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Sajan Saini and Frank Espinosa's Spider-Man story is the most enjoyable segment of the entire debut issue, with Espinosa's artwork giving the friendly neighborhood web-slinger a more raw, unorthodox style that doubles down on punk rock energy. And while Ross' visuals are darker than usual, it befits Nightmare's approach and shifts along with the epilogue to complement the shakier opening. Fortunately, the issue's epilogue rectifies this by answering some of these questions, but making Nightmare the anthology's ghost host is a murky way to open the series. This prologue is one of the weaker parts of the issue, unintentionally ambiguous and overly reliant on exposition as the nature of Nightmare's latest scheme unfolds. Ross and Steve Darnall craft the framing story, with Ross providing his signature painted style as Nightmare weaves his tale. RELATED: Marvels X #1 Brings End of the World Tragedy The next takes place shortly after Captain America first joins the Avengers, as the team addresses its complicated dynamic with the Hulk in the way that they know best, while Nightmare's role in the wider story is gradually revealed. The first is an unseen, offbeat tale starring Spider-Man and his relationship with his webbing across his entire superhero career. With the omnipotent supernatural villain Nightmare providing an overarching narrative framing device for the anthology, the opening issue focuses on two separate stories. And, in its debut issue, the new effort is largely a rousing a success. Marvel is a six-issue miniseries representing Ross' original vision for Marvels: An anthology miniseries blending established and new voices to the Marvel characters journeying through the universe's history.
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Over 20 years after Ross teamed up with Kurt Busiek for the universally acclaimed miniseries Marvels, Ross and Busiek have reunited for a new miniseries that provides its own unique exploration of the Marvel Universe's extensive history and, this time, they're not alone. In a lot of ways, Alex Ross has changed the way people see superhero comic books by celebrating and visually reinventing the medium's history.