COMICS CAN BE AWESOME (December)

2018’s final monthly reminder that comics can be awesome…

Jupiter’s Circle #1

Jupiter’s Circle (v2) #1

Justice League of America 207

Justice League of America #207

Gødland #12

Gødland #12
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My ideal deluxe omnibus volume – part 3

If you read the last posts, you know what’s going on. Here are another ten stories that would definitely be included if I had a chance to put together a giant Batman omnibus collecting personal favorites:

 

  1. ‘Devil’s Advocate’ (Joker: Devil’s Advocate, cover-dated February 1996), by Chuck Dixon (script), Graham Nolan (pencils), Scott Hanna (inks), Pat Garrahy (colors), John Costanza (letters)

The Joker - Devil's Advocate

‘Devil’s Advocate’ is a serious – albeit very funny – contender for greatest Joker comic of all time (up there with ‘The Laughing Fish,’ ‘The Killing Joke,’ and ‘Mad Love’). In this one-shot about the Clown Prince of Crime finally standing trial and going to jail with a looming death sentence, Chuck Dixon and Graham Nolan bring together much of the cast of their Detective Comics run, from the detective duo of Harvey Bullock and Renée Montoya to the staff and inmates at Blackgate prison (where we get a priceless gag involving a harmonica), plus a handful of cameos. Also from that run, we get a clear narrative with smooth art and pitch-perfect dialogue (Alfred about Bruce: ‘He’s like all great detectives. He possesses a deep-seated loathing for mysteries.’). Dixon has often gone back to the notion that Batman, more than refusing to kill the Joker, is actually willing to repeatedly go out of his way to save his enemy’s life. That becomes a key point in ‘Devil’s Advocate,’ which (as the title suggests) is all about the discomfort of applying higher ideals of justice even to the benefit of someone hateful, i.e. the kind of moral dilemmas and ends-vs-means tension that shapes Batman’s crusade from the start. This is surely not a unique instance of popular fiction provocatively integrating a topic as complex and grim as capital punishment (the brutal Mission: Impossible episode ‘The Execution’ comes to mind), but it’s impressive how the book does it in such a slapstick and ingeniously plotted way. (93 pages)

  1. ‘Perpetual Mourning’ (Batman: Black and White #1, cover-dated June 1996), by Ted McKeever (script, art), John Workman (letters)

batman - black & white #1

It’s only eight pages, but ‘Perpetual Mourning’ takes readers for what is possibly Batman comics’ most powerful and heartbreaking ride. We follow the Dark Knight as he examines a woman’s corpse and puts together clues about her and her murder. This framing device allows Ted McKeever to not only showcase Batman’s skills as the World’s Greatest Detective, but also highlight his solitary dedication to the pursuit of justice for the victims of violent crime (Warren Ellis and Jim Lee would go on to do a neat variation of this device in the short story ‘To Become the Bat’). That said, the main impact comes from McKeever’s introspective prose over the noirish black & white art, plus the beautiful symbolic interludes with the dancing couple. A masterpiece. (8 pages)

  1. ‘Devil’s Trumpet’ (Batman: Black and White #1, cover-dated June 1996), by Archie Goodwin (script), José Muñoz (art), Phil Felix (letters)

devil's trumpetAs if ‘Perpetual Mourning’ wasn’t enough, the same issue of the original Batman: Black & White mini-series featured this awesome story by two giants of the medium. José Muñoz’s expressionistic art is even closer to film noir than Ted McKeever’s. Meanwhile, Archie Goodwin’s script, which focuses on a musician desperate to get his hands on a mythical trumpet, feels like a throwback to his work for Warren’s horror anthologies Creepy and Eerie, except that it culminates with the Dark Knight suddenly showing up like a scary avenging angel. I’m just a sucker for these peripheral narratives in which Batman is not the star but a silhouetted force of nature that shapes Gotham City’s urban legends and the lives of petty criminals who get in over their heads… (8 pages)

  1. ‘Through the Long Night’ (Batman & Robin Adventures #20, cover-dated July 1997), by Ty Templeton (script), Brandon Kruse (pencils), Terry Beatty (inks), Linda Medley (colors), Tim Harkins (letters)

Batman & Robin Adventures 20

I’m also a huge fan of Ty Templeton’s run in the Adventure books, where he penned a wonderful string of unpretentious, action-packed, and often quite funny self-contained tales. His Batman and Robin were a swell, heroic team who hated guns and saved the day by outwitting their adversaries, which is not to say that they didn’t kick plenty of butts along the way. ‘Through the Long Night’ does one of my favorite tricks, which is to imagine how a place like Gotham would actually work – if you think about it, of course the local cops would regularly bet on how many crooks the Dynamic Duo could catch before the end of the night shift (and of course there’d be a street gang called ‘The Vampires’). Moreover, true to character, while the Caped Crusader and the Teen Wonder relentlessly fought one group of criminals after another (plus an angry dog), of course police detective Harvey Bullock would keep trying to improve his odds. Sure, the premise is simple, but the execution makes this a real treat. (22 pages)

  1. ‘Claws’ (Gotham Adventures #4, cover-dated September 1998), by Ty Templeton (script), Rick Burchett (pencils), Terry Beatty (inks), Lee Loughridge, Zylonol (colors), Tim Harkins (letters)

Catwoman: ClawsAnother Templeton-written gem, with even niftier visuals thanks to Rick Burchett’s stylishly angular pencils. Last time I wrote about it, this is what I had to say: ‘Selina [Kyle]’s obsession with cats has spurred quite a few anti-vivisection stories throughout the years. You can argue that escapist superhero comics may not be a suited forum for such a topic (in contrast to, say, Scottish anarcho-punk), but this tale from Gotham Adventures pulls it off, because the story isn’t just preachy, it’s faithful to the character. It’s also a great example of Batman’s and Catwoman’s flirty yet doomed relationship, as their morals keep getting in the way of their romance.’ (22 pages)

  1. ‘The Hill’ (The Hill, cover-dated May 2000), by Christopher Priest (script), Shawn Martinbrough (pencils), John Lowe, Shawn Martinbrough (inks), Ben Dimagmaliw (colors), John Costanza (letters)

Batman PriestAn underappreciated one-shot about Batman facing the limits of his impact (and, by extension, the limits of the superhero archetype he embodies) as well as, more broadly, America’s failure to grasp and respond to the trials of its poorer communities. I’ve written about this one as well: ‘As hard as it is to write Batman stories informed by social realism, Christopher Priest pulls it off with confidence in this crime tale set in the Hill, Gotham City’s ghetto for the disenfranchised African-American community. Basically, the Dark Knight goes after a local kingpin but has to face the fact that people in the Hill are exposed to so much drama and violence in their everyday lives that they hardly give a damn about some white guy in a cape. Artists Shawn Martinbrough and John Lowe help keep the comic tight, with a cinematic flow, although the narrative could have benefited from some decompression – it would have been more powerful and easy to follow if the various characters had been given more room to breathe. Regardless, Priest delivers pre-The Wire dialogue rich with urban slang and deals with the topic of social exclusion in a way that may be superficial but doesn’t come across as insultingly naïve or annoyingly preachy. Even better, he gives us a Bruce Wayne for whom both the Batman disguise and his douchebag playboy persona are means to an end, and who is willing to fully reinvent himself in order to achieve his aims.’ (39 pages)

 

  1. ‘Deathtrap A-Go-Go!’ (Batman Adventures (v2) #9, cover-dated February 2004), by Gabe Soria (script), Dean Haspiel (art), Zylonol (colors), Nick J. Napolitano (letters)

batman adventures #9

From the blog’s archive: ‘In an abandoned warehouse somewhere in Gotham, the Dynamic Duo, surrounded by monsters and caught in a deathtrap with time ticking away until their supposed demise (or as Batman might as well call it, just another night), discuss the very concept of ‘deathtrap.’ What the comic lacks in plot, it more than makes up for in hilarious gags and one-liners. Less a metafictional satire of a ridiculous trope than a celebration of its imaginative potential, there are enough ideas in these 17 pages to fill in a 2-year run by today’s pacing standards.’ Of particular note is the amazing splash page with the Scarecrow’s boobytrapped House of Horrors, where each division works as a comic panel, so that we can simultaneously see the Caped Crusader wrestle a tentacled creature on the first floor and decapitate a zombie at the ground level. (17 pages)

 

  1. ‘Dead Robin’ (Gotham Central #33-36, cover-dated September-December 2005), by Ed Brubaker, Greg Rucka (script), Kano (pencils), Stefano Gaudiano (inks), Lee Loughridge (colors), Clem Robins (letters)

Gotham Central #33

Going back to the realist end of the spectrum, Gotham Central explored Batman’s hometown through the eyes of the Major Crimes Unit. One of the finest police procedurals ever, this comic has it all: nuanced characterization, moody art, and credible, adult storytelling about what it’s like to be a detective in a city where, every time you kick down a door, you may come across a mad killer armed with a freezing ray. Gotham Central’s greatest story arc is arguably ‘Dead Robin,’ a four-parter that kicks off with a corpse who may or may not be the Boy Wonder. Greg Rucka and Ed Brubaker (two of the medium’s most talented crime writers) get a lot of mileage out of the police’s limited perspective – the protagonists aren’t even sure if there is more than one Robin around and they rightfully suspect Batman is conducting his own parallel investigation just beyond their sight (like when they arrive at Arkham, only to find most inmates suffering from recent injuries…). When the Dark Knight does show up, it feels suitably shocking and terrifying. There are callbacks to previous arcs and character development (references to Corrigan’s corruption, Chandler’s grudge against Batman) as well as a subtext about Batman’s trauma over the death of his previous sidekick, Jason Todd, but ‘Dead Robin’ stands well on its own as a rounded mystery full of cool scenes. (88 pages)

  1. ‘Help Wanted’ (Batman: The Brave and the Bold (v2) #10, cover-dated October 2011), by Sholly Fish (script), Rick Burchett (pencils), Dan Davis (inks), Guy Major (colors), Sal Cipriano (letters)

batman brave and bold 10

With its cartoony designs and superhero-heavy team-ups, the 21st century iteration of The Brave and the Bold couldn’t be more distant from Gotham Central – like its precursor, the series thrives on boisterous escapades in which the Caped Crusader faces deliriously fantastic threats with the same practical, straight-faced attitude he deals with Gotham’s street-level crime (the same spirit that informs this year’s weird animated romp Batman Ninja, in which the Dark Knight hardly blinks after being thrown into the middle of mecha battles in feudal Japan). Yet this is not an awkward transition, as this issue also allows us to see Batman through someone else’s perspective, which – as you’ve probably gathered by now – is something that really appeals to me. Besides the Eisneresque gesture of treating the masked hero as a supporting character in the lives of ordinary people, it’s just refreshing to get a closer look at the quirky world around what is usually the main action. Told from the point of view of a professional henchman, ‘Help Wanted’ is a great example of how you can tell this kind of story and still finish on a poignant note about the Caped Crusader himself. Plus, despite the upbeat, all-ages-friendly tone, I cannot help but sense a mild satire about how today’s precarious job market encourages us to pursue increasingly risky, immoral gigs for ruthless employers… (20 pages)

 

  1. ‘Earthly Delights, Scenes from a Work in Progress’ (Batman and Robin #26, cover-dated October 2011), by David Hine (script), Greg Tocchini, Andrei Bressan (art), Artur Fujita (colors), Pat Brosseau (letters)

Batman And Robin #26

Let’s finish with a reminder of Batman comics’ rich history of blending a supposedly unsophisticated genre with nods to more respected culture and formal experimentation, this one from the prolific Dick-Grayson-as-Batman era. It’s another issue I’ve written about before and I’ll definitely revisit it in the future: ‘The Dynamic Duo gets called in by Nightrunner (AKA the French Dark Knight) when there is a breakout at the Parisian version of Arkham Asylum. What ensues is a surreal battle among an upside-down Louvre and an insane mob whose collective id has been magically unleashed. The twist is that, because it’s France, the villains are all mind-bending and highbrow, their crimes channeling various arts, such as film, architecture, sculpture, painting, performance, and literature. Writer David Hine planned for a longer storyline but ended up getting only one issue, so he crammed all his fascinating ideas into 20 pages of madness. Hine, who is a master craftsman of bizarre, conceptual comics (if you don’t believe me, check out his Bulletproof Coffin), breaks the issue into sub-sections paying homage to specific creators, from René Magritte to Man Ray. The result is fun, challenging, and sometimes mesmerizing. No wonder Hine decided to open the comic with the word ‘Dada.’’ All in all, it’s a dazzling piece of work, with Greg Tocchini’s and Andrei Bressan’s art, Artur Fujita’s colors, and the letters of Pat Brosseau (as Patrick Brosseau) more than living up to Hine’s idiosyncratic script. (20 pages)

Total page number from all these comics: 914. Add to that some of the covers, plus a thought-provoking intro by Mark Waid, and you’d have one hell of a volume!

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My ideal deluxe omnibus volume – part 2

If you read the last post, you know what’s going on. Here are another ten stories that would definitely be included if I had a chance to put together a giant Batman omnibus collecting personal favorites:

  1. ‘The Underworld Olympics ‘76!’ (Batman #272-275, cover-dated February-May 1976), by David V. Reed (script), Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Ernie Chua (pencils), Ernie Chua, Frank McLaughlin, Tex Blaisdell (inks), Ben Oda (letters)

BATMAN 272

In this underrated 4-part saga, Gotham hosts the International Crime Olympics, a competition between master criminals from across the world. It’s a goofy premise, albeit one with a precedent – back in 1952, Bill Finger and Dick Sprang did a domestic take on this idea (in ‘The Olympic Games of Crime!’). Here, writer David Vern (as David V. Reed) spins an intricate yarn packed with non-stop fights, traps, and puzzles. In each issue, one of the teams – South American, European, Afro-Asian, North American – has to complete a set of challenges while the World’s Greatest Detective tries to deduct what they’re doing. While it’s not original for a Batman adventure to resemble a game, ‘The Underworld Olympics ‘76!’ goes further than most by playing directly with the notion that anything can be a sport if you treat it that way… Some of the ethnic depictions (drawn by Ernie Chan, as Ernie Chua) may not fit too well with current sensibilities, but there is still a lot about these comics that retains my affection. For one thing, they feature one my favorite characters: Gotham City. The city’s geography and culture play a big role in the story, from the Cleopatra’s Needle obelisk to the Gotham Colonial Minute Men Corps, from the Humphrey Bogart Festival to the hyper-organized underworld. I also enjoy the quirky ways in which Reed brings foreign politics into the comic, including a pre-Brexit British crook whose nationalism gets him in trouble with the other Europeans – especially with the Soviet thief, who is all about team work and internationalism! By contrast, the Dark Knight’s Americanness is emphasized through an amusing panel in which he points a finger at a Rhodesian outlaw (who, unlike his countrymen at the time, doesn’t seem to have anything against the black people in his team) and yells ‘Uncle Batman wants you!’ (72 pages)

 

12. ‘To Kill a Legend’ (Detective Comics #500, cover-dated March 1981), by Alan Brennert (script), Dick Giordano (art), Adrienne Roy (colors), John Costanza (letters)

to kill a legendI toyed with the idea of putting this one in the list of essential Batman comics. It’s a minor classic, for sure, but I ultimately decided that it isn’t really ‘essential’ because it didn’t leave much of a mark in the long run (in the sense that later authors haven’t built on it). That said, people *should* read it anyway, because it’s such a brilliant tale. In this companion piece to Bill Finger’s expansions of the background of the Waynes’ murder (in ‘The Origin of the Batman!’ and ‘The First Batman’), the Phantom Stranger sends the Dynamic Duo to a parallel Earth where history is about to repeat itself, giving them the opportunity to prevent this version of Bruce’s parents from being killed. ‘To Kill a Legend’ has a nice time with the notion of Batman and Robin in a world where they regain their primordial oddness, since nobody has ever seen anyone like them (‘if we told you the truth – you’d have us committed instantly!’). The concept goes beyond realism, though. Instead of settling for the boring twist of taking our heroes to a world that’s unfamiliar to them but familiar to us, writer Alan Brennert comes up with a world without heroic mythology at all (‘No Robin Hood – no Camelot – no Hercules, Odysseus, Gilgamesh’), one where crooks faint at the sight of the Caped Crusader! This raises the stakes, as Robin realizes that by preventing Batman’s origin they may be depriving the world of its first hero, which creates an interesting moral dilemma. The way the story solves that dilemma is ingenious and touching, leading to one of the most inspiring endings in the franchise. While it’s not a perfect comic (the premise is somewhat undermined by a panel showing that Sherlock Holmes books do exist in this universe), it confirms Alan Brennert’s incredible knack for powerful characterization (seriously, I could’ve gone with any of his other stories for this slot). (19 pages)

  1. ‘Smell of Brimstone, Stench of Death!’ (The Brave and the Bold #200, cover-dated July 1983), by Mike W. Barr (script), Dave Gibbons (art), Gary Martin (inks), Adrienne Roy (colors), Dave Gibbons, Gaspar Saladino (letters)

batman vs batmanAlso taking advantage of DC’s multiverse, Mike W. Barr wrote this super-enjoyable crossover between Batman’s Golden and Bronze Ages. I’ve written about this one before: ‘The first half of the story is set on Earth-2 (where Batman’s earliest adventures took place, in the 1940s and 1950s), pitting the Caped Crusader against a Satan-themed villain called Brimstone. Barr’s writing perfectly captures the tone of a more innocent age, from the playful pun-based clues to Commissioner Gordon’s underwritten role, to the buildings decorated with giant props. Much of the merit goes to artist Dave Gibbons, of course, as well as to Gary Martin, who inked this Earth-2 sequence. Yet what makes the comic awesome is that in the second part of the story Brimstone travels to the current reality (of 1983, when the comic came out), giving Barr the opportunity to tackle the near-apocalyptic feel of that period, in a tale of street gangs, racial riots, and social breakdown. Like the first part, this doesn’t come across as a spoof so much as a straightforward tale written with a different sensibility. Indeed, this section of the issue could have easily belonged to any mainstream comic of the time (including those penned by Barr). By pairing it with the Earth-2 pastiche, though, Mike W. Barr gives us a wonderful viewpoint into the evolution of Batman storytelling. And again Gibbons, who has yet to meet a challenge he cannot match, poignantly illustrates this contrast by delivering some totally ‘80s art.’ (40 pages)

 

14. ‘…The Player on the Other Side!’ (Batman Special #1, cover-dated April 1984), by Mike. W. Barr (script), Michael Golden (art), Mike DeCarlo (inks), Adrienne Roy (colors), Todd Klein (letters)

the wrathAnother minor classic. Barr revisits elements from ‘There is No Hope in Crime Alley!’’ in order to interrogate what makes Batman who is he and what it would look like if he had directed his determination in the opposite direction. The more I reread it, the more I find small moments and ideas I like (even if Barr misses a good opportunity to fully engage with the pertinent question of Batman’s tolerance for murder committed by cops). Again, I wrote about this one here. This is how I described it: ‘It tells the story of a kid who saw his parents killed by the police on the same day that Bruce’s parents were gunned down by Joe Chill and grew up to be an avenging cop-killer known as The Wrath – the symmetrical opposite to Batman. A similar idea has since been used on other villains (including Bane and Prometheus, not to mention a recent reboot of the Wrath himself), but Barr really takes the doppelgänger notion in interesting directions. And so do artists Michael Golden and Mike DeCarlo, who pull off a costume based around the ‘W’ in Wrath that smoothly parallels Batman’s cowl. Drawing on the homonymous works by Aldous Huxley, Manfred B. Lee, and Frederic Dannay (the latter two best known as Ellery Queen), ‘The Player on the Other Side!’ uses the mirror concept to explore what ultimately defines Batman. Notably, the comic illustrates the importance of the supporting cast (Gordon, Alfred, Leslie) in how the Dark Knight eventually turned out.’ (40 pages)

  1. ‘The Dark Rider/At the Heart of Stone’ (Batman #393-394, cover-dated March-April 1986), Doug Moench (script), Paul Gulacy (art), Adrienne Roy (colors), John Costanza (letters)

heart of stoneThe most Cold War-shaped entry on the list. At a time when film producers desperately struggled to convert the James Bond series into conventional 80s’ action movies (in the passable Never Say Never Again and in the awful License to Kill), Batman starred in a Bond-style two-parter that’s truly worthy of its era’s brand of heart-racing, badass thrillers. It was still done during the golden years of Doug Moench and Paul Gulacy, when the former filled his scripts with subtle subtext and unsubtle wordplay (complaining that they are sitting and waiting while the Dynamic Duo takes care of things, Bullock tells Gordon: ‘I’d offer one of my stogies, Commish, but all’s I got are used butts.’) and the latter’s art hadn’t devolved into mostly rubber-looking cheesecake (Adrienne Roy’s muted colors and the fact that Gulacy inked himself certainly help). I love these comics so much than I will write more about them soon. Meanwhile, this is what I highlighted the first time I brought them up in the blog: ‘As far as I’m concerned, the best use of the Soviet-agent-gone-rogue trope takes place in Batman #393-394, one of the greatest Batman stories of the ‘80s (which is saying something). On the face of it, it’s just more of the same: a renegade KGB operative out of Bulgaria, called the Dark Rider, wants to carry out a terrorist attack against the US, so Batman partners up with a Russian spy, Katia, in order to stop him and prevent war between their nations. This tale fits into the tradition of grand espionage adventures, with the Caped Crusader chasing a plutonium-filled MacGuffin (the pre-revolutionary statue of a Cossack horseman, which comes to represent the Dark Rider himself) through Venice, Bonn, Moscow, and Switzerland, all brought to life by Paul Gulacy’s breathtakingly cinematographic art. The whole thing is packed with neat, little touches… When sieging the Dark Rider in the story’s climax, Katia says ‘We split up here – I’ll go around the back.’ and Robin points out that’s usually the Batman’s line, to which she replies ‘It will take more than a “line” to save this night.’ However, in the end the Dynamic Duo save everyone precisely by wrapping an actual line around the Dark Rider’s feet!’ (46 pages)

  1. ‘Fever/Fever Break!’ (Detective Comics #583-584, cover-dated February-March 1984), by Alan Grant, John Wagner (script), Norm Breyfogle (pencils), Kim DeMulder, Steve Mitchell (inks), Adrienne Roy (colors), Todd Klein (letters)

Detective Comics 584

The first story-arc by the awesome duo of Norm Breyfogle and Alan Grant (at this stage still co-writing with John Wagner) hits the ground running, encapsulating the mix of overblown fury, violence, and macabre comedy that characterizes much of their subsequent collaborations. They approach Batman comics as exploitation fiction: the opening pages deliver a pure slice of 1980s’ grit, even before zooming in on a couple of drugged up kids attacking a cat and setting an old man on fire. This sets up a nasty tale about the Dark Knight going after the dealers behind a new designer drug called ‘fever,’ only to end up facing a psycho ventriloquist and his gangster puppet, Scarface (who kind of anticipates Joe Pesci’s terrifying performance in Goodfellas). Along the way, Breyfogle gets to show off by drawing brutal murders, ultra-dynamic action scenes, a trippy climax, and a twisted punchline. Besides his art, what makes this work for me is the overall contrast between downbeat realism, sensationalist hysteria (everyone is on edge in these comics!), and a gleeful flair for the grotesque. Once again, Gotham City comes across as genuinely idiosyncratic – if you think there’s something wrong with our society, just multiply it by a thousand… This helps contextualize Batman as more than a lunatic vigilante tackling recognizable social issues: it shows that Gotham has weird-ass crime and, therefore, a weird-ass crimefighter. (44 pages)

  1. ‘The Eye of the Beholder’ (Batman Annual #14, cover-dated 1990), by Andrew Helfer (script), Chris Sprouse (pencils), Steve Mitchell (inks), Adrienne Roy (colors), John Costanza (letters)

Eye of the BeholdersSpeaking of grim stories, this deliberately paced reimagining of Two-Face’s origin is not afraid to go into some seriously dark places, including a subplot about child abuse. It’s true – I also like it when Batman comics play it straight every once in a while, especially when they do such a damn fine job of it. Part crime yarn, part psychological drama, ‘The Eye of the Beholder’ is full of strong character moments from the early days of the Dark Knight’s career, like when our hero and then-Captain Jim Gordon discuss the possibility of murdering a serial killer while still trying to figure out how this whole vigilante thing should work. A tale of desperate men in a cruel world, this is a worthy follow-up to the acclaimed Batman: Year One, from which it borrows a mature, hardboiled style. I wouldn’t be surprised if it partly inspired Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight. In fact, I honestly can’t understand why it doesn’t show up in fans’ lists more often. It’s that good.  (55 pages)

 

  1. ‘The Hungry Grass!’ (Detective Comics #629, cover-dated May 1991), by Peter Milligan (script), Jim Aparo (pencils), Steve Leialoha (inks), Adrienne Roy (colors), John Costanza (letters)

detective comics 629

An eerie tale about being literally haunted by the past. The starting point is a tragic villain called Hungry, who uses a magical grass to wreck chaos upon Gotham City, making petty, senseless demands – for example, everyone has to wear a red hat and wash the sidewalk with toothbrushes. From there, the story keeps getting stranger and more convoluted (and, for once, it doesn’t disregard the effects of police brutally). Because the script is by Peter Milligan, it finishes with a touch of existential malaise. As is typical of his collaborations with Jim Aparo, though, ‘The Hungry Grass!’ is not just thoughtful, but also highly entertaining – their partnership exceled at a bizarre type of horror, punctuated with offbeat humor (‘Why can’t he demand money or something that makes sense? This is seriously unamerican, Batman…’), in some ways reminiscent of David Lynch (whose career arc is the subject of a conversation within the comic, at one point). (22 pages)

  1. ‘Inquiring Minds/Let the Puzzlement Fit the Crime/Malled’ (Detective Comics #647-649, cover-dated August-September 1992), by Chuck Dixon (script), Tom Lyle (pencils), Scott Hanna (inks), Adrienne Roy (colors), John Costanza (letters)

Detective Comics #648

In this witty story arc, the Z-list villain Cluemaster, fresh out of prison, returns to a life of crime and wisely decides to stop sending clues to the police about his future capers (‘You see, I would use my puzzlements as a way of compensating for a lack of self-esteem. I wanted to show my intellectual superiority. But thanks to the wonders of modern psychiatry, all I want now is to be rich.’), yet someone else starts sending clues for him. Pick any issue from Chuck Dixon’s first year in Detective Comics and you are bound to strike gold. His characters behaved as if they were in a smart, mostly grounded crime series, even if some of them wore spandex costumes. The plots typically involved exciting heists, further fleshing out Gotham’s landmarks and city life in the process – in the same way that New York itself became a character in heist movies like the original The Taking of Pelham 123, Dog Day Afternoon, or Inside Man. This three-parter has many of Dixon’s trademarks, including a healthy dose of Gotham politics (it’s set against an upcoming mayoral election, with Commissioner Gordon being used as pawn) and a smooth way of revealing the answers to each clue (a trick Dixon continued to develop in later stories about the Riddler). As a bonus, this also marks the debut of Spoiler, another one of my favorite members of Batman’s supporting cast. (66 pages)

  1. ‘The Last Riddler Story’ (The Batman Adventures #10, cover-dated July 1993), by Kelley Puckett (script), Mike Parobeck (pencils), Rick Burchett (inks), Rick Taylor (colors), Tim Harkins (letters)

batman adventures #10

An all-around fun comic, with a cool geeky subtext. I also wrote about this one before: ‘In this laugh-out-loud issue, writer Kelley Puckett and penciller Mike Parobeck (vigorously inked by Rick Burchett) pit the Dark Knight against no less than four hilariously dysfunctional villains. There is Mastermind, whose planning is so meticulous that he even brings his own handcuffs just in case he gets caught, Mr. Nice, who is such a swell guy that he is guilt-tripped into sharing his loot with the people he is robbing, the Perfesser, who is more interested in lecturing pedantically to his accomplice than in completing the actual crimes, and the Riddler himself, for whom actually getting away scot-free is much less important than coming up with a riddle Batman cannot solve. Besides the over-the-top comedy, chock-full of one-liners and sight gags, the issue deserves credit for telling a great Riddler story, one that has a lot of fun with this villain’s eccentric personality. Moreover – as a bonus for comic book geeks – there is a neat metafictional angle, as each of the remaining foes is based on a senior DC editor, namely Mike Carlin, Denny O’Neil, and Archie Goodwin.’ (22 pages)

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My ideal deluxe omnibus volume – part 1

A couple of months ago, I listed a bunch of comics I assume every Batman fan will come across, sooner or later. With that out of the way, let us move on to some of my personal favorites – i.e. to stories I keep returning to over and over again (and which I think everyone should read as well, even if not all of them can be considered classics or masterpieces). I’ll stick to stories that are less than 100 pages just to prevent the selection from feeling *too* uneven, even though the story sizes can still vary a lot within such a wide range (and even though it means setting aside two brilliant mini-series written by Dave Gibbons: 1990’s World’s Finest and 1992’s Batman versus Predator). So, if I was to put together a giant tome that conveniently collected 30 of these tales, this is what you would find inside:

1. ‘The Trial of Titus Keyes!’ (Batman #20, cover-dated December 1943-January 1944), by Bill Finger (script), Bob Kane (pencils), Jerry Robinson (inks), George Roussos (letters)

Batman 20

An early experiment in storytelling, probably influenced by Citizen Kane and/or Will Eisner’s The Spirit.  I wrote about my love for this story here, including the following lines: ‘Bill Finger was in top form here, crafting a neat courtroom procedural around an innocent-looking man being trialed as an arch-criminal. The comic features many staples of the genre, such as agitated examinations and cross-examinations, a last minute surprise witness, and a plot twist every couple of pages. Finger cleverly figured out a strategy to weave in the action scenes and madcap excitement readers expected from a Batman comic: basically, although the main narrative thread takes place in court, the witnesses’ testimonies become flashbacks revealing parts of the case, namely the parts where Batman and Robin kick butt and take names.’ (12 pages.)

 

2. ‘Next Stop – Danger!’ (Batman #43, cover-dated October-November 1947), by Bill Finger (script), Jim Mooney (pencils), Ray Burnley (inks), Ira Schnapp (letters)

Batman 43

I just can’t get enough of Golden Age stories about how average citizens can be, in their own way, almost as heroic as the Dynamic Duo. In ‘Next Stop – Danger!,’ we follow the paths of a bored subway driver, a blind beggar, an uninspired playwright, a desperate woman, a guilt-ridden newspaper boy, and a couple of wanted racketeers, all of whom end up playing a role in an action-packed Batman adventure (although perhaps it makes more sense to say that Batman is the one playing a supporting role in their own personal sagas). Writer Don Cameron had already toyed with a similar structure five years earlier, in ‘Destination Unknown’ (also taking place in a train ride), but Bill Finger really elevates the idea in this version by imbuing the cast with quite a heartfelt degree of humanity and hints of postwar malaise. I talked a little bit more about it here. (13 pages)

 

3. ‘The Parasols of Plunder’ (Batman #70, cover-dated April-May 1952), by Bill Woolfolk (script), Bob Kane, Lew Schwartz (pencils), Charles Paris (inks)

Batman 70

Because Batman comics are also about eccentric villains, wacky plans, and surreal set pieces… There is something charmingly naive about this tale in which the Penguin (‘that grotesque bird of ill-omen’) starts an umbrella business and spends much of the story trying to get the Caped Crusader to endorse his products. The Penguin may be one of Batman’s least interesting rogues in terms of personality, but his looks, his obsession with birds, and his use of umbrellas as weapons often provide fun visuals. ‘The Parasols of Plunder’ is a great example, as it’s full of memorably outlandish confrontations, all of them delightfully brought to life on the page (according to the Grand Comics database, Bob Kane drew the Dynamic Duo and Lew Sayre Schwartz drew the rest, as part of their arrangement at the time). One of the high points is a page that begins with what could’ve been a poster for Jacques Demy’s beautiful musical The Umbrellas of Cherbourg and finishes with a dozen businessmen hilariously hurled through the air by a magnetic statue of Alexander Hamilton. (12 pages)

 

4. ‘The Nine Worlds of Batman!’ (Detective Comics #208, cover-dated June 1954), by Ed Herron (script), Dick Sprang (pencils), Charles Paris (inks)

detective comics 208

I had to include at least one story drawn by the great Dick Sprang, probably the most popular and influential of Bob Kane’s ghost artists – and the one who visually defined Batman’s transition into the bonkers world of psychedelic science fiction, in the 1950s. In ‘The Nine Worlds of Batman!,’ Sprang gets to go wild with the designs for high-tech machinery and space suits as the World’s Greatest Detective investigates a whodunit at the Space Research College, where each testing chamber turns into a deathtrap. We thus get one of my favorite aspects of Batman comics, which is how they tend to put an offbeat spin on their zeitgeist’s fears and obsessions – in this case, on the Atomic Age’s misuses of science and dreams of space exploration (you can say it was DC’s lighthearted response to the kind of thoughtful, somber sci-fi EC Comics was cranking out at the time, now collected in books like Spawn of Mars and other stories). As a bonus, the action is deliciously hectic (in the first page alone, criminals blow up a bank with a missile, the Dynamic Duo solve a case before speeding to a new crime scene, and Batman figures out an important clue while Commissioner Gordon screams hysterically) and the mystery plot is pretty cool as well, with Batman and Robin trying – and not always succeeding – to stay one step ahead of the criminals. Pure pulpy goodness. (12 pages)

 

5. ‘The Strange Death of Batman!’ (Detective Comics #347, cover-dated January 1966), by Gardner Fox (script), Carmine Infantino (pencils), Joe Giella (inks), Gaspar Saladino (letters)

detective comics 347

After a courtroom drama and a sci-fi thriller, we get an entry that taps into some of the most appealing tropes of the superhero genre, from its playful reflexivity to the endless potential of multidimensional continuities. That said, who would’ve thought that an issue about an ill-defined villain who looks like a giant rubber ball could be so unforgettable? Obviously, part of the reason is Carmine Infantino’s slick drawing style, which turned the Bouncer’s frenetic, ricochet-prone antics into a thing of grace and beauty. But let’s face it: as fun as it is to see the Bouncer’s confrontations with the Dynamic Duo (who fight him by using their knowledge of elasticity and induction heating, because Gardner Fox never missed a chance to cram some nerdy factoids into his comics), the real high point is the final act of the story, which takes a bizarre metafictional turn… and the twists keep on coming until the end. The result is a lovely ode to Silver Age imagination. (14 pages)

 

6. ‘The Angel, the Rock and the Cowl!’ (The Brave and the Bold #84, cover-dated June-July 1969), by Bob Haney (script), Neal Adams (art), Ben Oda (letters)

The brave and the bold 84

Chronology be damned: in this kickass spy yarn, a still relatively young-looking Batman has a flashback about the time he fought in World War II and bumped into DC’s resident war hero, Sgt Rock. I like my Batman comics with manic energy and a brazenly tasteless attitude, so this one is right up my alley… Bob Haney’s adrenaline-charged script has a James Bond-ish Bruce Wayne – in and out of costume – jump from a motorcycle into a moving airplane, throw a grenade against a German aircraft before parachuting into occupied France, and beat up Nazis every couple of pages. Part of the reason this works so well is Neal Adams’ art, which at the time was muscular yet elegant: thinking of it cinematically, it had the ‘sophisticated adventure’ feel of Michael Powell’s and Emeric Pressburger’s earlier collaborations (like Contraband) and the lush, gothic atmosphere of Hammer classics (like The Curse of Frankenstein). Irresistible. (23 pages)

 

7. ‘Legend of the Key Hook Lighthouse!’ (Detective Comics #414, cover-dated August 1971), by Denny O’Neil (script), Irv Novick (pencils), Dick Giordano (inks), Gaspar Saladino (letters)

detective comics 414

Denny O’Neil’s run in Batman/Detective Comics from the early 1970s holds a special place in my heart – together with Batman Adventures and the Alan Grant/Norm Breyfogle run, these formed my platonic ideal of Batman comics. And it’s not just the classic tales O’Neil wrote for Neal Adams, it’s also the lesser-known stories pencilled by Irv Novick, a veteran of the medium who played almost as big a role as Adams in terms of updating the Dark Knight into an athletic – yet fallible – adventurer who moved between the worlds of gothic horror and film noir. (Dick Giordano, who inked both Adams and Novick, clearly deserves much of the credit as well!). ‘Legend of the Key Hook Lighthouse!’ combines much of what made these comics so great, from the empathic characterization (including a particularly engaging female character) to O’Neil’s purple prose (‘This is the one who exists to right wrongs! – A mind bright as tungsten flamed cased in a superb body’), from the haunting images (Batman emerging from the darkness, the general’s hand in the water) to the poetic ending (in this case, it’s literally a poem). (15 pages)

 

8. ‘The stage is set… for murder!’ (Detective Comics #425, cover-dated July 1972), by Denny O’Neil (script), Irv Novick (pencils), Dick Giordano (inks), Milt Snappin (letters)

detective comics 425

Another O’Neil & Novick collaboration. This is one of their fair play mysteries, somehow managing to establish a bunch of credible suspects and red herrings before Batman figures out the killer. Even though these stories could’ve had more pathos if they had more time to breathe and to flesh out the cast, they are usually neat and clever – and I do get a kick out of seeing Batman own up to his reputation as World’s Greatest Detective. ‘The Stage is set for Murder!’ is probably not the tightest foray into this formula, but I find it particularly entertaining because it’s set around a production of Macbeth, so O’Neil can use the theater milieu to get away with some over-the-top characterization… Both the villain’s motivation and the disguise used early on are kind of ridiculous, yet the exaggerated sense of melodrama and theatricality seem to fit in this context. (15 pages)

 

9. ‘Killer’s Roulette!’ (Detective Comics #426, cover-dated August 1972), by Frank Robbins (script, art), Ben Oda (letters)

detective comics 426

Besides writing dozens of stories about the Dark Knight and his supporting cast, Frank Robbins also drew a handful of them. His style was way more velvety and cartoony than that of other artists in the Batman titles at the time, but it did convey a noirish mood that was perfectly suited to the character. For my money, Robbins’ art was enough to elevate even tales that otherwise felt rushed and somewhat contrived. My favorite of these is ‘Killer’s Roulette!’ Despite the somewhat campy title page, it’s a grim little yarn about gambling with hardboiled dialogue and a truly macabre premise, culminating in an intense – and powerfully illustrated – climax that really pushes Batman’s code against using firearms (not to mention the kind of imagery you could get away with under the Comics Code Authority). (15 pages)

 

10. ‘The Impossible Escape’ (The Brave and the Bold #112, cover-dated April-May 1974), by Bob Haney (script), Jim Aparo (art, letters)

Brave and the Bold 112

I dig this comic so much that I’ve written about it before. This is what I had to say: ‘From the slam-bang opening in which Batman faces suicidal raiders at the Gotham Art Museum to the climatic chase in an ancient, maze-like Egyptian tomb, this comic never lets go. ‘The Impossible Escape’ keeps adding one off-kilter twist after another at a hell-for-leather, feverishly brisk pace, as is typical of Bob Haney’s and Jim Aparo’s exhilarating run on The Brave and the Bold. Along the way, the Caped Crusader finds himself in a trap-filled pulp adventure that may lead him to the elusive secret of immortality. He also teams up with Mr. Miracle, the alien escape artist created by the legendary Jack Kirby. What a blast!’ (By the way, Batman’s subsequent team-ups with Mr. Miracle – the Cold War-tinged ‘Death by the Ounce’ and the sci-fi-ish ‘Mile High Tombstone!’ – are packed with almost as many shameless thrills and crazy ideas.) (20 pages)

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COMICS CAN BE AWESOME (November)

Whether you’re celebrating or crying over the recent electoral results, here is your monthly reminder that comics can be awesome:

The Spectre (v3) #50

The Spectre (v3) #50

Captain Atom #56

Captain Atom #56

The Demon (v3) #15

The Demon (v3) #15
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A wonderfully grotesque Swamp Thing double page spread

Because no Halloween is complete without revisiting the greatest horror comic book series of all time.

swamp thing 61

Swamp Thing (v2) #61
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Taking a break… (October 2018)

Because sometimes life gets in the way.

gotham after midnight

Gotham After Midnight #1
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COMICS CAN BE AWESOME (October)

Your monthly reminder that comics can be awesome…

Chrononauts 1

Chrononauts #1

No Hero 3

No Hero #3

Space Riders 3

Space Riders #3
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Norm Breyfogle (1960-2018)

Damn it, I’ve only just found out… One of the greatest Batman artists of all time died last Monday.

One day, Gotham Calling will look closely into Norm Breyfogle’s fluid designs and dynamic storytelling. Until then, I leave you with this splash page featuring some of his most memorable creations:

detective comics 598

Detective Comics #598
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Essential Batman stories every fan should read – part 2

If you read the last post, you know what’s going on. This is the second part of my list of essential comics that serve as the best possible gateway into grasping the overall Batman meta-narrative. This week, I’m highlighting post-Crisis works:

11.‘Batman: Year One’ (Batman #404-407, cover-dated February-May 1987), by Frank Miller (script), David Mazzucchelli (art), Richmond Lewis (colors), Todd Klein (letters)

batman 405

The second of Frank Miller’s one-two punch assault on Batman comics (and on the medium as a whole), Year One replaced DKR’s operatic scale with a restrained, grounded account of the Dark Knight’s first year in Gotham City. Between Miller’s tense prose and David Mazzucchelli’s grimy art, this is probably the closest anyone has ever come to pulling off a rendition of Batman that truly reads like a straight-up, hardboiled crime yarn (with the possible exception of ‘Death Strikes at Midnight and Three,’ as mentioned last week). I discussed this story-arc here, including the following passage: ‘Starting with a young Bruce Wayne’s return to Gotham after having trained around the world, the book covers the roughly one year period in which Bruce develops his Batman identity, giving us a glimpse of his learning curve as he first tackles the city’s organized crime and rampant corruption. Composed mostly of short vignettes intercut with a few long sequences, Year One is more character study than conventional plot. In an inspired decision, we don’t just get to follow Batman’s growth, but that of Lieutenant James Gordon, who is almost as much a main character as Bruce. Both are fighting for (and against) the city, but one from outside the law and the other from within, one from a position of privilege and the other under constant threat – until they finally join forces when they realize they can hardly trust anyone but each other…’ (This book was so popular that it spanned the whole subgenre of ‘Year One’ comics.)

12.‘The Killing Joke’ (The Killing Joke, cover-dated 1988), by Alan Moore (script), Brian Bolland (art), John Higgins (colors), Richard Starkings (letters)

Batman - The Killing Joke

As sympathetic as I am with the critical readings of The Killing Joke that have stressed its place in the tradition of brutalizing female characters just to advance the characterization of male protagonists, I still cannot fully bring myself to claim this prestige one-shot is not some kind of masterpiece. Alan Moore has certainly written better comics, but this remains a fluid tale – with gorgeous art by Brian Bolland – where every image and line of dialogue resonates with decades of history between Batman and the Joker. In How to Read Superhero Comics and Why, Geoff Klock perceptively explores some of the various layers, setting up the discussion like this: ‘While The Dark Knight Returns shows order from the perspective of Batman, The Killing Joke shows both the terror and the peculiar joyfulness of living within a fictional world burdened by an insanity of signification, and the anxiety caused by contradictory influence and overdetermination. It takes its place in the initial phase of the revisionary superhero narrative in that it exposes the construction of its own narrative, and superhero narratives in general, through several key reflexive moments and metaphors. The image with which the story opens (and to which it fades) is that of the concentric rings created by raindrops in a shallow puddle. […] The randomly falling raindrops that create lesser or greater waves upon the puddle’s surface stand for individual superhero stories and their effect on the field of storytelling. […] Shallow but broad, the puddle emphasizes the tradition or field of signification from which The Killing Joke emerges. As the last image, it points to where any Batman work will end up – just another drop in the pond, another arbitrary center of organization that will reverberate into the character’s fictional history to greater or lesser effect.’

13.‘Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth’ (Arkham Asylum, cover-dated October 1989), by Grant Morrison (script), Dave McKean (art), Gaspar Saladino (letters)

Arkham Asylum

Grant Morrison’s and Dave McKean’s contribution to the movement to push Batman comics into a more mature, sophisticated direction, this acclaimed graphic novel has the Dark Knight wander around Arkham Asylum and confront revised iterations of his villains, who act as allegories for notions of sanity and different mythological traditions. I do think there is merit to this work (for example, McKean’s painted art is suitably nightmarish), even though I wasn’t very generous when I brought it up here, relating it to Tim Burton’s films. Nikolai Fomich has a more thought-provoking take on the book here, which begins by addressing the sexual undertones of the rogues’ gallery: ‘These emblematic villains bring into the Batman universe different kinds of sexual queerness – not merely non-normative kinds of sexuality, some kinds of which (such as homosexuality) are often symbolically associated with good within Batman narratives, but rather various kinds of queerness that are destructive – the Mad Hatter’s brainwashing of young girls and pedophilia; Clayface III’s agalmatophili, or love of (female) mannequins, a love which he sometimes forgoes when he feels the urge to touch real human beings, a touch which turns them into clay; Joker’s anarchic and nihilistic egotism, which at times takes the form of a predatory sexuality; Two-Face’s repression of all his rage and aggression, arguably sexual in part; Maxie Zeus’ masturbatory obsession, steaming from his ego and delusional belief that he is a transvestite god who comprises both sexes; and Killer Croc’s vaginal deformation, symbolic for the wet, dark, and ravenous Dragon of legend and religion, representative of the “danger” and voraciousness of female sexuality. Batman’s relationship to these various mad villains is symbolically indicative of his own psychosexual health. Whether he fears them, relates to them, or defeats them in a story is important in understanding what authors and artists are saying in those texts about Batman’s psychologically and sexuality.’

14.‘A Death in the Family’ (Batman #426-429, cover-dated December 1988-January 1989), by Jim Starlin (script), Jim Aparo (pencils), Mike DeCarlo (inks), Adrienne Roy (colors), John Costanza (letters)

Batman 427

Batman 427

Another ultra-gritty, Joker-centric tale from the late ‘80s – yet this one doesn’t aim towards highbrow literature. Instead, A Death in the Family is like a distillation of the decade’s schlockiest blockbusters, complete with bloody macho action, Arab terrorists, globetrotting adventure, and an over-the-top climax in which the Dark Knight has to face the Joker’s diplomatic immunity (because the Clown Prince of Crime somehow became an Iranian ambassador). This Reaganite time capsule earned its place in the history of Batman comics not just because it revolved around the possibility of killing off the second Boy Wonder (Jason Todd), but because it infamously decided the story’s outcome via a 900 telephone number voting system, through which readers sealed the fate of the young character! Moreover, the Joker’s actions in this tale and in The Killing Joke pretty much defined his relationship with Batman for the following decades. That said, it’s a shame A Death in the Family is the first Jim Aparo-drawn entry on the list, as his pencils here pale in comparison to his earlier work. (Aparo’s lengthy run with Bob Haney on The Brave and the Bold is certainly an influential classic, but there isn’t any specific issue or set of issues that left an outstanding mark… The team-ups with Sgt. Rock are memorably bonkers, but you can just as easily pick up any other story to get a sense of that run.)

15.‘Knightfall’ (Batman #489-514, Batman Annual #17, Batman/Punisher: Lake of Fire, Catwoman (v2) #1-13, Detective Comics #659-681, Detective Comics Annual #6, Justice League Task Force #5-6, Legends of the Dark Knight #59-63, Mitefall, Punisher/Batman: Deadly Knights, Robin (v4) #1-13, Robin Annual #2, Shadow of the Bat #16-34, Showcase ’93 #7-12, Showcase ’94 #3-10, and Vengeance of Bane, cover-dated January 1993-January 1995), by Doug Moench, Dennis O’Neil, Jo Duffy, Chuck Dixon, Alan Grant, John Wagner (script), Jim Aparo, Norm Breyfogle, Mike Manley, Jim Balent, Mike Gustovich, Ron Wagner, Eduardo Barreto, Barry Kitson, Graham Nolan, Lee Weeks, Sal Velluto, Kevin O’Neill, John Romita Jr, Tom Grummett, Phil Jimenez, John Cleary, Kieron Dwyer, Bret Blevins, Vince Giarrano, John Beatty, Mark Bright, Klaus Janson, Bill Willingham, Bob McLeod, Tim Sale, P. Craig Russell, Michael T. Gilbert, Teddy Kristiansen, Mike Vosburg (pencils), Jim Aparo, Norm Breyfogle, Tom Mandrake, Bob Wiacek, Joe Rubinstein, Dick Giordano, Rick Burchett, Scott Hanna, Terry Austin, Mike Manley, Frank McLaughlin, Romeo Tanghal, Eduardo Barreto, James Pascoe, Ande Parks, Bob Smith, Bob McLeod, Klaus Janson, Gerry Fernandez, Jeff Albrecht, Ron McCain, Kevin O’Neill, Ray Kryssing, John Stokes, Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Carlos Pedrazzini, Steve George, Vince Giarrano, Bob McLeod, Jimmy Palmiotti, Bruce Patterson, Peter Gross, P. Craig Russell, Michael T. Gilbert, Teddy Kristiansen (inks), Adrienne Roy, Matt Hollingsworth, Buzz Setzer, Glenn Whitmore, Christie Scheele, Klaus Janson, Tom McCraw, Bernie Mireault, Lovern Kindzierski, Teddy Kristiansen, Dave Hornung (colors), Jim Aparo, Richard Starkings, Tim Harkings, Ken Bruzenak, Willie Schubert, Albert DeGuzman, Bob Pinaha, John Costanza, Clem Robins, Albert DeGuzman, Todd Klein, Bill Oakley (letters)

Batman 497Batman 497

The output of DC comics in the ‘90s was marked by earth-shattering events (Superman’s death, Hal Jordan’s transformation into Parallax, etc), usually at the center of ambitious crossovers. Batman comics were no exception, with group editor Denny O’Neil coordinating a handful of different series, by different creators, into a coherent overarching narrative coming out weekly over long periods of time (in some cases, for over a year). To get a feel for the era, every fan should check out – at least partially – one of these sagas, with Knightfall being the most obvious candidate (together with its epilogue, Prodigal). In this crossover, the villain Bane (created specifically for the story) broke Batman’s spine, so Bruce Wayne was replaced by Jean Paul Valley, a super-violent psychopath with a bulging armored suit. The whole thing worked as an exciting-if-uneven epic at the surface level, but there was a metafictional subtext as well, with various characters – and, presumably, the readers – facing the fact that the old-school Caped Crusader was much cooler than the grim, bulky cyborg anti-heroes who were all the rage in comics at time. Knightfall (which has been collected in multiple editions) looms over the nineties – since mid-1992, most issues built up to the crossover; in its aftermath, key relations between characters were lastingly defined by what had transpired in that tale. This bombastic meta-series is also a chance to get acquainted with the decade’s most prolific creators (such as writers Doug Moench, Chuck Dixon, and Alan Grant, artists Norm Breyfogle and Graham Nolan, colorist Adrienne Roy, and cover-artist Kelley Jones), who shaped Batman’s world for years to come.

16.’The Long Halloween’ (The Long Halloween #1-13, cover-dated December 1996-December 1997), by Jeph Loeb (script), Tim Sale (art), Greg Wright (colors), Richard Starkings (letters)

The Long Halloween

Of the many sequels to Batman: Year One, this is the one that stood above the crowd and made the most remarkable impression, smoothly bridging the gap – both storywise and stylistically – between the more realistic Miller/Mazzucchelli version of Gotham and the wilder version you find in most comics. When I wrote about it here, I put it this way: ‘This comic, which was a major inspiration for [Christopher] Nolan’s The Dark Knight, addresses the transformation of Gotham from a city of gangsters into a city of insane, costumed criminals, while also serving as an origin story for Two-Face. The Long Halloween picks up threads from Year One and has a similarly hardboiled atmosphere, although [Tim] Sale’s gorgeously stylized artwork gives it a very different flow from Mazzucchelli’s pencils – for one thing, Bruce Wayne looks less like a young Gregory Peck and more like someone who could knock out Arnold Schwarzenegger. More importantly, the book is full of taut characterization (particularly of Batman, Gordon, and district attorney Harvey Dent), shameless homages to The Godfather films, perhaps one too many gratuitous cameos by the rogues’ gallery, and a genuinely clever whodunit.’

17.‘No Man’s Land’ (Azrael, Agent of the Bat #50-61, Batman #563-574, Batman – Day of Judgment, Batman: Harley Quinn, Catwoman #66-77, Day of Judgment #1-5, Detective Comics #730-741, Hitman #37-46, JLA #32-33, Legends of the Dark Knight #116-126, Nightwing #32-39, No Man’s Land #0-1, Robin #67-73, Shadow of the Bat #83-94, The Batman Chronicles #16-18, Young Justice – No Man’s Land, cover-dated March 1999-February 2000. See the reading order here.), by Dennis O’Neil, Bob Gale, Devin Grayson, Greg Rucka, Kelley Puckett, Janet Harvey, Bronwyn Carlton, Chuck Dixon, Scott Beatty, Dafydd Wyn, Paul Dini, John Ostrander, Geoff Johns, Larry Hama, Garth Ennis, Mark Waid, Ian Edginton, Steven Barnes, Jordan B. Gorfinkel, Lisa Klink (script), Roger Robinson, Alex Maleev, Dale Eaglesham, Frank Teran, Jon Bogdanove, Damion Scott, Dan Jurgens, Sergio Cariello, Mike Deodato, Mat Broome, Sergio Cariello, Jason Pearson, Chris Renaud, Pascal Alixe, Eduardo Barreto, Graham Nolan, Dean Zachary, Yvel Guichet, Jim Balent, Matt Smith, Christopher Jones, Wayne Faucher, Frank Teran, Phil Winslade, Mike Deodato, Tom Morgan, John McCrea, Mark Pajarillo, D’Israeli, Rick Burchett, Paul Gulacy, Paul Ryan, Rafael Kayanan, Scott McDaniel, Greg Land, Staz Johnson, Gordon Purcell, N. Steven Harris, Guy Davis, Jason Minor, Pablo Raimondi, Andy Kuhn (pencils), James Pascoe, Wayne Faucher, Jaime Mendoza, Frank Teran, Eduardo Barreto, John Floyd, Bill Sienkiewicz, Matt Ryan, David Roach, Sean Parsons, John Floyd, Mark Pennington, Cam Smith, Wayne Faucher, Sal Buscema, Eduardo Barreto, Bill Sienkiewicz, Jaime Mendoza, Robert Campanella, Aaron Sowd, John Stanisci, Marlo Alquiza, Steve Mitchell, Frank Teran, Phil Winslade, David Roach, Rob Hunter, Garry Leach, Walden Wong, Matt Banning; Aaron Sowd, D’Israeli, James Hodgkins, Randy Eberling, Andy Lanning, Mark McKenna, Karl Story, Drew Geraci, Stan Woch, Marlo Alquiza, Guy Davis, Randy Emberlin, Chris Ivy (inks), Demetrius Bassoukos, Dave Stewart, Noelle Giddings, Gloria Vasquez, Richard Horie; Tanya Horie, Greg Wright, Noelle Giddings, Pamela Rambo, Patricia Mulvihill, Ian Laughlin, Rob Schwager, Tanya Horie; Richard Horie, Roberta Tewes, James Sinclair, Greg Wright, Carla Feeny, Pat Garrahy, John Kalisz, D’Israeli, Bob Schwager, Felix Serrano, Klaus Janson, Digital Chameleon, Adrienne Roy, Jason Wright (colors), Ken Bruzenak, Rob Ro; Alex Bleyaert, Willie Schubert, Todd Klein, John Costanza, Bill Oakley, Rick Parker, Clem Robins, Ken Lopez, Albert DeGuzman, Tim Harkins, Ellie DeVille, Patricia Prentice (letters)

Batman No Man’s Land #1

Another fundamental crossover – the one that closed the nineties and ushered in a new era of Batman comics (which included regular callbacks to the events in No Man’s Land). Above all, this is an essential work for those interested in the Dark Knight’s supporting cast and surrounding world, as it takes place after an earthquake destroyed Gotham and the government isolated the city from the rest of the United States, which allowed creators to play with various post-apocalyptic tropes. You get to see the people who stayed behind – the cops, the outlandish villains, the average citizens – reinvent civilization, including new variations of language and technology, as well a new hierarchy of value (‘a box of matches is more valuable than a camera, and a bike is more useful than a Ferrari’). Sprawling sagas are always hit-and-miss, but overall there is some genuinely engaging storytelling in this one. The more completist among you will want to go further and read about the earthquake, in Cataclysm, and other tales leading up to the government’s drastic decision, many of them collected in the Road to No Man’s Land paperbacks (see a comprehensive reading order here). If you find the prospect of reading over a hundred issues too intimidating, though, at least track down NML’s highest points (listed here).

18.‘Tower of Babel’ (JLA #43-46, cover-dated July-October 2000), by Mark Waid (script), Howard Porter, Steve Scott (pencils), Drew Geraci, Mark Propst (inks), Pat Garrahy, John Kalisz (colors), Ken Lopez (letters)

JLA #43JLA #43

A solid understanding of the history of Batman comics has to take into account that, even though some choose to treat the character as a street-level ninja detective or vigilante, he is also firmly embedded in the world/genre of superheroes… and you can’t get a purer superhero yarn than Tower of Babel, from the frenetic pace of Mark Waid’s script down to Howard Porter’s exaggerated art style. It’s fairly easy to spot the roots of this story-arc in which the Dark Knight shows that he could theoretically defeat all the members of the Justice League of America. There is a clear line from the Batman vs Superman slugfest in DKR and from Grant Morrison’s reinvention of Bruce Wayne as an almost godlike, hyperintelligent planner who is *always* the most badass in the room (an approach Morrison prominently inaugurated in JLA’s early issues) until Tower of Babel, which took to the extreme the notion that this non-powered human was actually a match for some of the most powerful superhumans in the DC Universe. Yet the latter isn’t just an entertaining take on geeky discussions of the who-would-win-in-a-fight variety – this story left its own mark in the field, engraining the view that Batman was a paranoid douchebag who inevitably pushed away those closest to him (a view that dominated DC comics in the early years of the 21st century).

 19.‘Batman and Son’ (Batman #655-658, cover-dated September-December 2006), by Grant Morrison (script), Andy Kubert (pencils), Andy Kubert, Jesse Delperdang (inks), Dave Stewart, Guy Major (colors), Nick J. Napolitano, Rob Leigh (letters)

batman 655

Grant Morrison’s radical seven-year run on Batman comics opened with a bang: its first story-arc turned the Caped Crusader’s world upside down by introducing his son, Damian Wayne, a hilariously arrogant kid who was trained to be a master assassin (and who went on to become one of the best additions to the cast in ages). Besides proving his willingness to shake the general status quo, Morrison also cheerfully revised the tone of the whole line: since the end of NML, most Batman-related books had become increasingly somber, with a misanthropic Dark Knight acting almost like a villain in his own series, but Batman and Son presented a well-adjusted Bruce Wayne in a tale with shamelessly ludicrous concepts and several laugh-out-loud moments. The book also set the stage for Morrison’s later stunts, including Bruce’s death (in Batman R.I.P. and Final Crisis), the replacement of the Dynamic Duo (Batman and Robin), Bruce’s time-travelling saga (The Return of Bruce Wayne), and the expansion of the Caped Crusader into an international franchise (Batman Incorporated).

20.‘The Court of Owls’ (Batman (v2) #1-11, cover-dated November 2011-September 2012), by Scott Snyder, James Tynion IV (script), Greg Capullo, Rafael Albuquerque (pencils), Jonathan Glapion, Rafael Albuquerque (inks), FCO Plascencia, Nathan Fairbairn, Dave McCaig (colors), Richard Starkings, Jimmy Betancourt, Patrick Brosseau, Dezi Sienty (letters)

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The last few years of Batman comics have been marked by so many surprising twists and changes in direction that stunts have become the new norm. This accelerated tendency goes back to Grant Morrison’s run, but many recent fans seem to have jumped on board with the so-called ‘New 52’ reboot, when Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo took over the main Batman series. Snyder has loosely recycled ideas from the last eight decades of stories, but he has done so in a particularly appealing way: whereas with Morrison the intertextual connections were a big part of the fun, in Snyder’s work readers don’t feel like they are necessarily missing much if they’re not aware of Batman’s long publication history. Add to this a horror-tinged flair for shock value and Capullo’s cartoony, dynamic pencils and you’ve got yourself a hugely successful take on this property. There are other starting points, for sure, but the first Snyder-Capullo collaboration, ‘The Court of Owls,’ laid the groundwork for what was to come both in terms of plot and of general approach to storytelling.

 

Honorable mentions (post-Crisis): Some comics have acquired enough of a lasting following and/or critical acclaim to deserve attention from any self-respecting Batman fan, even if they weren’t as influential as the ones listed above… It’s the case of Mike W. Barr’s and Alan Davis’ run in Detective Comics (#569-574, December 1986-May 1987), the graphic novel Son of the Demon (December 1987), Alan Grant’s and Norm Breyfogle’s run in Detective Comics (#583-594, 601-621, February-December 1988, June 1989-September 1990), the story-arc ‘Dark Knight, Dark City’ (Batman #452-454, August-September 1990), Kelley Puckett’s run in The Batman Adventures (#1-3, 6-30, October 1992-March 1995), the one-shot Mad Love (February 1994), the anthology Batman: Black and White (#1-4, June-September 1996), the story-arc ‘Hush’ (Batman #608-619, December 2002-November 2003), the mini-series Arkham Asylum: Living Hell (#1-6, July-December 2003), and the ongoing series Gotham Central (#1-40, February 2003-April 2006).

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