The comic book panel is like an atom. With just a handful of them, you can build anything.

Shocking reveals, narrative mic drops — even comedic timing, in a medium in which timing itself is in the hands of the reader. The search for a “best panel” is not the same as a search for “best comic.” It’s the search an ineffably striking moment captured on the page, an image that forces a reaction from you even if you have no idea what the comic is about. Here are the 10 comic panels from 2022 that we can’t stop thinking about.

(And for more on what’s happening in the pages of our favorite comics, make sure to read Monday Funnies, Polygon’s weekly list of the books that our comics editor enjoyed this past week.)


Supergirl cradling Comet’s corpse

Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, Tom King, Bilquis Evely, Mat Lopes, Clayton Cowles

Against a backdrop of blinding sun and billowing clouds in a blue sky, a bloodied and battered Supergirl cradles the body of her companion Comet, his naked form wrapped in her tattered cape, and says “I don’t know. Maybe you just. need a little help,” in Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow.

Image: Tom King, Bilquis Evely, Mat Lopes, Clayton Cowles/DC Comics

The question isn’t “Is one of the best panels of the year in Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow?” It’s “Which panel in Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow do I choose?” I’ve previously said Woman of Tomorrow is the most Sandman-like thing Tom King has written, and while some portion of that is the semi-contained fable of each issue, it’s also the craft that artist Bilquis Evely brings to the comic’s worldbuilding, in a space adventure by way of the inexplicable creatures of Star Wars rather than the scientifically enumerated biomes of Star Trek.

But what makes Evely’s single panels wondrous is her compositions and her acting. Artists have used the iconography of Superman to recreate Michelangelo’s Pietá before, but Evely may have done it best, choreographing cape and clouds and sun onto the essential pose. Where Evely draws Kara Zor-El with a gaze hard enough to pierce the reader’s heart, Mat Lopes pops her irises with ice blue flecks, his work a carefully conducted symphony, emphasizing the important even as it highlights Evely’s intricate linework.

Jen Walters off her heels

She-Hulk, Rainbow Rowel, Rogê Antônio, Rico Renzi, Joe Caramagna

Titania, with a stop sign resting casually on her shoulder, sneeringly asks how it is that Jen Walters keeps successfully reinventing herself, while she keeps “landing on my face!” A pissed Jen looks at her in silence for a panel. The next panel shows her feet, kicking off her purple heels. The next panel shows her face again, but cuts off the bottom of it because she’s shorter now. “Maybe it’s because you keep picking fights with Hulks,” she answers in She-Hulk #1 (2022).

Image: Rainbow Rowel, Rogê Antônio, Rico Renzi, Joe Caramagna/Marvel Comics

Sometimes a great panel is three panels, like Rainbow Rowel and Rogê Antônio pulling off this small but perfect visual gag in the first issue of their She-Hulk. We don’t think of a comic book panel as having its own point of perspective, as a frame of a movie has a point where the camera was placed. But Rowel and Antônio show that it can be really funny if you do.

The sublime freeze frames of Do a Power Bomb

Do a Power Bomb, Daniel Warren Johnson

Lona Steelrose launches off the corner into her signature flying move, hanging suspended upside down in the air above the wrestling ring. Her opponent, a sentient orangutan, lies fearful in her shadow. The ref is gripping his head with both hands. The crowd is going absolutely insane. In Do A Power Bomb.

Image: Daniel Warren Johnson/Image Comics

The story of Do a Power Bomb is that Daniel Warren Johnson got into professional wrestling for the first time during the pandemic, and this is his love letter. There is not a page of Power Bomb that’s ashamed or sheepish of its subject matter, it’s all sincerity, all camp, all heart, and all spectacle. But where the comic takes your breath away is movement.

Comics are a deceptively still medium, in which we use phrases like “motion lines” to mean “a developed iconography of abstract lines which are invisible to the characters but indicate to the reader that motion has occured.” Wrestling, on the other hand, is a pastime in which movement — literally “wrestling moves” — are the entire deal.

Johnson takes the eye of a Renaissance painter to Power Bomb. He picks the exact moments that convey both previous and impending motion; the exact point in the shot where somebody like Zack Snyder would switch to slo-mo; the moment every voice in a crowd would gasp in unison — and blows a split second out on the page so that the tension and beauty of it hangs forever.

Not an angry god, but an angry friend

Batman #127, Chip Zdarsky, Jorge Jimenez, Tomeu Morey, Clayton Cowles

Superman is a dark silhouette, frost streaming from his mouth, only the whites of his eyes to communicate his disapproval. “I’m going to need you,” he says to the Failsafe robot, “to back away from my friend” in Batman #127 (2022).

Image: Chip Zdarsky, Jorge Jimenez, Tomeu Morey, Clayton Cowles/DC Comics

Hollywood has made sure that we all know the iconography of an angry Superman — he floats impossibly in the sky, his eyes glowing a radioactively furious red, a promise that looks can kill and maybe he will too. And look, red-eye angry Superman is a temptingly strong visual. But Batman #127 says: It’s also a crutch.

What if instead, Superman’s anger was righteous and controlled, a protective reflex? What if it wasn’t a burning laser, but an icy breath that douses a house fire and hangs in the air as he makes a final attempt at deescalation? What if we know that Superman is angry because his eyes are simply those of a protector defending his friend, rather than an enraged god destroying his enemies?

Hitting the ground running

Saga #55, Brian K. Vaughan, Fiona Staples

“This is how an idea survives,” reads narration text, as Hazel runs from a voice accusing her of thievery, clutching her blue top hat to her head in Saga #55.

Image: Brian K. Vaughan, Fiona Staples/Image Comics

Writer Brian K. Vaughan and artist Fiona Staple’s epic is the exception that breaks every rule in American comics publishing — a hit with Wednesday Warriors and trade-waiters alike that only grows more popular over time, never loses narrative steam, and will probably never get optioned for a cinematic adaptation. At least not until Hollywood is chill with an X-rated, hyperviolent, special effects-heavy family adventure.

In 2022 Saga faced another rule to break: Returning from a three-and-a-half year hiatus with, if anything, a bigger audience than the book had when it paused in 2018. Even more remarkable, the only thing there really was to say about Saga #55 was that it was just as good as Saga #54.

It felt like the book had never left. And it’s a testament to Vaughan and Staples’ talents that the first panel of their comeback is a simple reframing of the very first page of their comic, and a jump cut-style time jump, yet still felt like the natural next step.

The passion of Victor Fries

Batman: One Bad Day — Mr. Freeze, Gerry Duggan, Matteo Scalera, Dave Stewart, Deron Bennett

Depicted in icy blues and black negative space, Victor Fries falls to his knees in agony before the capsule that holds his sick wife in frozen stasis in Batman: One Bad Day — Mr. Freeze.

Image: Gerry Duggan, Matteo Scalera, Dave Stewart, Deron Bennett/DC Comics

It’s hard to give a well-known story a fresh retelling, but that’s what DC Comics has been doing all year with it’s Batman: One Bad Day line: Handing the origin stories of the biggest names in Batman’s Rogues Gallery over to the biggest talents working for the company. Batman: One Bad Day — Mr. Freeze stands out from its peers, not least because of Matteo Scalera’s beautiful use of negative space (not to mention the borrowing of Mike Mignola’s indelible character designs created for Batman: The Animated Series).

But credit to writer Gerry Duggan: He gives Scalera the space to work. Mister Freeze is littered with full page spreads, each worthy of framing. But this one stands out. The essence of a tragic villain’s turning point, distilled to a single, impeccably composed frame.

How to introduce yourself

Step by Bloody Step, Si Spurrier, Matias Bergara, Mat Lopes

A snowy landscape of the bank of a still and icy stream. On the left, a small, naked child reaches for the glowing fruit of a dangling plant. On the right, in the distance, a larger than life figure in a suit of black armor battles messily in the snow with a fanged monster in Step by Bloody Step.

Image: Si Spurrier, Matias Bergara, Mat Lopes/Image Comics

Comic books don’t have opening credits sequences, full of scrolling words and scene setting montages — but if they did, this double page spread is surely where Si Spurrier and Matias Bergara’s names would appear. Spurrier and Bergara take a few pages to introduce the central duo of their opus — the naked child and the armored guardian — and then pull out to introduce the comic’s third character: the hostile, helpful, wondrous world around them.

Part of the hook of Step by Bloody Step is that it’s completely wordless, but this page is where Spurrier and Bergara remind their reader to be quiet, too. By taking a moment away from continuing the story to underscore their intentions and their talents, Spurrier and Bergara are introducing themselves as much as their comic.

Superman in a Pride cape

DC Pride 2022, Devin Grayson, Nick Robles, Triona Tree Farrell, Aditya Bidikar

Jon Kent/Superman smooches his boyfriend Jay in mid air above a Gay Pride parade. Jon’s cape is lined with every different pride flag imaginable in DC Pride 2022.

Image: Devin Grayson, Nick Robles, Triona Tree Farrell, Aditya Bidikar/DC Comics

Corporations should stay out of Pride — and deep down, Big Two superheroes are populist iconography, as the closest thing America has to modern folk heroes. We can recognize the truth of both of these ideas at the same time. In terms of story impact, it doesn’t get much stronger than making Superman into a potential PFLAG parent.

And we can recognize that even if a “Superman” is Clark Kent’s son, rather than Clark Kent himself, having Superman make out with his boyfriend in mid air above a Pride parade while he wears a cape lined with every Pride flag the artist can fit on it is potent iconography, and a powerful statement.

Judgment Day arrives

AXE: Judgment Day #4, Kieron Gillen, Valerio Schiti, Marte Gracia, Clayton Cowles

Human bodies fall suspended, disintegrating in a blast from above. The small figure of Captain America raises his shield against the blast uselessly; the person he cradles against his chest is already a crumbling skeleton in AXE: Judgment Day #4.

Image: Kieron Gillen, Valerio Schiti, Marte Gracia, Clayton Cowles/Marvel Comics

AXE: Judgment Day was the best Marvel Comics spectacle in years, but there’s just one image from the event series and its voluminous tie-ins that is stuck indelibly in my brain. It’s mortals disintegrating under the wrath of god, while the tiny silhouette of Captain America stalwartly raises his shield — and the cosmic forces turn the innocent in his arms to a husk anyway.

Judgment Day constantly reminded the reader of the human stakes of the end of the world, and the vast gap between the struggle of average citizens to avoid god-meted carnage, and the super-strong, super-regenerative, in-many-cases-literally-deathless heroes who fail to protect them. Even Captain America, Marvel’s most iconic everyman, survives when every man around him is obliterated.

It’s a necessary dichotomy for a story where two of Marvel’s most powerful groups of superheroes — the Eternals and the Mutants — ultimately realize they must change how they share their gifts, and this single panel explains what just took me over 100 words to say.

Hera’s prophecy

Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons #2, Kelly Sue DeConnick, Gene Ha, Wesley Wong, Clayton Cowles

“Not a THOUSAND,” Hera roars, swinging her fan. Feathers fly off of it in the curve of the Golden Spiral, the feathers transform into birds, and behind all of it are scenes of women suffering and fighting through all history, in Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons.

Image: Kelly Sue DeConnick, Gene Ha, Wesley Wong, Clayton Cowles/DC Comics

The goddess Athena tells Hera, whose thousand eyes see a thousand futures, that she would like to keep the woman-avenging Amazons hidden from Zeus’ retribution “long enough for women to see justice.”

Hera sighs in sadness. “There will be no justice for women. Not now.” Her lip curls and her brows furrow in divine disgust, as she imperiously raises her fan. “Not a hundred years from now.”

Then you turn the page.

Sometimes a panel is so brilliantly conceived, so beautifully crafted, so flawlessly executed, so emphatically presented in its original form, that there’s simply no better way to tell someone how good it is than to press a book into their hands and beg, “Read this, read this, read this.”



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