If you like Christopher Nolan’s Batman films…

While most superhero movies serve you generic, more or less well-crafted adventure/fantasy, an interesting thing about the cinematic versions of the Dark Knight is that they’ve all been lavishly shaped by their directors’ eccentricities. I’m OK with that – I have my comics, so I don’t need the movies to be more of the same. The reason I have zero expectations for Zack Snyder’s upcoming film is not because it won’t be faithful to the comics’ version of Batman, but because Snyder’s authorial voice is awful (by contrast, I would gladly watch the Coen brothers do whatever they feel like with the Caped Crusader).

I bring this up because Christopher Nolan’s work is no exception. Sure, for all the buzz concerning Nolan’s revolutionary take on Batman, his movies are quite faithful to the style of the source material (especially in contrast to the films by Tim Burton and Joel Schumacher, which were degenerate descendants of the 1960s’ TV show). Since the eighties, gritty pseudo-realism has been a staple of Batman comics, plenty of which are way grittier and/or more realistic than their Hollywood counterparts. That said, at the same time there is no denying how Nolan-esque the last movies are!

It wasn’t clear from the start. When Nolan started playing in Gotham City, the action trappings seemed like a departure from his earlier, low-key, cerebral crime flics (the amateurish film noir Following, the cult-favorite experimental thriller Memento, and the more straightforward yet psychological Insomnia). However, nowadays Christopher Nolan has become synonymous with byzantine, frantically edited, exposition-heavy blockbusters that many love (regarding them as smarter than the average, if nothing else because you actually have to think in order to keep up) and many others loathe (too pretentions and confusing to be lowbrow, too contrived and unsubtle to be highbrow). And boy does his Batman trilogy fit right in!

Batman Begins     The Dark Knight     The Dark Knight Rises

When you get down to it, Batman Begins may not be as down-to-earth as it is often claimed (the climax revolves around an evil plot to cause mass hysteria in Gotham City by vaporizing a fear-inducing hallucinogenic with the help of a huge microwave emitter!), but it is certainly more straight-faced than any of the previous live action films about the Caped Crusader. This 2005 reboot fleshes out Batman’s origin with in-depth characterization (honestly, I could’ve done with less whining) and expands the big screen’s rogues’ gallery by introducing the Scarecrow and Ra’s al Ghul. The script was co-written by David S. Goyer, which helps explain the abundant instances of obvious symbolism, even by Nolan’s standards of thematic overstatement. Still, the result is a badass, multilayered thrill ride with lots of great names in the cast and some solid Batman moments, even if the dialogue is pretty terrible and the ending morally fuzzy.

The Dark Knight chronicles the Darwinian evolution of Gotham’s underworld, as traditional gangsters give way to extravagant psychopaths. This is not only a genuinely great Batman film, it’s a legitimately great crime film in its own right… hell, it’s a legitimately great film, full stop. More of an ensemble piece than a hero-driven adventure, the plot spirals between Batman, the Joker, James Gordon, and Harvey Dent. By continuously escalating the complexity of the story and moving multiple chess pieces around, Nolan pushes the audience’s concentration further than he did in The Prestige without yet reaching Inception levels. It’s one awesome scene after another, with even minor characters given a chance to shine – and while Heath Ledger steals the show as a terrifying Joker, the fact is that all the performances are top-notch (despite Christian Bale’s infamous gravely Batman-voice). The Dark Knight’s success was also no doubt linked with the way in which it tapped into the post-9/11 zeitgeist, in particular concerns about security, privacy, torture, and freedom. A key sequence aboard two ships (one democratically organized, the other under dictatorial rule) is both a challenging parable and a masterclass in suspense. That said, the movie wisely keeps its politics ambiguous as the Joker/Batman antagonism works on various levels: terrorism/hyper-surveillance, anarchy/authoritarianism, chaos/order, misanthropy/humanism. Regardless, the payoff lives up to the two characters’ relationship in the comics, with Batman refusing to kill the Joker (preventing him from falling off a building in what can only be a ‘fuck you’ to Tim Burton) because he realizes that would validate his enemy’s philosophy.

Having firmly rooted the franchise in the paranoid atmosphere of the War on Terror, Christopher Nolan managed to keep the topical momentum with The Dark Knight Rises, which came across as an outlandish reactionary allegory of Occupy Wall Street. The story revolves around a populist Bane, but it makes absolutely no sense. Of its many flaws (amusingly summed up here), perhaps none is more frustrating than the way in which the film undoes its predecessor. While the second entry in the series displayed faith in humanity, the third one is about the need to brutally reign over the masses – it’s basically a right-wing fable in the style of Lars von Trier’s Dogville, but less Brechtian and less obsessed with rape. The Dark Knight Rises even makes a point of subverting Batman’s anti-gun stance, as Catwoman saves his life by shooting the bad guy and then brags about it (other than that, though, Anne Hathaway’s version of Catwoman is spot on!). I don’t necessarily mind movies with proto-fascist overtones (I’m in for John Milius’ Conan the Barbarian, David Fincher’s Fight Club, and Paul Verhoeven’s Starship Troopers, not to mention Pete Travis’ Dredd) and I could even forgive some of the many plot holes if only there was more fun to be had beyond all the noise and self-importance. Still, much like Nolan’s Interstellar, this is a flawed yet ambitious work, and I admire his drive to deliver bigger-than-life cinematic experiences that are unlike anything else on the screen!

Batman 407     Batman Versus Bane

While Goyer’s and Nolan’s Batman stories are original and characteristically overcomplicated, they wear their main influences on their sleeve. The first film borrows loosely from the graphic novel Batman: Year One. The second film takes a lot of inspiration from The Long Halloween and The Killing Joke. The last one draws heavily on The Dark Knight Returns. I’ve discussed these comics in previous posts, so I will not dwell on them except to say that they remain the most critically acclaimed Batman books around and are a great place to start for new readers.

The Dark Knight Rises also shares plot elements with Knightfall and No Man’s Land, although their tone is significantly different, including way more ludicrous characters. What fans of Bane should definitely check out is Chuck Dixon’s and Graham Nolan’s two-fisted yarns with the character, some of which are collected in the Batman versus Bane paperback.

In terms of overall themes and mood, with all the political subtext and a relatively grounded take on vigilantism, these movies seem to be aiming for something close to Alan Moore’s non-Batman masterpieces Watchmen and V for Vendetta (both much more thought-provoking books than their mediocre film adaptations). As far as the Dark Knight’s adventures go, though, if you dig Christopher Nolan’s mix of street-level crime/terrorism and twisted mind games, try looking for comics set during Batman’s earliest years

Legends of the Dark Knight 11Legends of the Dark Knight 11Legends of the Dark Knight #11

Prey is a great example of a tale that could easily take place in the Nolanverse. Relentless and psychologically charged, Doug Moench’s script throws Batman into an intense maze of threats coming from all around and gradually closing in on him. Set near the beginning of the Dark Knight’s career, Prey pits Batman against drug dealers, a resentful cop, an unpredictable cat burglar, a deranged psychiatrist, a manipulated mayor, the Gotham police force, some angry stevedores, and his own nightmares.

The art, with inks by Terry Austin and colors by Steve Oliff, is penciled by Paul Gulacy. Despite an annoying tendency for gratuitous cheesecake, Gulacy is a better action director than Nolan, so instead of chaotic visuals in the fight scenes you can actually follow what is going on:

Legends of the Dark Knight 13Legends of the Dark Knight 13Legends Of The Dark Knight #13

The most riveting display of down-and-dirty Gotham grit, however, is City of Crime, by David Lapham of Stray Bullets fame. You can almost feel the stench emanating from the pages as Batman’s investigation into a young girl’s disappearance takes him down a horrific path through Gotham’s crime world, from seedy slums to corrupt elites, from costumed lunatics to a freakish conspiracy that will haunt your sleepless nights…

Lapham, of course, can practically write gripping noir tales in his sleep (Murder Me Dead and Silverfish being obvious examples), but he really outdid himself here. This is Gotham as the worst parts of your own city times twenty, at least – it’s a big city turned living Hell.

detective comics 801detective comics 801 Detective Comics #801

Another writer who has done a memorable job of exploring the dark side of Gotham is Scott Snyder. If you pick up his ongoing Batman title or any of his ‘New 52’ books, you’ll find yourself swept by viciously violent, over-the-top storytelling. In fact, Snyder’s run in these past 4 years has followed much of the same spirit as the Nolan movies, with balls-to-the-wall action and logic-be-damned, jaw-dropping plot twists.

Me, I still prefer Scott Snyder’s earlier work, which was just as dark but way moodier and more psychologically haunting. The issues collected in The Black Mirror took place during the time when Dick Grayson had replaced Bruce Wayne as Batman (one of the times, anyway) and reintroduced James Gordon’s son as possibly the most sinister villain of the past decade. The fact that Snyder effectively wrote it as a horror series, combined with Jock’s and Francesco Francavilla’s unbelievably atmospheric art, resulted in a remarkable and original Batman comic which was sadly cut short to make way for the 2011 reboot…

detective comics 871detective comics 871Detective Comics #871

NEXT: Mask of the Phantasm.

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If you like Joel Schumacher’s Batman films…

After Tim Burton brought to the screen a surreal, alternative version of the Batman universe with echoes of the 1940s, director Joel Schumacher picked up the mantle and drove this cinematic franchise into the Silver Age. Leaving behind the grim gravitas of the first two movies, Schumacher kept the notion of treating the series as a dreamlike, highly stylized fantasy, yet made it a comparatively brighter one – or better yet, neon-lit. Everything became even kookier-sounding and kinkier-looking (yep, nipples in the batsuit). Heroes and villains were no longer treated as tragic figures, but rather as colorful toys to be thrown against each other in over-the-top action scenes.

Less of an aspiring auteur than Burton, Joel Schumacher went for openly shallow popcorn entertainment. That said, these films have an unmistakable visual style, redesigning Gotham City with utterly insane architecture and lighting. They have a cartoonish feel that isn’t that far off from what Warren Beatty did with Dick Tracy.

Batman Forever     Batman and Robin

With its ludicrous plot, fetishistic overtones, and ham-fisted pop psychology, 1995’s Batman Forever feels less like a departure than like a slapstick extension of its predecessor. Schumacher delivers an unpretentious superhero blockbuster full of actors in wacky suits cheerfully chewing the scenery – not one, but both villains seem to be mimicking Jack Nicholson’s rendition of the Joker. By then, The Mask had already proven that Jim Carrey could successfully bring a comic book to life, so Schumacher appears to have let him go completely wild as the Riddler (‘Joygasm!’). Although nominally playing Two-Face, Tommy Lee Jones instead just struggles like hell to out-Carrey his co-star. Meanwhile, Chris O’Donnel tries to hip up the film as Robin the Boy Wonder, despite being clearly in his twenties, and Nicole Kidman is brought in to continue Batman’s strand of blond, milky skinned love interests (albeit the horniest of the lot). The biggest wasted opportunity is Val Kilmer’s uncharismatic performance in the leading role… since Kilmer is at his best when channeling Elvis Presley (Top Secret!, True Romance), he totally should have done Batman in Elvis-mode!

Batman & Robin further amps up the camp by having the Dynamic Duo produce automatic ice skate blades from their boots in order to fight a ‘hockey team from Hell’ (that’s the first 10 minutes), filling the dialogue with *even more* sexual innuendo, and introducing the infamous Bat-credit card (Expiration date: Forever). The result is not so much a movie as an LSD trip. According to your tastes and expectations, it can be either unwatchable dreck, an amusing live-action cartoon, or hysterically so-bad-it-is-good. Arnold Schwarzenegger clunks around in a Mr. Freeze costume while mispronouncing non-stop cold-related puns and Uma Thurman, overacting like a maniac as Poison Ivy, seems to be totally in on the joke (unlike Alicia Silverstone’s uninspired Batgirl). And say what you want, George Clooney was born to play Bruce Wayne. While Burton gave the series a quasi-horror vibe sprinkled with absurdist black comedy, a la Gremlins, Schumacher shoots for a Looney Tunes-esque Gremlins 2. That said, in places Batman & Robin still wants to be taken seriously, leading to some jarring shifts in tone (in the Schwarzenegger canon, this should sit next to Last Action Hero). The film emanates both a faux-rebel ’90s attitude and the feel of a dumbed down kids movie in a franchise that from the beginning also tried to appeal to a relatively older crowd, all the while being packed full of way too many useless characters and gimmicks whose only purpose seems to be to sell merchandise – sigh, I could be describing the Star Wars prequels.

Batman Hush

Still, even if you think Joel Schumacher went too far in terms of silliness, you may appreciate his overall approach of bombastic visuals and larger-than-life, leave-your-brain-at-the-door spectacle. In that case, Hush is what you want. This story of a mysterious villain who knows all the right buttons to push in order to mess with the Dark Knight was conceived by Jeph Loeb like a Hollywood mega-blockbuster in comics form, offering one major ‘Holy shit!’ moment in practically every issue (like Bruce Wayne revealing his secret identity to Catwoman, or Jason Todd showing up alive after being thought dead for 15 years).

Jeph Loeb sure knows how to write crowd-pleasing, dumb entertainment – after all, he worked on the cheesy crypto-fascist Schwarzenegger vehicle Commando, on the adorably ridiculous comedy Teen Wolf, and on the shockingly popular TV show Smallville. In the world of comics, Loeb is known for writing with his artists in mind, playing to their strengths and providing plenty of spectacular splash pages for them to shine. Thanks to him, superstar artist Jim Lee got to draw, for the first time, pretty much every fan-favorite member of Batman’s cast. Indeed, surely a great deal of the huge success of Hush derived from Lee’s luscious pages, with inks by Scott Williams and colors by Alex Sinclair.

Batman #611Batman #611

The other thing to keep in mind about Jeph Loeb is that his writing, even in the 1990s (when I really enjoyed his stuff, especially Superman: For All Seasons and Challengers of the Unknown Must Die!), has always been to a great degree based on echoing scenes and lines from iconic works and trying to regain their power through either explicit or subliminal nostalgic resonance. His first Batman story, ‘Choices,’ revisited a famous exchange from the film To Have and Have Not (‘Were you ever bit by a dead bee?’). The excellent The Long Halloween and the sequel Dark Victory seemed to pillage every crime movie Loeb had ever seen and to channel them through the Batman universe, including at least The Godfather, The Godfather II, Chinatown, Silence of the Lambs, Miller’s Crossing, The Untouchables, Once Upon a Time in America, White Heat, Scarface, Little Caesar, and Taxi! And to be fair, the mood of the originals does somehow rub off by osmosis, so that whether you recognize the references or not, the result still feels like a great crime yarn!

With Hush, Jeph Loeb adopted a more inward-looking variation of this strategy. He now dug into the Dark Knight’s own history by remaking Batman comics’ greatest hits, like in this homage to a classic Denny O’Neil story:

batman 616Batman #616

Although indulging in obscurer references, arguably the same can be said of Grant Morrison’s work starting with Batman and Son. Gone are the days of Arkham Asylum’s gloomy psychological horror: 21st century Morrison writes the Caped Crusader on hallucinated overdrive, cramming each issue with crazy ideas! These are pure superhero comics, goddamn it! Morrison’s run is full of explosive mashups of familiar concepts, like an army of Man-Bat ninjas or bizarre drugs spliced from Hugo Strange’s monster serum, Bane’s venom, and Joker’s toxin. It reads like a hipper, smarter version of what Joel Schumacher was initially aiming for.

Granted, it can be confusing (yet rewarding) to follow Morrison’s extremely fast-paced, non-linear, intricate plots… but for all the postmodern intertextual metafiction, this is above all frenetic fun, so if you want you can just sit back and enjoy the ride:

Batman 700Batman #700

As far as ’90s-style action goes, however, nothing beats Chuck Dixon’s original run on Nightwing.

This series followed the exploits of Dick Grayson in his twenties (unlike Chris O’Donnell, he realized he was too old to be Robin, and so called himself Nightwing) and saw him move to Blüdhaven. Gotham’s neighboring city, Blüdhaven was somehow even more of a corrupt, crime-ridden cesspit than Batman’s home turf – as Dixon’s narration put it, ‘If it’s too coarse or too vile or too awful for Gotham, it winds up here.’ Scott McDaniel’s twisted designs projected a decadent industrial city that looked every bit as eccentric as Schumacher’s Gotham, albeit with less homoerotic statues.

Nightwing13Nightwing #13

With a hardboiled, sleazy exploitation vibe, at first Chuck Dixon treated Nightwing as a B-movie version of Batman, including shamelessly lame villains like a gangster with his head facing backwards and a vigilante who walked around with a domino mask and a baseball bat calling himself Nite-Wing, much to everyone’s confusion! In his last couple of years on the title, Dixon shifted gears by having Dick Grayson join the police force and turned Nightwing into a more grounded crime series. Meanwhile, he really embraced the potential of the ongoing serial format to flesh out the supporting cast, engaging in some long-term plotting and characterization while dangling multiple threads. A detail set up in the very first issue did not pay off until issue 59!

Of course, this is not to say that there weren’t plenty of thrills and rewards along the way… This was a roller coaster of a comic, especially in the first 40 issues, drawn by Scott McDaniel. Getting the most out of McDaniel’s energetic pencils, Chuck Dixon made sure almost every page featured Nightwing acrobatically jumping around or kicking ass. And when things sometimes had to slow down, McDaniel still managed to make even scenes of people standing there talking look urgent and dynamic:

Nightwing 01Nightwing #1

Finally, as maligned as Batman & Robin is, I’m sure there are some who’ve retrospectively come to dig Joel Schumacher’s multicolored zaniness. Yet if you feel like a lighthearted, tongue-in-cheek, kitsch comedy featuring the Caped Crusader and his foes, you are still better off watching the Austin Powers-like Batman: The Movie. It is much more charming and tonally consistent – plus you get to see Adam West’s Batman, in his own weird way, kind of put an end to the Cold War 25 years before the fact!

Batman: The Movie

If it turns out 1966’s Batman is indeed your favorite Bat-film, then finding similar comics shouldn’t prove too hard. The ongoing Batman ’66 series and the spinoff Batman ’66 Meets The Green Hornet are set in the same continuity as the old movie and TV show. And, of course, you can always read the actual stories from the mid-sixties, which are quite close in spirit…

Batman 174    Batman 181    Batman 191

NEXT: Christopher Nolan.

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If you like Tim Burton’s Batman films…

Batman 349
Batman #349

Having already suggested a bunch of movies for fans of Batman comics, I figured it would make sense to also suggest comics for fans of the most prominent Batman movies.

The thing is that, just like the comics, the movies about Batman have very different moods and approaches to the character and his universe. From ultra-goofy to ultra-grim, I would say the only take on the Dark Knight still missing from the big screen is a full-on musical like the one in the beginning of the Batman Beyond episode ‘Out of the Past’ (just the first of many unbelievably awesome things in that episode). With that in mind, these next posts are for people looking for accessible comics similar to their favorite movie version of Batman.

Let’s start with the version from the Tim Burton movies…

Batman 459

Tim Burton is above all an aesthetic director (some would say visionary), someone who seems more interested in making his films look stunning than in telling coherent stories. A master of gothic surrealism, Burton enjoys filling the screen with bizarre and grotesque imagery, even if he’s not above quirky cutesiness (as seen in his animated works and in Big Fish, not to mention the illustrated poetry book The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy).

Although he is unabashedly influenced by classic horror in general and Vincent Price in particular (which is already visible in early shorts like Vincent and Frankenweenie), Burton had his breakthrough with wacky comedies (Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, Beetlejuice) and has devoted his career to genre mashups, his flamboyant authorial style often making up for lack of substance (except in Big Eyes, which has neither, wasting what could have been an interesting story). That said, underneath all the kitsch make-up, sets, and special effects, Tim Burton’s work tends to revolve around outsiders, usually freaks and monsters, especially human-animal hybrids or Johnny Depp with a funny hairdo.

I would say Burton hit his peak in the 1990s, finding fresh ways to channel his flair for romantic fantasy (Edward Scissorhands), childlike ghoulish humor (The Nightmare Before Christmas), and even his relationship with cinema and Vincent Price (mirrored in the real-life story of Ed Wood and the eponymous director’s relationship with Bela Lugosi). Since then, most of Burton’s movies have just been adaptations of pre-existing material reinterpreted through his distinctive visual and thematic motifs, namely adaptations of beloved books (Sleepy Hollow, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Alice in Wonderland), a musical play (Sweeney Todd), a soap opera (Dark Shadows), an originally amazing sci-fi masterpiece (Planet of the Apes), and a trading card series from the sixties (Mars Attacks!).

But before all that, the Caped Crusader got the Tim Burton treatment way back in 1989 and again in 1992. The films allegedly drew some inspiration from now-classic graphic novels The Killing Joke and The Dark Knight Returns, yet it feels like those books’ influence was essentially in terms of their bleak and violent approach to Batman’s world. Burton and his screenwriters clearly did not care about staying true to the characters, instead showing more interest in their visual and symbolic potential… so we got Bruce Wayne as a creepy rich dude in a mansion who sleeps upside down like a bat, we got Catwoman as a zombie with nine lives, we got the Joker killing the Waynes and then dying while fighting their son (the Joker creates Batman, just as Batman creates the Joker, geddit?).

Batman 1989     Batman Returns

Not unlike TV’s Gotham, though, once you get passed how screwed up the themes and continuity are and accept these stories as Elseworld tales, there is a lot to enjoy, from Danny Elfman’s majestic score to Anton Furst’s iconic designs. In fact, part of the fun is watching such a sinister, viciously distorted take on the Dark Knight universe. Sure, much of it is silly and chockfull of plot holes, but that’s because this is basically the operatic evil twin of the old Adam West show.

Perhaps less the fault of Sam Hamm’s script than of the many rewrites and egos involved, 1989’s Batman is as stylish as it is uneven: it starts out with a film noir vibe, moves on to Hammer horror territory, and culminates in RoboCop action mode with Batman casually killing a bunch of people with his remote-controlled, machine gun-equipped Batmobile! Kim Basinger is a bland Vicki Vale, Billy Dee Williams makes for an intriguing yet sadly undeveloped Harvey Dent, and Jack Nicholson steals the spotlight by convincingly bringing the Joker to life. As for Michael Keaton’s performance in the titular role, it works best if you think of it as a prequel to Birdman.

Coming out during his ’90s streak, Batman Returns then feels like Tim Burton on steroids. A nightmarish fairy tale, this is a surrealist, sickly comedic, and cinematographically breathtaking envisioning of Gotham City, which lies somewhere between The City of Lost Children and The Addams Family. While the hero once again fails to engage, Danny DeVito, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Christopher Walken are a blast as the villains! DeVito’s turn as the Penguin, who in this version was dumped into the sewers by his aristocratic parents, gets extra points for managing to throw the line ‘I was their number one son, but they treated me like number two.

So if you enjoyed these movies, what comics should you read? Well, for starters, you could do worse than to check out the issues that were being published at the time, the best of which are about to get collected in the hardcover Legends of the Dark Knight: Norm Breyfogle (only one of many good reasons to buy it). That said, if you’re looking for the comics’ equivalent of a dark-as-hell Batman tale that disturbingly reimagines the series’ iconography, then you must get your hands on Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth:

Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious EarthArkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth

In this original graphic novel, a basic tale about the lunatics taking over Arkham Asylum and Batman coming in to sort things out serves as a vehicle for writer Grant Morrison to explore the symbolism of various villains, as the asylum becomes a metaphor for the Dark Knight’s own insanity. An attempt to apply Jungian psychology to the Bat-mythos, the comic isn’t entirely successful on either front: as a Batman adventure it’s not very exciting, as an intellectual exercise it still revolves around a guy who dresses like an animal to fight crime.

I realize this makes Arkham Asylum sound like a curio for pretentious, angst-ridden teenagers. But it’s still a fascinating book, even if it doesn’t really make a meaningful statement about anything other than Batman and his rogues’ gallery. In any case, it’s at least worth a glimpse for Dave McKean’s groundbreaking, freakish art:

Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious EarthArkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth

Drawing much more openly on gothic horror, Red Rain is another obvious choice. It pits Batman against Dracula himself, who goes mad from drinking the blood of the deranged citizens of Gotham City. In this memorable Elseworlds comic, Doug Moench’s script and Kelley Jones’ pencils deliver a combination of kinky baroque and locus horrendus which I’m sure Tim Burton would approve of…

Batman: Red RainRed Rain

Moench and Jones followed this project with the gory Bloodstorm, which expands the Red Rain concept in cool directions, including a run-in between Catwoman and a werewolf. In a way, it kind of anticipates the Twilight Saga, except that the main plot involves the Joker trying to gather an army of undead mobsters!

There is yet another sequel, Crimson Mist, but it’s much less inspired and focused, just trying to cram in more and more villains into the mix. Notably, it also weakens Bloodstorm’s powerful ending… Nevertheless, the three stories have been collected in the trade paperback Batman: Vampire.

Finally, if you appreciate the sense of design in the Burton movies and/or their offbeat black comedy, there may also be something for you in the collaborations of Steve Englehart and Marshall Rogers (collected in Legends of the Dark Knight: Marshall Rogers). I’m thinking in particular about the Joker’s campaign for governor and the notion of Gotham as a city where a guy cannot even have some relaxed alone time without getting disturbed by a maniac:

Batman - Dark Detective #3Dark Detective #3

NEXT: Joel Schumacher.

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10 covers with Batman attacked by animals

Batman comics have given the world plenty of awesome covers, whether by cleverly playing with their logo or by featuring terrifying depictions of the Joker (well, most of the time anyway). What is astonishing about Bat-covers, though, is not how many cool ones there are, but how many boring ones. Seriously, hundreds of covers just show the Dark Knight brooding, or jumping, or striking some kind of generic pose.

And sure, in the hands of the right artists this can be enough…

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…but most of the time it’s not.

So today Gotham Calling fights back against mediocrity. Don’t tell PETA, but we are highlighting 10 memorable covers in which the Caped Crusader faces the rage of the animal kingdom:

Detective Comics 585Legends of the Dark Knight 19Gotham Adventures 34World's Finest Comics 68Detective Comics 746Batman and the Mad MonkDetective Comics 333Detective Comics 568Batman 357Batman 158

NEXT: Tim Burton.

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Imaginary Batman team-ups by Warren Ellis – part 2

If you read the last post, you know what’s going on. Here are another five appealing team-ups between Batman and Warren Ellis’ creations:

LAZARUS CHURCHYARD

Lazarus Churchyard

With eighty percent of his body replaced with an intelligent evolving plastic, Lazarus Churchyard cannot die. And after four centuries of drugs and boredom, that’s exactly what he wants. Looking like a decrepit Alice Cooper, such a nihilistic, outrageous character would make for a promising contrast with either a time-travelling Batman or any of his futuristic incarnations, from the Clint Eastwood-esque hero of The Dark Knight Returns to the spunky Terry McGinnis of Batman Beyond.

I’m not going to lie: the main appeal would be seeing the Caped Crusader in this strange cyberpunk world illustrated by D’Israeli. Say what you want about Batman, he is nothing if not adaptable. But then again, Warren Ellis’ first comic is also quite possibly his most insane piece of science fiction (with the exception of City of Silence), alternating between the poetic and the darkly comedic in tales of a virtual afterlife, a meat computer, post-apocalyptic Basque separatists, gender confusion, and religious necrophilia.

Lararus Churchyard The Final CutLazarus Churchyard: The Final Cut

MIRANDA ZERO

Global Frequency 8

Always one to push himself and the medium forward, Ellis created Global Frequency as a relentless spy/sci-fi/action comic, each issue telling a standalone story, drawn by a completely different (and awesome) artist, concerning a race against time to prevent some kind of doomsday scenario. The quality varied (my favorite stories are Steve Dillon’s ‘Invasive,’ about the epidemic of an idea that acts like a virus, and Jon J. Muth’s ‘Big Sky,’ about the devastating effects of what may or may not be an angel’s apparition), but every issue had at least one cool idea at its core.

The concept that held the series together was a secret response organization led by the pragmatic Miranda Zero, who shared Batman’s no-nonsense attitude. A possible team-up could also involve collaboration between Oracle and Aleph, the young woman who coordinated the flow of information between the various agents. It should be noted, however, that because Global Frequency was so action-oriented we never got to know all that much about Miranda’s and Aleph’s background (the closest we came was in issues #8 and #11), especially as they practically only spoke through expository info-dumps.

Global Frequency 01Global Frequency #1

ROSI BLADES & TONY LING

Two-Step

Two-Step is far from being Warren Ellis’ most profound comic. It isn’t even his funniest, despite the fast-paced Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker barrage of gags, vividly illustrated by Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti.

Nevertheless, it’s impossible to resist the notion of a team-up between the Dark Knight and the protagonists of this millennial extravaganza: bored cam-girl Rosi Blades, who walks around a cartoonish alternate London in search of wild images to broadcast online, and zen gunman Tony Ling, who is a freelance operator in the black market for penis prostheses.

That’s right.

Two-StepTwo-Step #1

SPIDER JERUSALEM

Transmetropolitan - One More Time

It’s hard to overestimate how much of an impact Ellis’ masterpiece Transmetropolitan had on me – I’ve read it and reread it so many times and forced so many of my friends to read it that the books on my shelf are falling apart as they wait for me to pick them up again.

As in-your-face dark satire goes, the series was slightly more hardcore than Ben Elton’s early anarchist novels (This Other Eden, Gridlock, Stark) and slightly less surreal than TV’s Duckman, especially given Darick Robertson’s imaginative and energetic visuals. In Warren Ellis’ oeuvre, this undoubtedly shares Lazarus Churchyard‘s DNA. As science fiction, the comic was perhaps too good for its own right, having anticipated so much of what actually came to be (from Twitter to Google Glass and much more) that it’s now hard to appreciate how inventive it felt back then. But most of all, what set Transmetropolitan apart was that it appealed to pure rage over injustice, oppression, political hypocrisy, and consumerism. With lines like ‘If anyone in this shithole city gave two tugs of a dead dog’s cock about Truth, this wouldn’t be happening.’ and ‘If you loved me, you’d all kill yourselves today.’ – it remains one of the punkest comics out there!

At the center of it all was Spider Jerusalem, a futuristic Hunter S. Thompson with a mutant chain-smoking cat. Sure, it would be completely out of place for Spider to team up with Batman, but it would be worth it just for the inevitable scene where the guerrilla gonzo journalist would turn on the Caped Crusader with his faithful bowel-disrupter weapon, before going into one of his diatribes, like the classic anti-monoculture rant: ‘If we didn’t want to live like this, we could have changed it any time, by not fucking paying for it. So let’s celebrate by all going out and buying the same burger.’

Transmetropolitan 6Transmetropolitan #6

WILLIAM GRAVEL

Strange Killings - Necromancer

While the typical Ellis protagonist hides an idealistic heart underneath a sardonic exterior, William Gravel, SAS combat magician and occasional mercenary, is as cynical a bastard as they come. Imagine Batman having to team up with a nasty supernatural killer… and Gravel hanging out with a rich American in a silly costume (Gravel once suggested that the British Empire still secretly ruled the world, and America was nothing but a huge social experiment they’ve been running since Independence Day 1776).

Of course the kind of adventures Batman and Gravel specialize in are miles apart. That the latter’s stories are full of horrific graphic violence goes without saying (they’re published by Avatar, after all), but Ellis actually manages to give Garth Ennis a run for his money in terms of over-the-top profanity, obscenity, and gore. Between mutated genitalia stitched to a human tongue, the rotten corpses of men impregnated with lizards, and monsters that look like a cross between Predator and The Thing, there is enough fucked up imagery here to traumatize David Cronenberg!

Arguably, only the earlier mini-series are truly worth reading (even so, not for all tastes). However, it’s tempting to stick around just because Gravel himself is so fascinating. In contrast to Ellis’ and Mike Wolfer’s other collaboration (the hardcore sword & sorcery Wolfskin books, which are consistently entertaining), the ongoing Gravel series had some neat world-building but it wasn’t all that exciting, except for the prospect of watching its working class anti-hero regularly kick posh arse.

Strange_Killings-The_Body_OrchardStrange Killings: The Body Orchard #1

 

NEXT: Batman gets attacked by an elephant.

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Imaginary Batman team-ups by Warren Ellis – part 1

Given how prolific a writer Warren Ellis is, it’s surprising how few Batman stories he has done… It’s not as if there isn’t a whole multiverse of high concepts out there with which he would surely have a blast.

Although Ellis has worked on virtually every genre imaginable, he is first and foremost a master of mind-blowing science fiction. His stuff combines an enamored view of scientific progress with brutally misanthropic cynicism, not unlike Black Mirror. Rather than basic technophobia, most of his stories seem fascinated by the fact that humans waste science’s benign potential by using it to do horrible things to each other.

Warren Ellis’ comics are easily recognizable because all characters speak a mix of technobabble and terse, hyperbolic, sardonic wit (just like Ellis’ public persona). His average protagonist is a hard-edged idealist with a pitch black sense of humor, preferably chain-smoking and caffeine-addicted. That said, he has done tons of work-for-hire, scripting other people’s characters and showing that he can write different kinds of voices, even if they inevitably sound snarkier coming from him. Marvel in particular has often brought in Ellis to spice up its properties, with awesome results in series like Astonishing X-Men, Avengers, Excalibur, Iron Man, Moon Knight, Ruins, Thor, Thunderbolts, Ultimate Fantastic Four, Ultimate Galactus, Ultimate Human, and Wolverine. There is also Nextwave: Agents of H.A.T.E., which is set on the Marvel Universe but it’s written in full-on Ellis-speak, with everyone sounding hilariously out-of-character!

Ellis hasn’t written nearly as much for the DC Universe. His Batman work depicts the Dark Knight as a no-nonsense crime-fighting machine. This includes the forgettable two-parter ‘Infected’ and the excellent Batman: Black & White short story ‘To Become the Bat’ which cleverly captures how Bruce’s varied training informs an investigation. In the JLA Classified arc ‘New Maps of Hell,’ Warren Ellis gave Batman a badass punchline. His most successful take on the Dark Knight, though, involved a crossover with Planetary, a series Ellis created for Wildstorm. Part of what made it so much fun was seeing his typically sarcastic heroes interact with various versions of the Caped Crusader.

This got me thinking about how great it would be to see Batman in other Warren Ellis-related team-ups. I don’t mean him teaming up with the British writer himself, even if there is an amusing precedent of Ellis riding along in superhero comics (in Powers #7). I mean teaming up with characters like these:

ANNA MERCURY

Anna Mercury

Although Warren Ellis’ protagonists tend to always sound the same, he doesn’t often get enough credit for their diversity in contrast to the overall comics’ landscape. Notably, Ellis’ books are full of strong, interesting female characters, like the leads in such cool science fiction series as Mek, Ignition City, and FreakAngels, not to mention the meta-mindfuck that is Supreme: Blue Rose. As far as sci-fi heroines go, though, Anna Mercury is in a class of her own. A special agent for the British government operating out of imaginary worlds, in her downtime Anna Louise Britton is quite mundane and down-to-earth. But when she goes on a mission, she puts on a flashy wig and a skintight outfit, and calls herself Anna Mercury – because the kind of shit she deals with, people will only believe it if it comes from a babe who looks straight out an old pulp magazine!

Besides the fun of Batman hanging out with someone who is as much into over-the-top performance art as he is (but who chooses to dazzle instead of scaring people), it would be great to see the Caped Crusader in Anna Mercury’s bizarre field of operations. For example, we first meet her on a mission in a protectorate set in a parallel world that hangs in invisible orbit around Earth; an American warship passed by for twenty minutes in 1943, which completely reshaped local politics, society, and religion. Batman would perhaps feel at home in the city of New Ataraxia, given the art deco architecture and zeppelin-filled skyline:

Anna MercuryAnna MercuryAnna Mercury #1

DESOLATION JONES

Desolation Jones

Throwing the Dark Knight into a mystery series may seem too obvious, but Michael Jones would make for a useful partner if Batman’s adventures ever took him into the underbelly of Los Angeles’ spy world. This brooding alcoholic former-MI6-agent-turned-private-investigator-with-a-dark-secret-in-his-past certainly knows his way around all sorts of eccentric members of the intelligence community, although his methods can be way more violent than the Caped Crusader’s.

The only complete story to feature Jones, ‘Made in England,’ is the coolest riff on Raymond Chandler’s The Big Sleep since the Coen brothers’ The Big Lebowski, if nothing else because the plot revolves around a stash of Adolf Hitler’s porn. And it’s illustrated by J.H. Williams III, who is also responsible for some of the most breathtaking Batman art out there!

Desolation JonesDesolation Jones #1

DOKTOR SLEEPLESS

Doktor Sleepless

On the one hand, the parallels between Bruce Wayne and John ‘Doktor Sleepless’ Reinhart are obvious: they are both rich orphans, driven and resentful, who live in mansions and come up with theatrical alter egos to change their home city. Doktor Sleepless even has a kind of Bat-Signal projected onto the sky! That should give them plenty over which to bond.

On the other hand, Reinhart’s parents were not exactly crime victims, having been killed by the tentacles of Lovecraftian extradimensional creatures. And while Batman tries to enforce order in Gotham City, Doktor Sleepless wreaks futuristic chaos in Heavenside and tries to bring about the end of the world. Also, his versions of Alfred and Gordon are scary as hell.

Oh, and his Robin is a sexy assassin called Nurse Igor.

Doktor Sleepless 1Doktor Sleepless #1

FRANK IRONWINE

Frank Ironwine

Besides Desolation Jones, Ellis has written about plenty of detectives in his comics (like in the metafictional steampunk one-shot Aetheric Mechanics or in the psychological horror series Fell), as well as in his prose novels (in the uneven Crooked Little Vein and in the much tighter Gun Machine). However, Frank Ironwine could be a particularly interesting choice for a Batman team-up.

Brought to the page by Carla Speed McNeil’s delightfully expressive art, Frank Ironwine is a brilliant yet idiosyncratic police detective. Crucially, Ironwine’s approach to crime-solving is much closer to Columbo than to C.S.I., drawing on his profound understanding of people and history. And he is goddamn funny.

Frank IronwineFrank IronwineFrank Ironwine #1

JENNY SPARKS

The Authority 6

There are a couple of characters in Warren Ellis’ revolutionary superhero comic The Authority that resemble the Dark Knight, namely the urban proto-detective Jack Hawksmoor (who can literally communicate with cities) and the gritty masked vigilante Midnighter (who can pretty much outfight anyone). If they teamed up with Batman, the inevitable macho pissing match wouldn’t necessarily be all that exciting… By contrast, I would love to see the Caped Crusader work with Jenny Sparks, the English electricity-based superheroine born in 1900 who channeled ‘the Spirit of the 20th century.’

Created by Ellis way back in Stormwatch #37, Jenny Sparks had a lifetime of crazy adventures aligned with the evolving zeitgeist (wonderfully chronicled in Mark Millar’s and John McCrea’s Jenny Sparks: The Secret History of the Authority). A firm believer that it was the duty of superheroes to actively change the world for the better instead of merely safeguarding the status quo, Jenny eventually founded and led The Authority, a super-team which took it upon itself to aggressively fight the world’s problems on a global scale. Given her take-no-shit attitude, I wonder how she would have dealt with Batman’s comparatively reactionary approach to his mission.

Stormwatch 44Stormwatch #44

NEXT: More imaginary team-ups.

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Marshall Rogers’ iconic Batman

Batman: Dark Detective 2

Until shortly before his death in 2007, Marshall Rogers drew a bunch of cool Batman stories and even elevated some weaker ones with his clear, smooth lines, yet he is mostly remembered and beloved for a relatively short run way back in the late 1970s. This can be seen as a sign that Rogers’ talent peaked early in his career, but I think that it’s more a case of those older comics being just perfectly suited for him to kick major ass!

Marshall Rogers’ first Batman story was ‘Battle of the Thinking Machines’ (cover-dated April 1977). It pitted the Dark Knight against the Calculator in the culmination of a bizarre crime spree the latter had been perpetrating in the backup features of Detective Comics for months, which had included attempts to steal the life of a scientist, to steal all of Star City, to steal the Elongated Man’s fame, and to steal the final game of the World Series, as well as to skyjack Hawkman, because comics. The story was as silly and harmless as it sounds, but Rogers knocked it out of the park with his inventive angles and stylish designs:

detective comics 468Detective Comics #468

Rogers followed this with his fondly remembered, critically acclaimed, and all-around legendary run in the Man-Bat backups of Batman Family… Just kidding, that has been deservedly forgotten! By contrast, Marshall Rogers’ partnership with Steve Englehart in Detective Comics #471-476 is the stuff that geeky dreams are made of.

Shadow of the Batman 4

I really cannot say enough good things about this run (I’ll let someone else say them for me). Steve Englehart had a knack for characterization and for weaving subplots in which the various members of the supporting cast actually interacted with each other in meaningful ways, rather than just bouncing off of the Caped Crusader. This gave the series a richer, world-building atmosphere at a time when most Batman stories were completely autonomous, one-or-two issues long, and consequence-free.

Rogers was clearly in top form here, but he was only one element of the lightning in a bottle. He and Englehart formed a great team (they also worked together on a revival of Mr. Miracle, which they sneakily advertise in a poster in an alley in the background of Detective Comics #472). Englehart’s scripts were full of fantastic ideas and details, allowing Marshall Rogers – helped by Terry Austin’s inks and Jerry Serpe’s colors – to lend his sexy, elegant style to all sorts of awesome visuals, like the inside of Bruce Wayne’s head…

detective comics 471Detective Comics #471

…the Dark Knight facing Professor Hugo Strange’s monsters, like way back in the first issue of Batman…

detective comics 471Detective Comics #471

…Batman’s first properly fleshed out, non-villainess love interest, Silver St. Loud, with whom Bruce has a refreshingly mature relationship…

detective comics 471Detective Comics #471

…an auction where we get revealing glimpses of rogues bidding to find out Batman’s secret identity…

detective comics 472Detective Comics #472

…the Caped Crusader fighting Deadshot for the first time in almost 30 years, now with a Rogers-designed futuristic costume (which has more or less lasted to this day), on top of a Golden Age-style giant typewriter from Weisinger Office Suppliers, in a scene that cleverly juxtaposes the two eras…

detective comics 474Detective Comics #474

…and just the best damn Joker story of the Harlequin of Hate’s very long career:

detective comics 476Detective Comics #476

On the surface, ‘The Laughing Fish!/Sign of the Joker!’ is just another story in which the Joker announces he will kill specific people at a set hour, outsmarting Batman a couple of times with his ingenious assassination techniques – it’s a formula that harkens back to the very first Joker story and one that many writers have reproduced ever since.

What distinguishes the most entertaining Joker tales though, is that there is a kind of twisted logic behind his homicidal madness. In this case, the Clown Prince of Crime has dumped a chemical in the ocean that caused fish to look like him and now wants a percentage of all fish-sales, so he is murdering the heads of the Copyright Commission until they give him the requested trademark. This is at once hilarious and terrifying – because the request is impossible to satisfy, it means the Joker will just continue to kill. On the other hand, in today’s climate of transgenic patents and corporate overreach, the story looks more and more like a prescient dark satire of big business.

Marshall Rogers rocked so hard in these comics! He did a particularly amazing job with the suspenseful, claustrophobic scenes in which Batman, cops, and victims anxiously wait for the Joker to strike, not knowing what to expect (like the scene pictured above). This is also where Rogers nailed one of the most iconic Joker entrances ever, enveloped in spiralling laughter:

detective comics 475Detective Comics #475

Rogers and letterer Milton Snapinn seemed to have a nice rapport, pulling out all sorts of neat stunts. In the page below, there are letterboxes in the flying leaves, laughter sound effects that spread across panels, and the Joker’s arm piercing the paper while turning the page for the reader, with a glimpse of the following scene!

detective comics 476Detective Comics #476

It’s such a shame Marshall Rogers wasn’t brought in to illustrate Englehart’s sequel, ‘The Fishy Laugh’ (Legends of the DC Universe #26-27), which got settled with the most godawful art in Trevor von Eeden’s career.

After Englehart’s departure, Rogers did just a few more stories, memorable in their own right, before taking a long break from the Batman universe. These comics included a couple of issues written by Len Wein (featuring the first appearance of Clayface III) as well as two phenomenal tales written by Denny O’Neil:

DC Special Series 15DC Special Series #15

Having left such a firm mark on Batman comics, Rogers seemed destined to live in the shadow of his previous work as far as the Dark Knight was concerned. For a while, he only returned for special projects, including the retelling of Batman’s Golden Age origin in Secret Origins #6 and an offbeat imaginary tale under the Realworlds banner:

Realworlds: Batman

Since 2000, however, Marshall Rogers more than made up for his semi-absence, starting with ‘Siege’ (Legends of the Dark Knight #132-136), written by Archie Goodwin and James Robinson. This story brought Silver St. Cloud back to Gotham, which was nice, even though she served mostly as a plot device – Bruce Wayne didn’t even take her out and treat her right like a decent man would do.

Set in an undetermined period somewhere around the time Batman moved into a fashionable penthouse in the middle of Gotham City, ‘Siege’ had plenty to recommend, including its own take on Bruce’s granddad, on the origins of Wayne Manor, and on the classic story in which Thomas Wayne dressed like a bat way before his son did. Art-wise, ‘Siege’ is not that audacious, but Rogers’ impeccable sense of design shines through in quite a few sequences:

Legends Of The Dark Knight 133Legends of the Dark Knight #133

Rogers returned, along with Silver St. Cloud, in Dark Detective, whose continuity doesn’t really fit with ‘Siege.’ In fact, Dark Detective doesn’t really fit with anything: on the one hand, it apparently takes place in the aftermath of ‘War Games,’ with Batman as persona non-grata in the eyes of the Commissioner Akins-led authorities, but on the other hand Two-Face is still deformed and Rupert Thorne has political pull, which does not match in this era. If your nerdy brain can disregard all these contradictions without exploding, though, it’s kind of a cool mini-series.

Batman: Dark Detective 3

Best of all, Dark Detective reunited Rogers with Steve Englehart and Terry Austin, which made it feel like a sequel to their classic Detective Comics run. In this regard, it helped that it was not just Silver St. Cloud who was back, but also the Joker, who now wanted to become governor in a fun bit of Bush-era satire (my favorite campaign soundbyte: ‘If the presidency doesn’t have to be on speaking terms with reality, still less does the governorcy’).

In another amusing twist, this time around the victims of the Clown Prince of Crime’s killing spree were homages to popular Batman authors, like Bob Haney…

Batman - Dark Detective #2Dark Detective #2

…and Irv Novick:

Batman - Dark Detective #3Dark Detective #3

By then Rogers’ style had grown cartoonier, which is not to everyone’s liking, but I would argue that his art was as slick as ever.

That said, for once Rogers was not able to lift up the material. As much as I enjoy the goofier aspects of Englehart’s script, it’s easy to see why Dark Detective didn’t become as iconic as his previous work. The earlier stories had triumphed by seamlessly combining nostalgia and modern sensibilities, but Dark Detective seemed above all a product of nostalgia, because what had felt fresh and modern about Rogers’ and Englehart’s approach in the 1970s had since then become old school.

If the original run somehow remains appealing, it’s because it feels like it belongs somewhere – the energy of the time still resonates even if it’s hard to duplicate now. It’s just like those ’70s thrillers with relentless car chases (The Last Run, The Getaway, Charley Varrick, The Driver) – they continue to feel gripping after all these years, while recent chase movies, for all their furious speed and noise, can’t capture the same magic (although Drive and Death Proof come damn close).

Then again, nostalgia can go a long way in comics. The sound effects of Joker’s laughter were enough to evoke his memorable entrance from the original run…

Batman Dark Detective 01Dark Detective #1

…and kudos to Marshall Rogers for not merely reminding us of that iconic moment, but actually trying to top it in increasingly daring ways:

Batman - Dark Detective #4

NEXT: The best Batman team-ups that never happened.

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Kick-ass Crimes of Catwoman

Catwoman 37

Writing about standalone Catwoman stories last month, it occurred to me that Selina Kyle has committed quite a diverse range of robberies throughout the decades. From no-holds-barred heists to madcap capers that seem straight out of Blake Edwards’ The Pink Panther, here are 5 awesome issues and one-shots displaying her criminal versatility:

‘Final Report’ (Catwoman (v3) #11)

Catwoman v2 11-04

Since stealing feline-shaped jewels has arguably become Catwoman’s most recognizable trademark, you’d think a story about her trying to get the Bast Emerald (shaped like the eponymous cat-headed Egyptian goddess) couldn’t be all that exciting, no matter how many over-the-top high-tech deathtraps Brad Rader was asked to draw. Nevertheless, writer Steven Grant manages to spice things up with more twists than a David Mamet screenplay and a cast that also includes a dastardly millionaire and a bunch of federal agents.

And Catwoman’s final line, by the way, has to rank among her coolest moments!

Selina’s Big Score

Catwoman - Selina's Big Score

Anyone who has read Darwyn Cooke’s noirish Parker series can tell the dude is a huge fan of Richard Stark’s books. But years before Cooke ventured into adapting those novels into comics, he channeled his passion into what is not only the best Catwoman story you’ll ever read, but also a splendid heist story in its own right.

In this punch-in-the-gut of a crime thriller, Selina puts together a crew to somehow rob a high-speed train full of mob money. The gang includes, among others, a version of Chow Yun-Fat in The Killer and a Parker-like, tough-as-nails career criminal called Stark, who kind of looks like Lee Marvin (star of the spellbinding Parker film adaptation Point Blank). Alternating between exhilarating action and moody underworld dealings, the comic tops it all off with a legitimately powerful ending.

’The Lady Rogues!’ (Batman #45)

Batman 045

If you like your comics more on the loony side, this Golden Age story by Bill Woolfolk and Charles Paris is bound to delight. In what has got to be one of her most outlandish crime sprees, Catwoman tries to sabotage a film production based on a book about infamous female women of history and fiction, just because she’s pissed that she wasn’t included!

At one point, Selina disguises herself as Snow White and attacks a studio with the help of seven dwarfs, leading to a seriously awkward fight with the Dynamic Duo. In his defense, Batman seems to realize this, thus uttering the priceless line: ‘Robin, you get the dwarfs… I’ll go after the Catwoman!’

‘The Crooked House’ (Catwoman (v2) #25)

Catwoman 025

When one of the world’s richest men dies, he leaves his fortune to a series of eccentric projects, including a thoroughly booby-trapped house in Gotham City, which may or may not be hiding a treasure. Catwoman breaks in, facing one preposterous challenge after the next, and she’s not alone… the comic also features appearances by Robin and the Psyba-Rats (an amusing ragtag team of super-thieves about whom no one except Chuck Dixon ever gave a damn).

‘The Crooked House’ is a really fun romp – and the issue also includes a cool backup written by Doug Moench. That said, I confess that the main reason I chose it was because this is the best single-issue story to come out of the ’90s Catwoman run by Dixon and Jim Balent. However, if you’re willing track down slightly longer arcs, then make sure you also check out their two-parter ‘More Edge, More Heart/Box Office Poison’ (Catwoman (v2) #20-21) and the three-parter ‘Larceny Loves Company/Thieves/The Great Plane Robbery’ (Catwoman (v2) #28-30).

‘The Cat and the Clown!’ (The Joker #9)

JOKER 9

Last but not least, it’s Catwoman against the Joker, as both rogues decide to kidnap a famous comedian and his feline co-star. Predictably, the result is pure screwball mayhem, with deaths and puns galore!

 

NEXT: The Joker runs for governor.

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On Terry Pratchett

‘The thing is, I mean, there’s times when you look at the universe and you think, “What about me?” and you can just hear the universe replying, “Well, what about you?”

–          Thief of Time

 

Terry Pratchett died last week and I’m not sad.

I’m not sad, because he appears to have died peacefully, surrounded by loved ones, after an accomplished life. I’m not sad, because I didn’t know him personally, or even knew all that much about him (I’ve seen some interviews, but I’m generally not very interested in writers’ lives beyond their works). Most of all, I’m not sad, because, having read 38 of his 55 novels, I can still look forward to thousands of pages of crazy magic, witty turns of phrase, and silly footnotes.

Pratchett never wrote Batman comics. Or any comic, as far as I know (unless you count a couple of illustrated books), although some of his work has been adapted into graphic novels. Regardless, given his flair for imaginative, exciting stories full of quirky characters with even quirkier names, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that I’m a fan. Much like the adventures of the Dark Knight, I’ve compulsively read Pratchett’s stories at home and at work, on buses and airports, having gotten them from stores and libraries and friends’ collections whenever I could get my hands on them.

So Nanny Ogg, Nobby Nobbs, Cheery Littlebottom, and Cohen the Barbarian, this post is dedicated to you. And to Reg Shoe, the zombie who started the ‘undead rights’ movement. And to Captain Carrot Ironfoundersson, the huge adoptive son of dwarves (a joke Alan Moore reused in the fantasy spoof Smax), whose bright-eyed innocence becomes increasingly creepy. And to The Luggage, the multi-legged, semi-sentient, homicidal suitcase that keeps showing up. And, of course, to the Librarian, who was turned into an orangutan and decided he preferred it that way, even if he did continue to work in the library (with brief stints as police officer, keyboard player, and goalkeeper).

Eric     Unseen Academicals

Mixing full-blown comedy and fantasy, Pratchett’s multiverse is a nice counterpoint to the grim seriousness of Lord of the Rings and Game of Thrones. Hand in hand with all the goofy humor, however, these books have filled my head with awesome ideas, from a city that accepts an out-of-control dragon as king because ultimately she doesn’t seem worse than regular politicians, to an illiterate savant with infinite photographic memory (a la Borges’ Funes the Memorious) who memorizes an entire library without understanding a single word.

To be sure, not everyone is into fantasy, even if many of those who snottily frown upon the genre are happy to read the ‘magical realism’ of Gabriel García Márquez and José Saramago, or incursions into ‘fantastic literature’ by Jorge Luis Borges and Italo Calvino. I’m happy to read them as well – and in Pratchett I found a writer with a less elaborate prose and more willingness to indulge in pop cultural winks (from Star Trek to Beverly Hills Cop), but who likewise draws on supernatural imagery to dig into the core of reality. After all, what is the Discworld if not a planet made up of all the stupid myths people believe in: it’s flat, populated by petty humans, gods, trolls, and creatures from every kind of lore… and it rests on top of four giant elephants, themselves on top of a turtle swimming through space.

The Colour of Magic     The Wee Free Men

The Discworld is less a series than a common setting, a shared universe like DC or Marvel, housing various sagas with distinct characters, themes, and atmosphere. Many of the stories take place in the city-state of Ankh-Morpork, a sprawling inter-species melting pot ruled by a fascinating, benevolent tyrant straight out of Machiavelli. This is where the City Watch books are set – a crime series about the poor bastards who try to keep the law among all the chaos (in fact, most just try to stay out of trouble). It’s also the setting for the satirical Moist von Lipwig saga, about a con artist who somehow finds himself running key institutions like the post office and the banking system.

Moreover, there are several books about the buffoonish Wizards of Unseen University, sending up the tropes of sword & sorcery. These revolve around the coward Rincewind (who keeps getting into Lovecraftian end-of-the-world scenarios despite his commitment to avoiding heroics if there is even the slightest chance of running away) and/or the academic staff under Archancellor Mustrum Ridcully (who, as is typical of academia, spend more time arguing with each other than actually doing anything).

The Witches series takes place in Lancre, in the rural side of the Discworld. It twists around traditional folklore while commenting on the power of legends and words. This is the home of Granny Weatherwax, in all her stubbornness and offbeat wisdom (‘Granny lived her life via the back door. There were only three times in your life when it was proper to come through the front door, and you were carried every time.’ – Wyrd Sisters).

Another set of novels follows the existential adventures of the anthropomorphic personification of Death (you know, the scythe-wielding skeleton), who rides around on a horse called Binky. In the Discworld, Death keeps quitting its job and going native among the living. Its granddaughter, Susan Sto Helit, has helped combat the Auditors of Reality, who are basically celestial bureaucrats.

And then there are a handful of isolated books which don’t fit with any of these series.

Aside from the occasional Easter Egg and cameos by peripheral characters (especially in Ankh-Morpork), Pratchett tended to stay away from crossovers, with a few exceptions. The Wizards often play an important role in Death’s books and they meet up with Lancre’s Witches in Lords and Ladies. The Witches travel to Ankh-Morpork for the operatic farce Maskerade. The most widespread team-up takes place in the highly entertaining The Last Hero, probably because for once each page was beautifully illustrated by Paul Kidby, so Pratchett was letting him shine.

The Last Hero     Maskerade

I can see how Terry Pratchett’s writing may not be everyone’s cup of tea. He sometimes sounds too didactic, heavy-handed, oh so British, and can never resist a gratuitous pun or play on words. Which is not to say that Pratchett’s style hasn’t evolved – it started as a spoof of hardcore fantasy, but the later works read more like epic narratives in their own right, with the jokey names and occasional shtick feeling like odd leftovers from the past.

In any case, it’s hard to deny he had a knack for amusing dialogue and clever asides:

 

‘And these are your reasons, my lord?’

‘Do you think I have others?’ said Lord Vetinari. ‘My motives, as ever, are entirely transparent.’

Hughnon reflected that ‘entirely transparent’ meant either that you could see right through them or that you couldn’t see them at all.

–          The Truth

 

Then again, I don’t read Pratchett for his way with language (enjoyable as it can be) as much as for the fact that he is a master storyteller. He’s brilliant at plotting, pacing, and character development, male and female – the eccentric cast always starts out as grotesque caricatures which Pratchett then manages to humanize. In the first Discworld novel, Ankh-Morpork was still a stereotypical, proto-medieval city, but throughout the decades faithful readers have seen it slowly grow into a multicultural steampunk metropolis going through an oddball industrial revolution.

As Pratchett’s stories became more ambitious in scale, he explored larger issues, with religion, politics, war, racism, and gender being the most recurring themes. His observations mix progressive idealism with bitter cynicism:

 

…one of the things sometimes forgotten about the human spirit is that while it is, in the right conditions, noble and brave and wonderful, it is also, when you get right down to it, only human.

–          Guards! Guards!

 

Some may find Pratchett’s humanist moralizing too preachy, annoying, or simplistic. But I really dig that Terry Pratchett began by doing deconstructionist satire (first of genre, then of society) and gradually challenged himself to come up with reconstructionist alternatives. When his books end on positive notes, these feel less like Hollywood-endings than like the product of a writer who regards downbeat endings as too easy a way to leave a strong final impression… Pratchett was more interested in using this imaginary universe to take his stories to original places, even flirting with utopianism. (That’s also true of the non-Discworld Nation, which is more or less grounded in reality yet ends up becoming a reimagining of British colonialism, instead of a mere indictment.)

Discworld Witches     Discworld The Truth

Keeping in mind the overlap of tone and characters, there are four different types of Discworld novels. The early ones, from the 1980s, were primarily slapstick, silly but smart, close in spirit to Monty Python, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, and Blackadder. In comics, the closest equivalent I can think of are Asterix the Gaul and Epicurus the Sage. The very first books set in the Discworld (The Colour of Magic, The Light Fantastic), which introduced Rincewind, are basically parodies of Tolkien. Subsequent Rincewind novels (Sourcery, Eric, Interesting Times, The Last Continent, The Last Hero) carry on in the same vein, doing madcap takes on straight-faced fantasy classics like Robert E. Howard’s Conan, the various versions of Faust, and countless orientalist adventures. With its provocative tale of revolution, Interesting Times is perhaps the only one to fully transcend into another level.

Yet, even in his initial period, you can see Pratchett striving to go beyond pure nonsense. Yes, Mort is hilarious, but it also timidly tries to be poetic (‘People don’t alter history any more than birds alter the sky, they just make brief patterns on it.’). Yes, Wyrd Sisters is a screwball homage to William Shakespeare (with Kubrick’s The Shining thrown in), but it also comments on political rhetoric and iconography. And yes, Pyramids is insane, but it revolves around a powerful metaphor for oppressive tradition.

Discworld Mort     Discworld Pyramids

A second type of novel is primarily concerned with our world, examined through surreal satire. The first book about the Ankh-Morpork City Watch, Guards! Guards!, still has plenty of absurdist humor, but most of the appeal lies the in the way it mercilessly mocks politics and society. The same can be said for other entries in the City Watch series, such as Men at Arms (where the cops have to face racial riots, not to mention the invention of the gun) or the excellent Jingo (where the main crime being investigated is war itself).

 

‘Fortune favours the brave, sir,’ said Carrot cheerfully.

‘Good. Good. Pleased to hear it, captain. What is her position vis à vis heavily armed, well prepared and excessively manned armies?’

‘Oh, no-one’s ever heard of Fortune favouring them, sir.’

–          Jingo

 

Small Gods is Pratchett’s magnum opus for this type of story, ridiculing religion with the verve of Python’s Life of Brian. Further examples include The Truth, which satirizes journalism, and the Moist von Lipwig trilogy (Going Postal, Making Money, Raising Steam), which reads like a Swiftian history of capitalism.

Discworld Guards! Guards!     Discworld Making Money

Other books can be described as just downright, no-holds-barred fantasy, even if of a tongue-in-cheek kind. Less campy than Xena the Warrior Princess and denser than Shrek, but from a not too distant breed. The point of magic here is to provide wonder and thrills: it’s escapist fun, tempered with Pratchett’s philosophical musings. The best of this bunch has got to be Reaper Man, the second novel where Death goes AWOL, this time with the unintended consequence that some people stop dying (Saramago would go on to explore a similar idea in Death with Interruptions).

Many of these novels reimagine fables and fairy tales, especially in the Witches series (Witches Abroad, Lords and Ladies), but also in the City Watch entry Feet of Clay, which is a murder mystery about golems. Although less mordant than the books in the previous section, these also involve taking real world phenomena and putting a supernatural spin on them, whether it’s movies (Moving Pictures), rock and roll (Soul Music), opera (Maskerade), Christmas (Hogfather), or college soccer (Unseen Academicals).

Discworld Soul Music     Discworld Moving Pictures

Finally, starting with the revisionist vampire tale Carpe Jugulum, in the late 1990s Terry Pratchett entered his gothic phase. The potential of horror tropes to symbolize the most sinister side of humanity was best expressed by Granny Weatherwax in that book, when she explained that people need vampires because ‘they helps ’em remember what stakes and garlic are for.’ The result were many novels that felt less like satires than like macabre allegories, often involving the Transylvania-like region of Überwald. Sure, there were still surrealist gags, but they were now closer to The League of Gentlemen than to The Mighty Boosh.

It wasn’t just the Witches series. Pratchett took stone-faced Sam Vimes, the head of the City Watch, into some seriously dark places in The Fifth Elephant, Night Watch, Thud!, and Snuff. Of these, Night Watch is easily my favorite, as Vimes travels back in time to the Discworld’s version of the 1871 Paris Commune and things get fucking intense…

 

People on the side of The People always ended up disappointed, in any case. They found that The People tended not to be grateful or appreciative or forward-thinking or obedient. The People tended to be small-minded and conservative and not very clever and were even distrustful of cleverness. And so the children of the revolution were faced with the age-old problem: it wasn’t that you had the wrong kind of government, which was obvious, but that you had the wrong kind of people.

–          Night Watch

 

Around this time, Sam Vimes also played a minor role (along with the reporters from The Truth) in Monstrous Regiment, which is possibly the Discworld’s darkest novel. No, wait, that would be The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents, which underneath the whimsical premise of talking cats and mice turns out to be scary as all hell!

discworld Night Watch     Discworld Thud!

I’m not too familiar with Terry Pratchett’s non-Discworld stuff (not yet, anyway). Nation is a cool book. Dodger could have been one as well if it didn’t come across as so pleased with itself, repeating the same beats over and over again, and uncharacteristically submissive to the Crown. Good Omens, an apocalyptic comedy about a childish antichrist, which he co-wrote with Neil Gaiman, has many misfires, but when it hits the spot you can tell Pratchett was behind it. All in all, the novels set on the Discworld are the ones that marked my life.

So with all this, where is the best place to start? Well, here are 10 books that can serve as gateway drugs:

MORT is the tale of a poor boy who gets hired as Death’s apprentice. This first novel in the Death series really sneaks up on the reader: for the most part it feels like you’re just reading a collection of laugh-out-loud funny scenes (and Karate Kid references) until you realize that the story is actually super-tightly plotted and full of great characterization.

WYRD SISTERS is the first and arguably the strongest novel in the Witches series (OK, technically it’s the second, but Equal Rites is dispensable except for completists). I would tell you to imagine a burlesque mashup of Macbeth, Hamlet, and King Lear, but it’s better than anything you can imagine!

PYRAMIDS is a frenetic ride through the Discworld’s version of Ancient Egypt, featuring a rebel prince trained by the Assassins’ Guild, a camel mathematician, and some truly mind-blowing science fiction.

GUARDS! GUARDS! kickstarted the City Watch series, dedicated to all those fine guards whose role is ‘round about Chapter Three (or ten minutes into the film) to rush into the room, attack the hero one at a time, and be slaughtered’. This is probably the novel where Pratchett achieved the most perfect balance between inducing laughter and being devastatingly misanthropic.

MOVING PICTURES sees the arrival of cinema to the Discworld. Needless to say, it’s packed with enough references to classic Hollywood to satisfy any film buff!

SMALL GODS tells the story of a god who is down to only one devout believer… and a slow-witted one at that. Since in the Discworld gods only exist if people believe in them, anything goes to gather up more followers before it’s too late.

THE TRUTH shows us the creation of Ankh-Morpork’s first proper newspaper, but it owes as much to Pulp Fiction as to His Girl Friday. Even though the book revolves mostly around new characters, this one is also a treat for fans of the City Watch series, since it provides a different perspective on Sam Vimes.

THE AMAZING MAURICE AND HIS EDUCATED RODENTS is about a Puss in Boots-like cat and his gang of educated mice who con ignorant villagers through a variation of the legend of the Pied Piper of Hamelin… Don’t be fooled by the fact that this is a Young Adult novel (which in Pratchett’s case only means it’s chockfull of sex and death). The book is a phenomenal political allegory.

MONSTROUS REGIMENT takes the familiar premise of a girl pretending to be a boy to join the army and spins one of the most thought-provoking, feminist war stories you’ll ever read.

GOING POSTAL introduces the charismatic Moist von Lipwig. You may think that the postal service isn’t an obvious topic for a knock-out farce, but Pratchett delivers one in this tale of a con man who is forced to go straight and finds out the whole system is designed for people like him.

Monstrous Regiment     Going Postal

So say hello to Death and Binky, Sir Pratchett.

Like I said, I’m not sad. After all, I can still reread passages like this one:

 

Now consider the tortoise and the eagle.

The tortoise is a ground-living creature. It is impossible to live nearer the ground without being under it. Its horizons are a few inches away. It has about as good a turn of speed as you need to hunt down a lettuce. It has survived while the rest of evolution flowed past it by being, on the whole, no threat to anyone and too much trouble to eat.

And then there is the eagle. A creature of the air and high places, whose horizons go all the way to the edge of the world. Eyesight keen enough to spot the rustle of some small and squeaky creature half a mile away. All power, all control. Lightning death on wings. Talons and claws enough to make a meal of anything smaller than it is and at least take a hurried snack out of anything bigger.

And yet the eagle will sit for hours on the crag and survey the kingdoms of the world until it spots a distant movement and then it will focus, focus, focus on the small shell wobbling among the bushes down there on the desert. And it will leap . . .

And a minute later the tortoise finds the world dropping away from it. And it sees the world for the first time, no longer one inch from the ground but five hundred feet above it, and it thinks: what a great friend I have in the eagle.

And then the eagle lets go.

And almost always the tortoise plunges to his death. Everyone knows why the tortoise does this. Gravity is a habit that is hard to shake off. No one knows why the eagle does this. There’s good eating on a tortoise but, considering the effort involved, there’s much better eating on practically anything else. It’s simply the delight of eagles to torment tortoises.

But of course, what the eagle does not realize is that it is participating in a very crude form of natural selection.

One day a tortoise will learn how to fly.

–          Small Gods

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Brian Azzarello’s off-the-wall Batman

Batman 620Batman #620

Since 1939, there have been plenty of offbeat Batman writers, but I get a special kick out of the fact that Brian Azzarello has been allowed through the gates. After all, Azzarello seems mostly at home telling viciously violent, R-rated, immoral stories, and when faced with corporate-owned properties he enjoys writing them totally out of character… I’m not complaining though, since we’ve gotten some magnificently outrageous comics out of the deal!

To be sure, Brian Azzarello is clearly a big fan of puns and hardboiled fiction, two longstanding staples of Batman comics. In fact, some of Azzarello’s coolest works involved filtering old hardboiled narratives through different genres (for example, his Cage is a blaxploitation version of Dashiell Hammet’s Red Harvest, and his El Diablo is a western version of the underrated film noir Hollow Triumph). The intricate plotting and manly tone are also typical of classic pulps, although the non-stop parade of slang and sleaze sometimes feels more like the reader is repeatedly being hit on the head with a James Ellroy tome. Most of all, you can tell you’re reading a Brian Azzarello comic by the way in which it is enamored with language: from witty to symbolic to groan-inducing wordplay (‘It’s Renny.’ ‘What, your nose? Well then, here’s a hankie.’), the cascading double meanings bounce around between sophomoric and quasi-Shakespearean.

Brian Azzarello’s eccentric voice has found its match in similarly eccentric artists. Most notably, Eduardo Risso’s distinct visual style is perfect for stories of scruffy male characters and voluptuous femme fatales. Risso’s meandering POV also adequately complements Azzarello’s own meandering narration and dialogue. Taking advantage of this chemistry, the duo produced a number of neat crime comics, such as the clichéd Jonny Double, the epic 100 Bullets, and the futuristic Spaceman.

Risso’s and Azzarello’s first Batman-themed collaboration was the black & white short story ‘Scars.’ It’s basically a conversation between Batman and the serial killer Victor Zsasz in which the Dark Knight argues that real power is looking into the eyes of someone you’ve just saved and knowing that now they owe you. Way to sound heroic, Batman!

Batman Broken City

They followed this up in 2003 with the story arc ‘Broken City,’ now joined by the rest of the 100 Bullets team, namely colorist Patricia Mulvihill, letterer Clem Robins, and cover artist Dave Johnson. In a way, the whole thing almost feels like a spin-off of that title, complete with a blink-and-you-miss-it cameo by Agent Graves in the second chapter.

Like their magnum opus, ‘Broken City’ has a whirling plot, but in contrast to 100 Bullets it owes more to detective fiction than to gangster sagas. And it somehow manages to be even moodier:

Batman #622 Batman #622 Batman #622

Always one for twisted, broken protagonists, Brian Azzarello tries his best to take Batman into some seriously dark corners. A key plot point in the story revolves around him dealing with the murder of two parents who left a surviving kid behind. We also get a flashback into Bruce Wayne’s final moments with his own parents, which is emotionally powerful but pretty much inconsistent with any other depiction of these events seen before or since!

Me, I love it. ‘Broken City’ has a noir-as-fuck attitude to the point of kitsch. Killer Croc, the Penguin, and Scarface seem like they just walked out of an audition for a public reading of The Black Dahlia. Even the Caped Crusader is in on the joke, getting his fair share of risqué double entendres:

Batman 620Batman 620Batman #620

Azzarello, Risso, Mulvihill, and Robins reunited to do a noirish Batman mystery for DC’s experimental Wednesday Comics. Their most acclaimed Batman-related project, however, was ‘Knight of Vengeance,’ a spin-off from DC’s 2011 crossover Flashpoint. Set in a world where Bruce died at the hands of a mugger and it was his surviving father, Thomas Wayne, who became a bat-clad vigilante, ‘Knight of Vengeance’ is a radical reimagining of the Batman mythos. Azzarello took advantage of the freedom granted by this alternative continuity to write a Dark Knight close to his usual sensibilities, i.e. embittered and bloodthirsty, not to mention an adept of ridiculously elaborate turns of phrase.

Much like TV’s True Detective, these works are all surface passing for substance – and what a sexy (and sexist) surface it is! They have a highly recognizable, unifying style, starting with Risso’s pyrotechnic pencils and inks, which even riff on iconic panels from The Killing Joke, The Dark Knight Returns, and Year One, as if to prove that he can outdraw anyone who gets in the way…

Another singular artist who has regularly been paired with Azzarelo is Lee Bermejo. The contrast to Eduardo Risso couldn’t be greater, as Bermejo has quite a photorealistic approach to comics. He gives Gotham City an impressive retro look, rendering it in a way that you can almost feel the textures and smells:

batman deathblow after the fireBatman/Deathblow: After the Fire

Azzarello and Bermejo first worked together on After the Fire, a kind of crossover between Batman and Wildstorm’s black ops super-agent Deathblow. I say ‘kind of’ because this mini-series flies in the face of the conventions for this type of stories by never having the two characters actually meet (much less fight and team up, as the formula goes) – although there is an awesome sequence in which Bruce Wayne totally disguises himself as Deathblow! Unlike Azzarello’s later, wacky Deathblow series, After the Fire is a legitimately taut espionage tale, typically elliptical yet rewarding to readers who pay close attention.

That said, the most accomplished Azzarello-Bermejo collaboration has got to be Lex Luthor: Man of Steel, an excellent mini-series told from the point-of-view of Superman’s classic nemesis (and also a fine companion piece to Rick Veitch’s and Tommy Lee Edwards’ The Question: The Devil’s in the Details, which you should own). In part, the comic works because Brian Azzarello sticks to what he does best, telling convoluted stories about Machiavellian bastards, instead of trying to write a conventional superhero tale (he tried it with Superman: For Tomorrow, with catastrophic results). But more than that, the rapport between writer and artist really gelled in this book, particularly in the way they played with reflecting surfaces, feeding off Azzarello’s flair for juxtaposing multiple layers of meaning on each gesture and exchange:

LuthorLuthorLex Luthor: Man of Steel #3

The team followed Luthor with Joker, a graphic novel spotlighting the Clown Prince of Crime. Bermejo brought his A-game, drastically redesigning much of Batman’s rogues’ gallery and nailing a Joker that wasn’t far away from Heath Ledger’s in The Dark Knight movie (which came out around the same time). On the other hand, Azzarello produced what is probably the most godawful script of his career, basically piling scenes upon scenes of the Joker committing gratuitous, sadistic acts, from skinning a guy alive to raping the wife of his own henchman. Too stomach-churning to be fun, yet too ludicrous to be taken seriously, one of the best-looking Batman books out there also happens to be the most unpleasant to read (fortunately, Bermejo later found a better vehicle for his luscious art in the Dickensian Batman graphic novel Noel).

But hey, at least there is a bit in Joker where the Dark Knight provides a hilariously mean-spirited justification for his costume:

JokerJokerJoker

Azzarello and Bermejo partially redeemed themselves with a fun spread in Superman/Batman #75, featuring Lex Luthor and the Joker in a Calvin & Hobbes-like comic strip. And who knows, maybe one day we’ll get to see if Azzarello’s, Bermejo’s, and Risso’s Batman: Europa is as mind-blowing as it sounds!

Brian Azzarello has worked with several other artists – in fact, while firmly holding on to his specific voice, the man has gradually shown increasing range and adaptability. Based on his early, chauvinistic crime comics, I could hardly have imagined that Azzarello would end up writing such an exciting, fantasy-heavy run on Wonder Woman!

Wonder Woman 05

To be fair, a great example of his versatility came out already in 2004. As a tribute to editor Julie Schwartz, DC published a series of comics inspired by outlandish covers Schwartz had commissioned back in the Silver Age. Azzarello wrote a hysterical story based on a cover with Green Lantern selling power rings, including this insane gem of a page:

dc comics presents green lanternDC Comics Presents Green Lantern

Given the brooding pseudo-gravitas of most of his previous work, it might come as a shock that Brian Azzarello has such a zany sense of humor (a vein he explored further in Doctor 13: Architecture and Mortality). Then again, there are only so many puns you can make before you bow down to Groucho Marx.

Despite his WTF depictions of the Dark Knight, somehow Brian Azzarello became a go-to guy for self-contained Batman stories. He wrote ‘Cornered,’ a short tale about corner kids and urban crime illustrated by Jim Mahfood (Gotham Knights #35). He wrote ‘Poison,’ a lame Poison Ivy piece to showcase Jordi Bernet’s cheesecake art (Solo #6). He even wrote a forgettable sequence for the animated movie Batman: Gotham Knight.

Ultimately, Azzarello seems to have been given carte blanche to piss all over traditional takes on the Caped Crusader:

batman - doc savage specialBatman / Doc Savage Special

He got another opportunity to so with First Wave, a series set in an alternate universe that brought together pulp heroes such as Doc Savage and The Spirit (yes, Will Eisner’s The Spirit). Brian Azzarello threw an alternate Batman into the mix, one closer to The Shadow’s influence in the very early Batman stories – a gun-toting Dark Knight, for Kane’s sake!

Even in his comics set outside the mainstream DC Universe, Azzarello has occasionally found a way to put further iconoclastic twists into Batman’s mythology. In Dark Horse’s anthology Noir: A Collection of Crime Comics, Brian Azzarello contributed with a short story (illustrated by Fábio Moon and Gabriel Bá) which revised a seminal detail in Batman’s origin. And then, of course, there is the final arc of Azzarello’s Hellblazer run…

Hellblazer 169Hellblazer 169Hellblazer #169

The closing arc of Brian Azzarello’s stint in Vertigo’s long-running horror series Hellblazer was marked by typically off-the-wall creative license. Told in Azzarello’s ultra-cryptic style, it featured high contrast art by Marcelo Frusin (who was also his partner in crime in the revisionist western comic Loveless), as well as by Giuseppe Camuncoli in the prelude. ‘Ashes & Dust in the City of Angels’ caused a bit of a stir by presenting the series’ protagonist, British magician/con man John Constantine, as a bondage-addicted bisexual (in fairness, the S&M element had already been briefly suggested years before by Jamie Delano’s ‘The Horrorist’).

As an additional twist, in the story John Constantine has a destructive relationship with an orphaned billionaire called S.W. Manor (as in Stately Wayne Manor) who lives in a mansion surrounded by bats, with a creepy trophy room, and gets off on misery and guilt. And just to drive the point home, Manor’s butler is called Fredo, his previous ward was called Jason, and his current one is called Tim (the latest Robin being Tim Drake at the time these comics came out). Sure, it’s all part of an extravagant revenge scheme by Constantine, but that doesn’t change the fact that Brian Azzarello came the closest to writing canonical Batman/Constantine slash fiction released by a major publisher!

So why go out and watch 50 Shades of Grey when you can stay home and read a pun-filled comic where Batman plays a dominated love slave?

Hellblazer 171

NEXT: Catwoman kicks ass.

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