
Skottie Young should do pencils on this title after he leaves NXM.
I think it would be fun for a few issues if Young used the style he used for those Cable/DP covers he did. Reminds me of the guy who does the art for Fraction's Casanova. But just for a few issues.
Just skip right to the source and get Bachalo on Runaways. Young's art is just a second-rate knock-off of Bachalo's style anyway.
It's a lot less cluttered now. Back in the day, Bachalo's art was crystal-clear. It's only in the last few years that he's started going way overboard with all the minutiae. Around the time he put out stuff like his Vertigo Death mini and early Generation X comics, he was vastly superior to Young in every way. Conversely, Young's work started out utterly horrid and has only just recently started to look even remotely appealing to me.
Yeah, I like Scottie Young. Speaking of Casanova, does it live up to the hype? I know a place where I can get the first 5 issues for $18, and I haven't decided yet.
No way. Bachalo's artwork is cartoony. Young's artwork is animated. There's a huge difference. Young's a lot more stylized and kinetic. It's a lot less cluttered, and it's way more fluid.
I didn't know there was any hype on the book. It's good though. Real good. Like if James Bond was created by Grant Morrison or something. I love it.
His current stuff on X-Men is waaay better than his stuff during Morrison's run. It actually looks pretty good.

I hated that "Assault on Weapon Plus" arc with a burning passion. I couldn't make out what was happening on half the pages.
I've noticed that Bachalo's more recent work on X-Men has been a lot clearer. Almost up there with his Gen X/Death-era stuff. Not a huge fan of his Iceman design, but the clarity of his layouts has greatly improved. Of course, I realized this right before Bachalo got replaced by Ramos.![]()
Same here. I loved JLA: World Without Grown-Ups. I never read Crimson, but I thought his pencils were pretty good on it. I saw his pencils for the first few pages and I could tell they were chock full of technical expertise, so I know he's not a bad artist. He's just taken his style way too far beyond my level of tolerance for exaggeration.
Well, that's part of the problem, too: he keeps getting tapped for straight-forward superhero action stories. I could see his current style working really well on a goofy comedy story or one of the more lighthearted Marvel Age/Adventures comics, but an arc where Wolverine is hunting down a man responsible for killing over 600 men, women, and children? Um... not quite the right tone.