List Price: $12.99Amazon.com's Price: $10.39 You Save: $2.60 (20%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
Buy Now!
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780785116677
ISBN: 0785116672
Label: Marvel Comics
Manufacturer: Marvel Comics
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 96
Publication Date: November 23, 2005
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Reading Level: Young Adult
Sales Rank: 372480
Studio: Marvel Comics
Editorial Review:
Product Description: A classic Fantastic Four villain makes the debut here in Ultimate form, turning the Baxter Building into a virtual trap set to capture and eliminate the fledgling adventurers. And what of the other denizens of the skyscraper, including Johnny and Sue's father Dr. Storm? And who has the power to outthink even the most brilliant man alive, Reed Richards? Wait and see! Plus: the first appearance of the Ultimate Inhumans! From a hidden race, she came to steal the heart of the FF's youngest member. She's the beautiful elemental called Crystal! Collects Ultimate Fantastic Four #19-20 and Annual #1.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
i love the ultimate fantastic four, i think it's the best ultimate book out there (ok tied with ultimate spider-man). the vols. 1-3, and 5-6 are great. but this one sucks. you really don't need to read it at all, i think maybe they were in between writers/artists at the time and just got someone to fill in on issues 19-20. the annual isn't that great either, it just introduces the inhumans (basically johnny meets crystal).
Rating: -
I sincerely hope I wasn't the only one disappointed with "Ultimate Fantastic Four: Inhuman." Because if I was, then I have lost a lot of faith in the human race. This volume wasn't so much a comic book as it was a written turd.
The art sucks, even the cover-page, which others have liked, I have deemed worse than the art I have come to recognize in this series. In the book itself, half the time I couldn't even see what was going on; everyone looked like black blobs talking to one other. ... Read More
Rating: -
I'm a huge fan of the Ultimate lines of X-Men, Spiderman, Ultimate(Avengers), and of course the Fantastic Four. For that reason, I am deeply upset with how UFF Vol. 4: Inhuman turned out. First off, this cover is way too decieving. Jae Lee, while an obviously talented artist, is definitely not the write person to be drawing for the Ultimate series. It completely veered away from the amazing artwork done in the first 3 volumes, which is pretty much the uniform look for the entire Ultimate universe. ... Read More
Rating: -
I picked up "Ultimate Fantastic Four, vol. 4: Inhuman," at my local library yesterday, and though many may think what I did was premature, I borrowed it and read it anyway. The paperback is pretty thin thus only containing issues #19 (Think Tank Part One), #20 (Think Tank Part Two - Finale), and #1 Annual issue (Inhuman). First off to get this out of the way: The cover art is probably the biggest missleader for me. Being someone who is an avid follower of ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN ... Read More
Rating: -
The "Ultimate FF" series starts to hit its stride here, having finally gotten past all the set-up and exposition, and settles into adventure-oriented stories that take only one or two issues to tell (as opposed to longer story arcs of previous volumes). In this sense it begins to feel like the old, original FF, back in the early days of Kirby and Lee.
The revamped, postmodern Mad Thinker is a real gas -- one of the most interesting, most creepily psychotic Marvel baddies I've seen in years ... Read More
|