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| SPACE GHOST No. 11, March 2025 |
In addition, the former crime reporter simply regurgitates a number of the cosmic vigilante’s most formidable enemies without even bothering to explain to the audience just how the majority of them ever managed to escape custody, or join forces with the ever evil Doctor Xander Ibal. Such evident omissions genuinely make it almost impossible for Pepose’s penmanship to prove even semi-convincing; especially when it concerns the supposedly dead Zorak who shockingly just turns up alive and well on the planet Orkon having viciously slain poor Commander Kovacs.
Similarly as unsettling though has to be the sheer serendipity of Space Ghost’s latest full-blown argument with his proteges, which results in the trio angrily departing their home in a spaceship just as the giant space mantis arrives to kill his arch-nemesis. This rather obvious manufactured moment provides the “award-winning writer of Punisher” with the opportunity to once again recycle one of his seemingly favourite twists, by having the adolescents dash back to their badly-beaten mentor just as he’s about to succumb to the injuries caused by his unrelenting enemies.
Fortunately for those who picked this particular publication up off the spinner rack, Jonathan Lau and Andrew Dalhouse are on top form, with both artists imbuing this rather fast-paced affair with all the pulse-pounding panels its script requires. In fact, it’s debatably a pity that the pair weren’t given the sheet space of a second issue to work with, as so many thoroughly enjoyable clashes between Dax and his ‘Rogues Gallery’ are frustratingly crammed into just a couple of pictures rather than be given the room they deserve – such as when he cleverly uses the Widow’s Web to smash the woman straight into an over-confident Brak.
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| The regular cover art of "SPACE GHOST" #11 by Francesco Mattina |


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