Reviews

Shutter Volume 3: Quo Vadis by Joe Keatinge

chantale's review

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3.0

The second volumes's ending made me question if I wanted to read this further. I chanced this volume and it's decent. Will read the 4th and see.

jesnevertheless's review

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5.0

God Shutter just gets better and better for me! The dialog, the humor! It's all in here. THIS is what a good comic is supposed to be! I can't wait to keep reading this series.

I'm really glad that we get so many answers in this volume but damn do I have so many more questions now! Shutter is a never ending story line, and I'm here for it!

glitterandtwang's review

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3.0

This is likely where Shutter and I part ways. I liked the initial two volumes, but it's gotten too muddled for me. The art is lovely, the idea is nice, but Keatinge doesn't focus on one story long enough for me to get a grip on it and connect with the characters. Alas.

lyrafay12's review against another edition

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5.0

Slightly more chaotic than its previous installments but overall Shutter is still providing a classic story that everyone should read.

emaks's review against another edition

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4.0

This series continues to be amazingly bananas. About the same level of action violence, absurdity, and humor as Saga.

divineblkpearl's review against another edition

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3.0

While I love the journey the creative team has brought us on I had some problems following the story--all these siblings and family ties and secrets were starting to become hard to grasp. Still I read on and because I know at times in comics, you need a few more issues or even another story arc to bring into fruition what was originally started. Del Luca's art is the constant thing keeps me grounded while reading even when things don't all makes sense. Still worth following.

therainbowshelf's review against another edition

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2.0

I'm actually pretty confused. A bunch of characters show up in flashy ways that suggest I should already know who they are, some characters appear in the last few panels with no introduction whatsoever, and declarations are made at the end that sound like the result of a lot of exploration and development. Is this just how the book reads, or is there extra content that appears between volumes 2 and 3? Because at the end, I was feeling less and less involved in what was happening and more like I was just kinda eavesdropping.
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