Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Witchblade by Ron Marz #1

Witchblade, Volume 1: Witch Hunt

Rate this book
Superstar writer Ron Marz (Ion, The Darkness) begins his ground-breaking run on Witchblade and, along with artist Mike Choi, gives new readers a perfect jumping-on point! Sara Pezzini awakens from a coma and begins anew with a new partner, new precinct, and a new understanding of the Witchblade. Collecting Witchblade issues #80-85.

160 pages, Paperback

First published February 22, 2006

22 people are currently reading
525 people want to read

About the author

Ron Marz

1,644 books122 followers
Marz is well known for his work on Silver Surfer and Green Lantern, as well as the Marvel vs DC crossover and Batman/Aliens. He also worked on the CrossGen Comics series Scion, Mystic, Sojourn, and The Path. At Dark Horse Comics he created Samurai: Heaven and Earth and various Star Wars comics. He has also done work for Devil’s Due Publishing’s Aftermath line, namely Blade of Kumori. In 1995, he had a brief run on XO-Manowar, for Valiant Comics.

Marz’s more recent works includes a number of Top Cow books including Witchblade and a Cyberforce relaunch. For DC Comics, he has written Ion, a 12 part comic book miniseries that followed the Kyle Rayner character after the One Year Later event, and Tales of the Sinistro Corps Presents: Parallax and Tales of the Sinestro Corps Presents: Ion, two one-shot tie-ins to the Green Lantern crossover, The Sinestro Corps War.

His current creator owned projects include “Dragon Prince” (Top Cow) and “Samurai : Heaven and Earth” (Dark Horse).

Photo by Luigi Novi.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
191 (27%)
4 stars
245 (35%)
3 stars
198 (28%)
2 stars
39 (5%)
1 star
14 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 59 reviews
Profile Image for James DeSantis.
Author 17 books1,204 followers
March 9, 2018
This was pretty dang fun!

So what do we have here? Our main hero Sara waking up for a coma. She still knows who she is and the power she has with the witchblade weapon. We are introduced to a detective named Patrick and together they begin to piece together who wants Sara killed. By the end our hero faces off against the church, well a cult church, but I like to think just church to make me smile. And then...well I won't spoil it but a big ass demon dragon comes to fight!

Good: The art is simple, nice, and clean. Sara and Patrick together are great, a lot of fun banter, and you actually feel the emotions in this one. I also thought the pacing was a perfect way of giving us humor, serious moments, and fights.

Bad: Well, it's safe. No one you expect to not die, dies, and people you expect to get hurt, do, and the plot is simple and easy. You've seen it in a 100 comics before. So playing it safe is really it's only weakness.

Saying it's a simple plot you've seen might sound bad but it's still tons of fun. I'ma go with a 3 out of 5 but I have a feeling this series will grow into something special.
Profile Image for Cathy .
1,932 reviews297 followers
November 11, 2024
I read Witchblade #80 in 2022. I liked the story enough back then to get the first volume, collecting Witchblade issues #80-85.

I knew nothing about the series before picking this up. First published in 1995, this reboot in 2006. There are a gazillion issues in this world and the author does not try very hard to give any backstory in this supposed new entry point to Witchblade. There is a short introduction that spends too much time with the author trying to be witty and too little on introducing the world. So I was scratching my head a lot reading this, because most of the time I had very little understanding of what was going on. Superhero aspects, horror, mystery, the supernatural and a little bit of a police procedural.

The female main character Sara is a police detective in New York and is attracted to „the weird stuff“. The comic starts with her in a hospital bed, comatose and hooked up to machines, watched over by her old partner Jake, who is on administrative leave. She was found that way in the sanctuary of a church a few weeks previously.

F7-EBBFDB-28-AA-4-AB6-83-F7-9-DA79-C776607

Another cop from the commissioner’s office, Gleason, comes to investigate what happened. When Sara wakes up, she doesn‘t remember why she went into the church or what happened.

Sara wears a mysterious armband with a large red stone that turns into the titular Witchblade, a sentient gauntlet and weapon to fight demons. There is a mysterious Asian antiques dealer, who seems to be helping, a catholic priest involved in something shady, a secret brotherhood, a mysterious woman in a superhero outfit, a doomsday plot… It all starts to become a little clearer from part #4 (issue #83?).

The story didn‘t grab me much unfortunately and it took me a good while to get through it. By the time I hit midway, I had to skim through all of it again to get some sense of what was going on. The story wraps up quite nicely with the end of the last issue.

The artwork is ok. The women unfortunately are a little old-school-big-boobs and scantily clad and the guys are square-jawed and good looking. Pretty old school.
Profile Image for Ozan .
131 reviews48 followers
April 3, 2025
The build of this trade is hurrendous, it fell apart in my hands when i was reading... :/ Officer Sara Pezzini had an artifact of great power called Witchblade, she didn't know what excatly it was and how to use it and The Witchblade kind of had its own mind too... Having Wichblade kind of started to ruin Sara's Life. Sara wanted her old life back before the Witchblade, but they seemed to stuck with each other.

The Story was basicly a classic heroic stuff of saving the world with horror elements and cops and priests. Sara Pezzini saved the world from some messed up cult of catholic priests in a catholic church in this volume. You know these 90s Image ,Top Cow heroes always have some christian mytholgy in their lore, Spawn, Witchbalde, Darkness, Magdalena all of them have this common theme going. The art was beautiful, but the writing was not there.
Profile Image for Philip Read.
10 reviews1 follower
September 4, 2017
This book is a sort of soft reboot for the Witchblade series, seemingly intended as an entry point for new readers. To that end, we’re introduced to Detective Patrick Gleason, an audience stand-in who becomes embroiled in protagonist Sara Pezzini’s world of magic and demons.

Pezzini has recently emerged from a coma and the two are on the case to find out exactly what happened 3 weeks ago that put her in that hospital bed.
Their investigation leads to a musty antiques store where they run into the book’s first major misstep; a mystical old chinese man named The Curator. He’s a walking asian stereotype so hackneyed that your eyes might just roll out of your head, replete as he is with Fu-Manchu moustache and long pointed fingernails. The book is mired in cliche but most of them; the secret societies, the ‘will they won’t they’ budding romance, the ‘monster of the week’ set-up, add a schlocky charm to proceedings.

The Artwork by Mike Choi et al is typical Top Cow fair. The heroes have supermodel good looks that border on indistinct (Pezzini appears to be the twin of Lara Croft and Gleason is a dead ringer for every tall dark and handsome hero from Bruce Wayne to Archer) and it’s all rendered in the edgy inks that you would expect from a 2008 mainstream comic. It’s fine for the most part but does really shine in some areas. The organic way the Witchblade writhes and expands into a claw or a suit of armour is particularly well executed, as is the climactic showdown with a towering neon demon.

The art also manages to steer away from the more cynical attempts at titillation that entries in this universe often indulge in. Yes our heroine is a flawless beauty, but she’s a flawless beauty whose clothes remain intact. Cheesecake art as it’s often known can be a lot of fun but when handled badly can seriously undermine attempts to create a grounded, sympathetic character. It helps Sara’s characterisation that the book cares more about what she is saying than what she is wearing.

Unfortunately this books binding is shockingly bad. After only a couple of reads the pages began to come apart in my hands. It’s not just bad luck on my part, I’ve known several people to have the same problem with not only this volume but this series.
For all of its good points, it’s a shame that this book literally falls apart as a physical product.
Profile Image for Matty Dub.
665 reviews8 followers
October 13, 2020
Why am I doing this to myself? This run is eventually drawn by Stjepan Sejic and I need more of his art in my life. This was the closest jumping on point to his art.

The writing would be serviceable with great art and get this book a 3 stars at least but Mike Choi’s art is absolute garbage. When he forgets he’s poorly imitating Jim Lee, his characters look like they’re from a children’s book which would still be a lot better than what we see 80% of the time. He is unapologetically aping Lee and it sucks. It’s ugly as all hell.

The story tells you what Witchblade is, which is good considering I’m jumping on at issue #80 but it’s so underwhelming. The end especially but that’s mostly due to Choi incapable storytelling.

Meh meh meh
Profile Image for Cat Russell  (Addicted2Heroines).
349 reviews210 followers
July 21, 2012
A great graphic novel in a series that I should have started a long time ago.

This is not my first time reading a story by Top Cow Productions, but this is my first introduction to Witchblade.

The story begins with a hospitalized Sara Pezzini and the mystery surrounding the circumstances that brought her there.

We are quickly introduced to two men who play significant roles throughout the story.

Patrick Gleason is the detective tasked with uncovering the events that brought Pezzini to her comatose state in the hospital. Jake McCarthy is Sara's currently suspended partner who waits by her bedside.

Upon Gleason's arrival, Jake becomes hostile and defensive, especially when he begins asking questions, going so far as to imply that they are more than just friends.

Gleason later receives some insight into Sara's condition from a mysterious man known only as the curator. He explains that Sara possesses the Witchblade, an ancient and terrible power that is passed down through generations. Sara must learn to use and harness the power of the Witchblade or the world could be destroyed.

Gleason's reply: "Seems like you've been firing up something a little stronger than incense, old man."

It isn't until an encounter in a dark alley that Gleason sees the Witchblade for himself, witnessing Sara wield its power to defeat two otherworldly creatures who attack her.

After gathering additional information from the curator, they team up to try and stop a group of misguided priests who are determined to bring forth a "new god".

Overall, I thought the story and artwork for Witchblade: Witch Hunt was fantastic! There's action, conspiracy, a bit of romance, and a bad ass heroine that I'm excited to read more about. I immediately ordered Witchblade: Volume 2 and I'm impatiently awaiting its arrival.
Profile Image for Jaki.
16 reviews2 followers
March 1, 2011
Witchblade has always been a favorite of mine. Maybe because the first introduction to it was when I was 12 and I saw a live action TV episode of it. Or perhaps it's because I love this strong female character. She's a complete badass. A smart, determined human being. Yes, there are some religious connotations to this piece of work (and for that matter all of Top Cow's comics), but it never glorifies anything - in all honestly it actually vilifies the church leaders.

I've started late in the whole graphic novel, comic book game; hence why I'm beginning with the volume one of Witchblade's graphic novels. It doesn't start at the very beginning, but I remember the gist of the origins from the Television show I watched. Excited to read the others and get into the mythology that interconnects Sara Pezzini (the Witchblade host) with The Darkness and Jackie Estacado.
Profile Image for Evad.
41 reviews1 follower
October 26, 2009
Bought the book, opened it, started reading and the pages started falling out like leaves on a tree during autumn. I'm not even sure I read it in the right order.
Profile Image for Kevin Blondel.
Author 14 books
May 20, 2024
WITCHBLADE #1 - WITCH HUNT -

PRINTING:
- Colors;
- Hardcover.

CONTENT:
- Introduction;
- Full story arc;
- Cover gallery;
- Approximately 150 pages.

PROS:
- Contemporary narrative qualities;
- Great introduction to the series;
- Horrific influences and an oppressive atmosphere;
- Realistic characters and dialogues -- far from 90's outdated standards.

CONS:
- Unexplained motivations of certain protagonists;
- Frequent and notable graphical shortcuts;
- Questionable characters introduction;
- Clumsy and inconsistent layouts;
- Unexpressive inkline.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
- Positive critical reception led to a complete reboot of the franchise;
- Original series adapted into a TV show and Manga/Anime.

TARGET AUDIENCE:
- Superhero enthusiasts;
- Horror story fans;
- Thriller readers.

RELATED READING:
- "Fathom" by Michael Turner & Bill O’Neil;
- "The Darkness" by Marc Silvestri, David Wohl & Garth Ennis;
- "The Magdalena" by Joe Benitez, David Wohl & Malachy Coney.

RECOMMENDATION:
* * * . .
Profile Image for The Wintermute System.
898 reviews
February 28, 2022
This is a good introduction into the world of Witchblade if you're aware of what the Witchblade is, although I wouldn't suggest it to someone with no knowledge: it explains what the Witchblade is in the vaguest of terms, and someone working with no awareness of what the Witchblade is would be at least a little lost in my opinion.

Still, the way in which the catholic church, and especially bad actors within the church work, propels the story along, as well as having Sara Pezzini, the current bearer of the Witchblade in a coma. When she wakes, an office has been assigned to figure out why she was in a coma. Except Sara's partner doesn't like or trust Patrick Gleason, and Sara is not only unsure if she can trust Gleason, but she has to keep him unaware of the Witchblade and how that effects her life so drastically.

Good writing, good art, could have done a better job of making this readable to those who don't really know the world, so four stars.
Profile Image for Craig Lotter.
74 reviews
November 21, 2025
First thing one has to mention is the absolute appalling build quality of this trade paperback. The page stock is glossy and nice and heavy, but man, you so much look at the book and pages fall out. So just be aware you'll need to keep some glue handy when attempting to read through this book. Other than that, Marz does a competent story that serves as a springboard into the franchise for newcomers. There's demons, a naughty Roman Catholic church, precinct partners and of course an air of mystery. Plenty of action as well. Choi's art is reminiscent of 90's Top Cow, i.e. all the characters look like models and are reasonably difficult to tell apart, but that said, this remains true to the spirit of Witchblade when it first came out, so if you take that into account, then Witch Hunt certainly delivers the perfect expected Witchblade experience.
Profile Image for Vaughn.
179 reviews3 followers
July 21, 2023
This was my first time reading anything about Witchblade, and I liked it more than I expected to.

The story follows police detective Sara Pezzini, who possesses an artifact called the Witchblade, which gives her her powers. She wakes up after a 3 week coma and can't remember what happened to her.

She is joined by another police detective named Patrick Gleeson as they try to uncover what happened to her, a journey which leads to a church conspiracy. Along the way, she battles demonic creatures and meets a mysterious old man who seems to know a lot about her and her Witchblade.

This was a good jumping on point for someone who knows nothing about the character. The writing, characters and art were all very good.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
2,756 reviews36 followers
November 3, 2019
I remember watching Witchblade years ago, so when I had the chance to pick this up at Book Expo years ago, I did. I enjoyed the story and I'm curious to see what happens next. The art is fitting to the story and genre overall. However, I just get so tired of male artist's obsession with drawing disproportionately giant boobs and the cover art/extra art with boobs bursting out of leather and metal. It's completely unnecessary and frankly irritating and distracting from what's going on. Even in a white t-shirt I keep feeling like Sara should fall forward or knock things over every time she turns around -_-
Profile Image for Ari.
56 reviews
July 31, 2021
Witch Hunt is a pretty good introduction to the Witchblade universe, especially for anyone who'd want to skip the Origins volumes (can't blame you).
The core of the story is pretty strong, and a lot tighter than most I've read in similar comics, but held back by its trappings: heaps of orientalism, gender stereotypes that were already tired in 2006, and an uncritical view of police in society. The art doesn't fare much better: while the action panels can be absolutely amazing, there's just too much male-gaze-fanservice and same-face syndrome going on for it to be really great.
Profile Image for Johnny Andrews.
Author 1 book20 followers
March 18, 2021
Collected here are issues 80-85 and a glimpse into Witchblade. If you are totally unfamiliar then it may be a little confusing but still a good read. Sara wakes from a coma and the only thing she knows is something happened in her church. Now with help from a Detective from another precinct to her own she has to find out what happened and in doing so she exposes both her new friend and old partner to her supernatural weapon, a secret cult like group and demonic entities.
Profile Image for wbforeman.
589 reviews3 followers
April 7, 2024
I thought this was gonna be a very 90s image book of very gratuitous female character in poses that don’t make logical sense but I was happily surprised. This was a fun introductory read where I didn’t have to read the 90s books to understand what was going on. The artwork here was mostly solid. It is dated somewhat as it’s that early. 2000s digital artwork, but it wasn’t egregious. Because of my surprise, I raise this book over from three to a four star book.
Profile Image for Mat Davies.
423 reviews5 followers
April 5, 2018
This is a pretty funky comic. There are some really cool images that are reminiscent of Species. The overall panelling is nothing particularly interesting though, and the depictions are on the whole quite standard. However, the action scenes are quite good and there are plenty of them. Not bad at all.
Profile Image for Sam Lidester.
19 reviews1 follower
October 7, 2020
Overall plot is ok but I have some problems with witchblade. I don't normally notice every character is straight white but I honestly have a hard time telling characters apart page to page, they all look so similar it is genuinely confusing. You also need to be prepared for casually sexy art, expect gratuitous ass and cleavage shots during critical conflict. 14 year old boys will love it.
Profile Image for Zec.
416 reviews17 followers
July 31, 2022
A story with no pretension - it starts with an intriguing mystery and the fast-moving plot keeps you hooked. Enjoyed the procedural elements, but felt that the climactic battle was a little rushed. Liked the character of the conflicted priest, wished he featured more, the two detectives... not so much.
Profile Image for Shane1step.
45 reviews
February 11, 2025
Это более лёгкий и современный комикс в общем сюжетном плане: меньше кадров на страницу, они крупнее, действия будто бы меньше в сравнении с прошлым серии. Текст больше в диалогах, но Марц действительно хорошо углубляется в персонажей. Чои клёвый. В общем, уважаемый ран стартует хорошо, но чёткое впечатление о нём у меня сформируется, видимо, через десяток выпусков — с таким-то темпом!
Profile Image for Andries van Wyk.
204 reviews11 followers
May 2, 2020
Art: 🌟🌟⭐️⭐️⭐️ Story: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Really cool story - throws you into the deep end with Sara and the Witchblade. However it doesnt tell anything about how she got it. Hope that is to come in the following issues.
Profile Image for Collier Jennings.
37 reviews
September 5, 2020
A Perfect Jumping On Point

Ron Marz is well known for reviving comic mythos, particularly Green Lantern. Here he begins a lengthy and character defining run on Witchblade, mixing mysticism and superheroics. Mike Choi's artwork is simultaneously scary and scintillating.
2 reviews
April 3, 2018
The story was great. The highly sexualized depiction was not.
Profile Image for John Wright.
713 reviews2 followers
August 18, 2022
A bit more mature and much better plotted. Starting to address issues the series has had since the beginning. And much more pro-woman and less pro-woman’s body.
Profile Image for Abhinav.
Author 11 books70 followers
September 18, 2014
You can read the full review over at my blog:

http://sonsofcorax.wordpress.com/2014...

In the last couple years Top Cow’s Witchblade IP has become one of my favourite reads in comics. Whether it is Witchblade/Sara Pezzini in the pages of Artifacts or Witchblade or in any crossovers here and there, I’ve always loved her as a character. Sara Pezzini to me is one of the best female characters in comics, by far, easily a match for the greats such as Wonder Woman or Storm or Batgirl or Black Widow. And if there is one man out there who has shaped my experience of Sara Pezzini, it is Ron Marz, who has written more Witchblade than any other writer and has had a long run on the core title as well.

Witchblade Volume 1, from my understanding of things, marks a new phase in the life of the protagonist Sara Pezzini as she continues to bear the heavy burden of being the bearer of the Witchblade, a mysterious artifact that has bonded itself to her and has allowed her to face criminals of all stripes and even the more supernatural of individuals. This was Ron’s first arc on the title, and for me it proved to be some of his best work to date, not to mention that the artwork by Mike Choi and others was great as well, capturing the feel of the city and the dark tones of the story.

In this story arc, titled “Witch Hunt“, Ron introduced the character of Detective Patrick Gleason. As someone who has read much more current Witchblade stories than Ron Marz’s incredible seventy-plus issue run, Patrick is a character with whom I am very familiar, for he is Sara’s current partner and also her boyfriend/husband. For me, he is one of the anchoring points of the Sara Pezzini mythology and in Witchblade: Witch Hunt, we get to see how Patrick joins up with Sara and how their relationship develops on a personal level.

With his introduction, we also see a major shake-up in Sara’s supporting cast since her previous partner Jake McCarthy gets the out and a second new character makes an entry, someone who is much more familiar with what the Witchblade is and its history. That is ultimately what really sold me on this arc. I know well about the Witchblade’s origins, and the status it holds as the balance between the powers of the Angelus and the Darkness, their child so to speak. But to see the beginnings of Sara learning all of that for the first time? Well that has an edge of its own, one I loved.

The main story is tied into why Sara fell into a coma in St. Augustine Church a while back. She saw something, experienced something, that has sent her to the hospital for three weeks, and Patrick is there to find out the what and the why. There is an immediate clash of personalities between him and Jake, and him and Sara, since he is the intruder in their lives, a third wheel so to speak. These interactions were handled well and since Ron’s script tends towards lots of dialogue, I had the chance to really understand these characters, to see what made them tick, especially Jake and Patrick.

In many ways, this is a pretty straightforward story of betrayal and conspiracies, but for me it was more than that because Ron’s writing was astounding in almost every way. He always features Sara prominently in any scene she is in and she gets the best lines, by far. The others revolve around her to a great degree and I liked that aspect since often some writers try to explore their central female characters by only looking at them through the supporting male characters. Witchblade: Witch Hunt is not like that, not at all.

In each of the characters there are quirks of personality and attitudes and egos that Ron tries to bring to the front at every opportunity and the whole mystery of Sara’s coma, not to mention the complicity of someone closest to her, is all handled well. For a supernatural horror title like Witchblade, execution matters a great deal, more so than any other genre because horror doesn’t work so well when it is too subtle or too obvious or anything. It needs to be built up properly, with the time taken to craft out the central mystery properly. And here Ron Marz has a whole six issues to do exactly that and the big mystery at the end feels rewarding, because the writer has made the experience of getting to that point worth it. The conspiracy really pays out in the end, and has a great emotional aspect to it as well, though Ron doesn’t oversell it.
Profile Image for Gav451.
749 reviews5 followers
January 28, 2023
Wonderful art, a completely new story and an independent spirit. The story is good and while the hero seems well protected those around her suffer in the battles she endures. In the first volume I liked the way she slowly found her powers and the slow reveal back story, that looks promising.

I was not sure about the mysterious Chinese wise man. Seemed to be lazy story telling.

The action had heft, the writing was solid and this was high concept action thriller with a strong female lead. While the covers hinted at white male gaze I was glad to see we did not get the silly fanboy pleasing costumes in this and that made the story hang together better.

The art is good, this comic has high production values and that made it fun to read as well.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 59 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.