
by Andy Diggle (writer), Roberto De La Torre (art), Matt Hollingsworth (colors), and Joe Caramagna (letters)
The Story: Foggy seeks out Daredevil and Dakota attempts to rescue Becky.
What’s Good: Last month’s Daredevil seemed to finally find itself, deciding to dedicate itself to the tribulations of Daredevil’s buddies Foggy and Dakota, characters who had been utterly neglected and whose perspectives should be invaluable. Given Daredevil’s uneven quality of late, I wasn’t sure if Diggle would stick with this commitment, but he does. Daredevil #511 focuses once again on Daredevil’s unique cast of friends and that’s good news in itself.
The end result is a book that feels really moody, desperate, and atmospheric. It, unlike the main Shadowland series, captures just how dark and insane Hell’s Kitchen has become. You really get the sense of New York’s devolving into an anarchic hell of indiscriminate and irrational violence and rage. In so doing, this issue really makes it clear how this is something that Shadowland, the main series, should’ve doing much earlier. The mood established this month and the depiction of Hell’s Kitchen’s madness and the price of Shadowland’s establishment and the events within are made clear this month, and it’s solid and it makes Shadowland appear all the more lacking by comparison.
De La Torre also continues to crank out great Daredevil art. It’s dark and gritty as usual, but in capturing the riotous, insane Hell’s Kitchen core, there’s a constant sense of derangement to De La Torre’s art, owing to his rough lines and shading. Better still, thanks in part to Matt Hollingsworth’s colours, the interiors of Shadowland remove some of the darkness in exchange for an undertone of disease and sickness.
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Filed under: Marvel Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Alex Evans, Alex Kurtz, Andy Diggle, Becky Blake, Comic Book Reviews, comic reviews, Dakota North, Daredevil, Daredevil #511, Daredevil #511 review, Detective Kurtz, Elektra, foggy, Foggy Nelson, Hand Ninja, hand ninjas, Hell's Kitchen, Iron Fist, Luke Cage, Marvel Comics, Marvel Universe, Matt Hollingsworth, New Avengers, New York, New York City, NYC, Roberto De La Torre, Shadowland, Spider-Man, the Hand, Weekly Comic Book Review, White Tiger | Leave a comment »