvel and Weeks were willing to write and publish this story.
K**R
Early is good.
The first few stories are really good but then they turn stereotypical and last couple of ones are horrible. Four stars for the good stories.
B**N
the Lee Weeks story is probably the best one. the rest are just okay
it's just alright. the Lee Weeks story is probably the best one. the rest are just okay.
J**N
Daredevil Dark nights Fantastic!
this is amazing as we see daredevil pushed to the limits in order to save a little girl who is in desperate need of a heart transplant but when the helicopter goes down in one of the worst blizzards in new york daredevil will have to weather the storm to get the heart to them before it's to lateThe greatest talents in comics bring you gorgeous new stories featuring the Man Without Fear! First, a blizzard brings New York to a standstill - and a little girl in desperate need of a heart transplant lies on death's door, unless Daredevil can get to her in time! The trouble is, DD is recovering from a severe concussion...but although everything may stand in his way, nothing will stop Daredevil from rescuing a young life! Then, Daredevil's life gets a voltage of violence from the Shocker! Matt Murdock must track a fugitive and reclaim the stolen evidence Matt needs to protect his innocent client - while the Avengers confront some massive monster mayhem in the streets of NYC! It's a race against time, but just another day for Daredevil!
G**R
Enjoyable super hero storytelling
This collection of an eight issue mini-series gives us the super side of a superhero. Daredevil gives us a great character to start: Matt Murdock, blind lawyer is also Daredevil, the man without fear, swinging around NYC and righting wrongs. He's been through a lot of evolutions in character, all pf which has been great storytelling. Here, we have a lighter, less burdened hero fighting the good fight with compassion. It's a welcome return.Although the writing is handled by different authors, the series hangs together fine and is a nice read.
C**R
Lee Weeks SHINES!
Excellent first story with incredible art by Lee Weeks (the only reason I bought it) and he can write too!A Man Named Buggit written and drawn by David Lapham I can't take seriously. I don't mind poor writing if I can drool over the art (it's never a good sign when I can draw better than the artist!). Here we have a tiny man (related to Krusty the Clown?) running around and... no. Mr Weeks could have saved it.Last story's art is better (still not good enough for Daredevil) but Jimmy P seems to have forgotten this is Daredevil. Very strange.
C**O
Ottimi disegni. Bellissima storia
Un fumetto da leggere per gli appassionati di daredevil. Se non avete problemi con l'inglese è un volume conveniente e in anteprima rispetto alle uscite italiane divise in più albi
A**R
It is one of the best daredevil stories out
The first story is worth the buy. It is one of the best daredevil stories out there
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 month ago