

This series lasted 22 issues, after which it was continued into All-New Hawkeye Vol.1 with a new team. In this series Barton continues to have problems with the Russian gangsters. Ive never read Hawkeye prior to this series and its been a bit of a revelation, never expected it to be this good. Plus, can he balance a relationship and a friendship with a certain red-headed Russian spy, ex-wife, and flirtatious femme fatale? The series had one Hawkeye Annual. This is book 2 of the Matt Fraction Hawkeye series that follows the lives of Clint Barton and Kate Bishop (the young Hawkeye) outside of the Avengers.

Clint Barton becomes a landlord and a pet owner, but in the process makes some deadly enemies. The legendary superhero during his time when he is NOT being an Avenger. Get ready for the next Hawkeye comic book series debuting November 24 - the same day as the Hawkeye show.The second Hawkeye ongoing series by Matt Fraction and David Aja, the creative team behind Immortal Iron Fist. Hawkeye #6 is available now in single-issue form or as part of the collection Hawkeye Volume 2: Little Hits. Hawkguy is the gift that keeps on giving. Hawkeye, by Matt Fraction, David Aja, and Javier Pulido When Marvel assigned Fraction to Hawkeye, they didn’t put much effort into marketing it, and Fraction’s has confirmed that the team fully expected they’d be off the book after six issues. It's nothing you expected and everything you wanted. It's a character piece, a quiet assurance for a Christmas night. What Hawkeye is is a human story with spurts of superhuman potential.

I know that plenty of superhero fans out there want cosmic action, broad visual storytelling, stakes that shake the universe and alter heroes forever. The small panels also really set us up for the big, quiet, expansive moments - there's a beat where Clint stands his ground that absolutely makes the book, and that's all based on Aja's salesmanship. Hawkeye, Volume 2: Little Hits - Book 2 of the Hawkeye (2012. Every page winds up having a method to the layout madness, like the DVR instructions lining the side of one sequence - there's a real sense of design at play here, and it adds a deliberateness that you don't really see anywhere else.

Tons of small square panels dot the page, but surprisingly that doesn't muddy the emotions behind his David Mazzuchelli-style faces. What an interesting artist - Aja really flies in the face of widescreen storytelling, instead favoring almost the opposite approach. (Image credit: David Aja/Matt Hollingsworth/Chris Eliopoulos (Marvel Comics))Īnd I haven't even gotten to the return of David Aja with this issue yet.
