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Individual issue reviews: #11 | #12 | #13 | #14 | #15Total review score: 4.2
Total meh. Finally gave up digging it out of the “I surely should finish it but can’t be arsed to lift those uninspiring pages” pile.
1st two volumes were better.
Great collection, as good as the show!
The first story arc seems to always be the longer plot. It's interesting to see how that's worked out so far.This one starts with a little bit of head inception, a memory within a memory, being looked at a few moments before everything goes down. The plot manages to make you feel for the characters, then pulls back into the usual Rick and Morty comedy that dissipates the feels, and then it makes you feel again - and then we end with a happy moment once again, cause it always works out for Rick.T...
Rick and Morty Vol 3 was not as good as the first two volumes. I don't know if it was just me or this story was the same one in vol 2 told in a different way. There were many similarities in both the stories and reading one after the other took all the fun out of this one!
i liked it.
Typically over-the-top in zaniness and imagination, this 3rd volume of Rick and Forty comics was fun. It was perhaps less so than the previous two as the stories do get a tiny bit repetitive over time and because, to be honest, I prefer to see the animated versions to the in-print ones. For the hard-core R&M fans, this is a must-have in any case.
(2.75) sort of seemed forced.
If you like the show you'll like the comics.
The moment of laugh out loud moments in this Volume was great! Definitely earned me some gazes in the break room at work. Stories this time:- When Rick's disembodied head is found in the garage and Morty is nowhere to be found, the family fears the worst. In truth, Rick and Morty are on an adventure instead the Rick head. Encountering aliens existing only in Rick's imagination, they seem to be having a great time, until IRL Jerry starts messing with a powerful dimensional searching toaster in th...
Blind faith that differs vitally from your neighbour's. Soon it will drive you to build a WALL. Sounds like someone I know, trying to build a wall.*slowly drinking tea*Fun as always, a little bit slow this time. Raises a lot of questions and mentions some serious topics.Helps with Gr's challenge too.Rating: 3.5 stars That's it! thank you for reading. I love writing short reviews.
The first two volumes of Rick & Morty comics were so well done that reading them was almost like watching the show. The art, the dialogue, the plots - all pitch perfect.Volume 3 is a sudden and unexpected turn in the wrong direction, and smells like a rush job. The main story has a very similar plot to Volume 2 (did they even read the previous volume?) with Summer and Beth functioning as resistance fighters in a convoluted tale that has poor artwork, at least one typo, and a panel that makes no
Maybe not the best volume in the series, but it was still a lot of twisted & disturbing fun.
This was an awful compilation. Lots of text. Radomness. Not funny stories. The first two were good, but this was just bad.
So I've read volumes 1 - 6 plus the one set in a pocket dimension and I plan on finishing them in case they improve or some piece of vital R&M lore is brought to light. In the mean time I will simply copy and paste this review for all the books. The truth is that these books aren't written nearly as well as the tv show. The prime example is story about Jerry from doofus Rick's universe (I think in volume 4). This Jerry is hyper competent, even to the point of being able to beat C-137 Rick, but t...
Tom Fowler comes on board as the writer and creates a couple stories worthy of the show. I especially enjoyed the roasting of sports, sports fandom and gambling in the final tale.
I am very pleasantly surprised by how well the comic book "Rick and Morty" stories hold up to the animated series, which is probably my favorite thing on TV. The twisted humor, the ridiculous self-awareness, the existentialism, Jerry's perpetual insecurities...And speaking of Jerry, volume 3 gives him a chance to shine like the pathetic diamond he is: in the first story, his fiddling with Rick's toaster brings on a alien invasion that ends up setting up the Smith family in a weird Dune-like univ...
I was glad for this to be over. It's overwritten and has very few funny moments. :( I liked this series better when Zac Gorman was writing it.
To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand Rick and Morty. The humour is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical physics most of the jokes will go over a typical viewer’s head. There’s also Rick’s nihilistic outlook, which is deftly woven into his characterisation- his personal philosophy draws heavily from Narodnaya Volya literature, for instance. The fans understand this stuff; they have the intellectual capacity to truly appreciate the depths of these jokes,