Messing around with Batman’s logo

Batman 31

In my world-changing countdown of Ed Hannigan’s Batman covers, I mentioned how much I love it when he put a spin on the series’ logo. Yet Hannigan, God’s gift to cover artists that he undoubtedly is, was hardly the only one to have fun with the iconic design.

As far as pulling stunts with the cover logo goes, a personal favorite of mine is Batman #354, which actually came out shortly before Ed Hannigan’s legendary run. Before I show it, however, let me try to give you a sense of how innovative it was… Covers for the Batman series had a pretty consistent logo in the early 1980s, bat-shaped and with the Dark Knight’s head between ‘Bat’ and ‘Man.’ You can see it, for example, in this cover which features the Caped Crusader being rudely interrupted while trying to enjoy a ski ride:

Batman 337

While the logo sometimes shifted colors to match each cover’s mood, or was pushed to the background to let other elements shine, it retained a pretty coherent shape and place. This is why it was so cool to see penciller Keith Giffen, inker Dick Giordano, and colorist Anthony Tollin suddenly play with the format:

Batman 354

Man, this is such a great cover, particularly in the context of the regular ones that preceded it. Not only does it expand the logo to frame the whole image, it adds further detail to Batman’s face and hands, making it seem as if the Dark Knight himself is hovering over the scene (in fact, his shadow is even projected onto the floor).

Since then, it has become less groundbreaking to screw with a series’ logo, although it’s still rare enough to jump at you from the stands. Take Detective Comics – I remember being so used to seeing its classic font and format…

Detective Comics 783     Detective Comics 860

…that merely breaking the pattern was enough to make me giddy for these:

Detective Comics 783     Detective Comics 862

That said, as striking as it can be to simply distort the logo, the covers that really get me are those that integrate it into the layout in particularly clever ways…

Gotham Adventures 02     Batman 613

Batman Incorporated 01     Batman Incorporated 04

Batman 528     Batman Madness

Batman 366     The Untold Legend of the Batman

Streets of Gotham 3     Batman Incorporated 5

I’m clearly not alone on this. In fact, in 2001 DC challenged its artists to do just that, so across various comics we got covers where the series’ titles were turned into all sorts of objects. This, of course, was insanely awesome (even though DC editors were not ballsy enough to trust their artists, since the titles were also added in a boring font, in small print, to the top of the covers):

Gotham Knights 24     Detective Comics 765

Legends of the Dark Knight 150     Gotham Adventures 45

Another neat trick is when, instead of transforming the title logo into a different object, artists just treat it as a solid item in itself. This creates cover images with a twisted internal logic, as Batman interacts with the title of his own comic:

Batman 539     Detective Comics 699

In this subgenre, I particularly like covers where the villains, not content with going after the Dark Knight, just go ahead and destroy his damn logo:

Batman 194     Batman 550

Superman / Batman 63     The Batman Adventures 30

Ultimately, logos are just so much fun that Batman and Robin even got a portable one, to show off on special occasions:

Batman 200

NEXT: Batman turns into an ape.

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Underrated Batman stories – part 2

If you read the last post, you know what’s going on. Here are another 5 accessible, self-contained Batman stories that usually don’t make it to the big lists but are nevertheless worth tracking down:

‘Black Masterpiece’ (Batman Annual #18)

Batman Annual 18

When a band of Gotham thieves, headed by a pretentious curator, steals the Mona Lisa and holds the painting for ransom, it’s up to Batman to recover the famous artwork. Intercut with this narrative, we get a saga set in 15th/16th century Florence, where the actual Mona Lisa (the woman who served as model) is kidnapped and a rich orphan goes to her rescue while wearing a Bat-suit and wings designed by Leonardo da Vinci himself! The result is not exactly an Elseworlds tale about an early modern Caped Crusader as much as a taut story that first draws parallels between the two plotlines and ultimately brings them together in a particularly cool ending.

‘Anatomy of a Murder’ (Shadow of the Bat #71)

Shadow Of The Bat 71

I had to include at least one mystery tale. The World’s Greatest Detective investigates the stabbing of an ordinary man, piercing through the web of love, hatred, jealousy, and contradictory behaviors that make up any life. My passion for Alan Grant’s twisted creations is no secret, but here we don’t get madcap villains or inventive action set pieces, just a labyrinthic whodunit and grounded human drama.

Penciller Mark Buckingham has the ungrateful task of illustrating a comic which consists mostly of interviews with each of the suspects. He nevertheless takes every opportunity to shine, such as in the image above, which features what has got to be one of the most generous depictions of the size of Batman’s cape.

‘Deathtrap A-Go-Go!’ (Batman Adventures (v2) #9)

batman adventures 9

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. As if that wasn’t enough, the issue’s backup story, in which Bruce Wayne goes to a therapy evaluation, is just as witty.

‘Work That’s Never Done’ (Batman Confidential #49)

Batman Confidential 49

Few comics have nailed Batman’s inner voice as captivatingly as this one. Following a 911 distress call, the Dark Knight arrives on a crime scene ahead of the cops and we are shown how the mind of the World’s Greatest Detective operates. Besides figuring out what happened and tracking down the killer, readers are privy to parallel, non-stop deductions delivered with terse precision: ‘When I woke up this afternoon, crumbs were on the stairs and in the kitchen. Either the mansion has mice or Alfred is burned out and stress-eating again. I’ll need to set some traps or buy him a round trip ticket to Bermuda.’

‘The Guardian of 100 Cities!’ (Batman #95, reprinted in Batman #258)

Batman 258

Finally, I wanted an example from Batman’s most innocent era. While this may not be the cleverest or wackiest tale Bill Finger ever scripted, nor one with particularly creative visuals by Sheldon Moldoff, it’s still one that gets me every time. The overall plot is quite simple, involving Batman and Robin chasing a bunch of criminals in a movie set and befriending an aging actor called Roger Stanton in the process. Yet there is so much charm packed into these 8 pages!

The story opens with a well-pulled twist, setting up the reader for a supernatural, globe-trotting adventure, only to quickly scale things down in the transition to the second page. Other twists follow, as Roger Stanton keeps surprising the Dynamic Duo and growing as a character until the very end. As was typical of the time, the action scenes incorporate the setting in fun ways, like when Robin knocks out a crook by swinging from a Dutch windmill. There are also cute details, such as the Caped Crusader holding the fugitives in a movie prop jail. Finally, it’s hard to resist a comic where the Boy Wonder utters the line: ‘Batman, I saw something moving near the Taj Mahal!’

NEXT: Batman goes skiing.

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Underrated Batman stories – part 1

If you’re looking for classic Batman graphic novels and must-read stories, there are plenty of listicles on the web to serve your needs. (I’ve provided some tips myself.) But perhaps you’ve already read those and are wondering what to get next, or perhaps you’re disappointed with the drab direction the series has taken as of late and find yourself in search of past glories, or maybe you’re just a nerdy hipster who wants to impress others with arcane knowledge in order to disguise your insecurities about not being able to come up with original ideas… In any case, I’m here to help. If you want cool, self-contained comics that flew under the radar, do yourself a favor and track down these overlooked gems:

‘Heretic’ (The Hill)

Batman - The Hill

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.

‘Actions’ (Gotham Adventures #48)

Gotham Adventures 48

Scott Peterson and Tim Levins (with occasional fill-ins by Rick Burchett) had an amazing run in Gotham Adventures. It was consistently satisfying, with the typical issue including a handful of dynamic action scenes yet still leaving enough room for a twist-filled crime story and some poignant characterization. In this sense, ‘Actions’ may seem like the least packed of the lot, as it is basically just a conversation between Robin (Tim Drake) and Alfred, accompanied by silent flashbacks and shots of Batman’s nocturnal activities. Yet this issue is such a meticulously constructed piece of storytelling that the fact that its creators make it feel simple and light becomes another one of their accomplishments.

There are three intertwined narratives: Robin coming to grips with Batman’s attitude towards the people he saves; Batman pursuing a car through the Gotham night; and, in flashback, Batman going to great lengths to help out a recently orphaned Dick Grayson. The off-page dialogue between Tim and Alfred is often superimposed on the two latter narrative threads, creating some amusing juxtapositions, such as when Alfred comments that Bruce sometimes seems ‘as though he’s entirely wrapped up in his work’ while we see an evil contortionist literally wrap himself around Batman (yes, an evil contortionist). It is a virtuoso act that culminates in a final page where all story threads pay off simultaneously. What makes the issue shine even more than its execution, however, is the fact that the choice to keep the Batman panels wordless further enhances the central theme that for the Dark Knight actions speak louder than words.

‘Carnival of the Cursed’ (Batman #224)

BATMAN 224

Angered that one of his favorite musicians was murdered, Batman sets off to New Orleans to bring the killers to justice. Because it’s New Orleans, he gets into a fight on a funeral second line, daringly escapes from a deathtrap on a Mississipi paddle steamer, and the whole thing culminates at a moonlit Mardi Gras parade. As I’ve pointed out before, Denny O’Neil sure knows how to write one hell of a Batman story!

Just like a jazz song built around a recognizable structure, this comic is less about the plot than about atmosphere… and boy is there plenty of atmosphere. O’Neil is in poetic mode, from the opening lines (‘Clouds cluster in a slate-grey sky line like ancient mourners… A finger of wind pokes sharply from the river… And rain falls with a sad whisper on New Orleans…’) to the powerful ending where the horn which has spawned music, greed, and murder ends up as just a battered piece of metal on the street. But it’s the art by Irv Novick and Dick Giordano – together with the carnavalesque colors – that truly makes this comic work, bringing to life a haunted city where the malformed villain looks like just another grotesque Mardi Gras costume.

‘The Frigid Finger of Fate!’ (Detective Comics #375)

detective comics 375

Told from the point of view of a criminal, this is one of those stories where the Caped Crusader takes the backseat, serving mostly as McGuffin and deus ex machina in someone else’s tale. Indeed, here is a story that could just as easily have come out of Will Eisner’s The Spirit. Gardner Fox’s script, one of the last in his long run, just never lets go: there’s an intriguing opening hook (a sniper is about to shoot Batman, claiming that he has already seen himself doing it), a smooth flashback (rain transitioning into shower water), a hard-on-his-luck protagonist trying to grasp the rules of a bizarre gift (his premonitions only work if he dreams them while feeling cold), a Barbara Gordon cameo, literary references ranging from Sophocles to Coleridge (and a likely autobiographical wink about authors getting story plots from dreams), a good-spirited dose of Dynamic Duo whoopass, a couple of plot twists, and a denouement that is as dark and poetic as they come.

Fox being Fox, the comic may feel a bit cluttered with text (although the wordy narration does help build up tension) and there are some quirky details, such as a Batman-themed holiday and a thief who supplies a gratuitous lesson about diamonds – still, nothing nearly as eccentric as this issue’s back-up story, which features the Elongated Man and a guy with the power to literally stop clocks with his face. As for the art, the clean lines of Chic Stone (ghosting for Bob Kane, according to the Grand Comics Database) do not always reach Eisneresque levels of expressionism and experimentation, but Irv Novick’s cover comes remarkably damn close…

‘Earthly Delights: Scenes from a Work in Progress’ (Batman and Robin #26)

Batman And Robin 26

And now for something completely different: a freaky superhero tale set in Paris, with Dick Grayson acting as Batman (not that his identity makes any difference in this story). 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.’

NEXT: Batman and Leonardo da Vinci.

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Frank Robbins’ oddball Batman

The 1970s were a great time for the Caped Crusader, even if, looking back, we did miss out on the chance to see Batman with a turtleneck or Catwoman with an afro (problem solved). After the kitsch of the ’60s and before the grit of the ’80s, creators seemed to have found a firm balance between a Batman that was dark enough to be cool without yet being an ultraviolent psychopath. The outlook was perfectly captured by artists like Neal Adams, Bob Brown, Irv Novick, and Jim Aparo, who gave the character realistic proportions and a gothic cape and cowl. In terms of writing, Denny O’Neil and Frank Robbins deserve a lot of credit for this tonal shift. A few weeks ago, I spotlighted O’Neil, still fondly remembered as one of the greatest Batman writers of all time. History has been less kind to Frank Robbins.

There are several reasons for this. For one thing, although Robbins would go on to write some truly solid stuff in the 1970s, he didn’t start off that way. In 1968, when he replaced Gardner Fox in Batman and Detective Comics, Robbins didn’t immediately move away from the camp of the TV show (which had just been cancelled), particularly regarding the incessant wordplay… Seriously, in Batman #205, an unrelenting kick-ass action issue if there ever was one, I counted 25 playful puns and 14 amusing alliterations (personal favorite: referring to Batman as ‘fearless ferret’).

While Novick and Brown gave the stories a hard-edged look from the onset, some of Frank Robbins’ earlier scripts are firmly tongue-in-cheek, including some gloriously goofy romans à clef. In ‘Batman’s Big Blow-Off!’ a beatnik newspaper pushes the Caped Crusader into revealing his secret identity, so he convinces an obvious Howard Hughes stand-in to be used as a front.

BATMAN 211Batman #211

Things get even more out of control when the ersatz-Howard Hughes gets jealous of Batman’s popularity, undergoes intensive martial arts training, and damn near kills the Dark Knight in order to take his place!

If you think this is out there, it probably means you haven’t read ‘Dead… Till Proven Alive!’ where Batman and Robin investigate the urban legend that Paul McCartney died in 1966 and was secretly replaced by a lookalike… At one point, the Dynamic Duo tries to find out the truth by getting the Beatles to sing ‘Happy Birthday’ to Alfred and then comparing voice-recordings.

Frank Robbins was certainly fond of incorporating contemporary references in his work – a zanier version of Law & Order’s ‘ripped from the headlines’ – yet the Zeitgeist did not always manifest itself in the ways you’d expect. Take the women’s rights movement. In ‘The Case of the Purr-Loined Pearl,’ Catwoman recruits female ex-cons into her gang with the promise of getting revenge against the men in their lives…

BATMAN 210 Batman #210

The result, however, is that Catwoman forces her new partners to undergo an intensive workout and sauna program in order to be slim enough to fit into a tight, sexy costume, just like hers, so that they can serve as distraction while she steals a shiny pearl!

And then there is ‘Batman’s Marriage Trap!’ where some male crooks come up with the most mesmerizingly misogynous plan ever:

BATMAN 214Batman #214

In order to screw up Batman’s nightly activities, the crooks literally spend a million dollars on advertising and create a women’s NGO demanding that the Caped Crusader get married – what the gang leader respectfully refers to as a ‘chick-harassing strategy.’ This leads to Batman being chased by a massive demonstration of female protesters who accuse him of promoting singlehood:

BATMAN 214Batman #214

As if kick-starting a whole grassroots movement wasn’t already an overelaborate stratagem, trust me, in the end the crooks’ actual plan manages to make even less sense…

If Denny O’Neil was the hippy-looking liberal writer who at the same time as scripting Batman was also telling social awareness stories with Green Arrow explaining racism to Green Lantern, Frank Robbins – in his mid-fifties by then – seemed genuinely concerned, if not confused, about the values of the flower power generation. In ‘Take-Over of Paradise,’ an activist gang barricades itself on a high-rise to demand low-cost housing. Batman proudly stands up for the ‘establishment,’ grumpily arguing that the protesters are ‘grown men – in a man’s world! And they play the games with civilized rules – or suffer the consequences!’ The story does reflect divergences between well-meaning protesters and those willing to kill to achieve their aims, but in the end the main villain is revealed as a ‘femme lib’ girl, out to take over the gang and show her partners what a female leader could do.

This is just one of many stories pitting Batman – as well as Robin and Batgirl, in Detective Comics’ backup features – against out-of-control members of the younger subculture. However, in ‘Freak-Out at Phantom Hollow,’ Frank Robbins does acknowledge the intolerance faced by long-haired hippies in small town America, unsubtly comparing their plight to the witch hunts of 300 years ago.

Another reason Robbins didn’t reach O’Neil’s status is that his contributions to the Batman mythos were not as enduring…

detective comics 434Frank Robbins’ most remarkable recurring villain was the Spook, an escape artist extraordinaire who charged criminals for helping them break out of jail. The Spook made very few appearances post-Robbins – ironically, the ‘Houdini of the Crime-World’ served one of the longest sentences, finally being released on parole in 2003 (in Gotham Knights #46). Pathetically, he later ended up decapitated by Batman’s ten-year-old son.

As for the Ten-Eyed-Man, a war veteran security guard who mistakenly blames Batman for his blindness, has his optic nerves reconnected into his fingertips so that he can see through his hands, and hijacks an airplane across the world in order to take his revenge on the Caped Crusader in the depths of the Vietnamese jungle – well, for some reason most writers just didn’t know what to do with this character!

Only Man-Bat continues to find a semi-regular presence in the comics, yet he still gets much less exposure than, say, the O’Neil-created Ra’s and Talia al Ghul… This is not surprising, given that the al Ghul clan has the potential for twisted family dramatics around an interesting emotional triangle and stories in which the whole world is at stake, while Man-Bat is essentially just another variation on The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, albeit a visually interesting one:

detective comics 400Detective Comics #400

Finally, there’s the fact that Frank Robbins didn’t have Denny O’Neil’s knack to stick the landings. O’Neil usually found a perfect, poetic note to serve as punchline, whether it was Batman writing the year of the villains’ death on their tombstones in ‘The Secret of the Waiting Graves’ or a Holocaust survivor impaling himself next to the Star of David in ‘Night of the Reaper!’ In turn, more often than not Robbins was still explaining his plot twists until the very final panel…

detective comics 409Detective Comics #409

Nevertheless, the truth is that Frank Robbins wrote many fun stories. While he may have sometimes rushed the endings, he did have a skill for slam-bang openings, grabbing the reader from the start:

BATMAN 219 Batman #219

One of his trademarks was to shamelessly appear to kill Batman on the title pages:

detective comics 392Detective Comics #392

                             Batman 204Batman 204

Batman #204

                             BATMAN 220BATMAN 220

Batman #220

What’s more, Frank Robbins really played up the World’s Greatest Detective angle. Robbins’ warped imagination came up with creative crimes – and while these were not always realistic, the clues given to the reader were fair. Even his most conventional mystery tale, ‘Legacy of Hate!’ (a well-executed whodunit set in an apparently haunted castle where a ghostly knight is out to kill Bruce and a bunch of far-removed Wayne relatives), finishes with a twist that sets it apart from mere Scooby Doo-esque shenanigans.

Batman’s methods can be a bit unusual – such as in the underrated ‘Challenge of the Consumer Crusader,’ where he pretends to be the victim’s ghost in order to extract a confession from a suspect – but hey, the guy dresses up like a bat, so we already knew that he had an idiosyncratic approach to crime-fighting. Regardless, you can find plenty of clever detective fiction in these comics. This is not just true for Robbins’ later output, which increasingly consisted of straight up, gloomy crime stories. In one way or another, from early on even his wackiest scripts tended to include some kind of surprise reveal as well as advanced deductive reasoning…

Batman 206Batman #206

Robbins also illustrated a few of his comics. He was great at it, with a pre-Darwyn Cooke angular style and feathery linework evocative of 1950s’ cartoon advertisement. As an artist, Robbins’ high point is perhaps the truly moody visuals he produced for a number of issues of the Denny O’Neil-scripted version of The Shadow:

the shadow 05The Shadow #5

Robbins’ art was of course strikingly different from the mainstream Batman artists of the time, whose figures were comparatively much more photorealistic. However, his noirish pencils fitted perfectly well with somber crime stories, such as the cat-and-mouse antics with a methodical killer in ‘Forecast for Tonight… Murder,’ or the hardcore race riot and Attica-like prison revolt of ‘Blind Justice…Blind Fear!’

For my money, Robbins’ greatest accomplishment was ‘Killer’s Roulette!’ The issue starts with the world’s unluckiest cat burglar: first he bumps into an armed victim, then he realizes the man he intended to rob has committed suicide over gambling debts, and then Batman barges in. As if things weren’t bad enough, the burglar takes the dead man’s gun and tries to shoot the Dark Knight – always a bad idea. Soon Batman finds himself investigating a gambling network, leading up to one badass game of Russian roulette:

detective comics 426Detective Comics #426

Frank Robbins’ work may have had ups and downs, highs and lows, and may not always have been on the right side of history. But every time I look at this page, all is forgiven.

NEXT: Batman goes to New Orleans.

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Henchworkers of Gotham, unite!

A spectre is haunting Gotham City – the spectre of some rich capitalist in a bat costume kicking the crap out of the underprivileged masses that are just trying to get by in this lousy economy. So if there is one group in Gotham that desperately needs to unionize, it’s henchmen and henchwomen.

I mean, talk about precarious working conditions. The schedules are terrible, the uniforms degrading, you frequently get punched in the face by Batman (or, even more humiliating, by Robin, while Batman goes after the main baddie), and there is absolutely no job security…

batman brave and the bold 10Batman: The Brave and the Bold (v2) #10

You may argue that it’s a globalized problem, not just Gotham City’s. People never think how things affect the family of a henchman. And unlike other self-professed heroes, at least Batman is not in the business of killing hoodlums!

Still, there can’t be that many jobs worse than working for the Joker. For one thing, the sense of humor of the Clown Prince of Crime is lame enough to make The Office’s David Brent cringe… And while Batman does have a no-kill policy, one of comics’ longest running gags is the fact that the Joker keeps murdering his own employees willy-nilly:

detective comics 475 detective comics 475 Detective Comics #475

Sure, there is at least one success story of a comrade who managed to break away with her life and a book contract. After years of helping the Joker carry out his madcap plans, Harley Quinn earned her own fanbase. She even has a solo series:

Harley Quinn 00Harley Quinn (v2) #0

Tony Finch, another former Joker henchman, also tried to make it on his own some years ago, with less impressive results. A natural born loser, when Finch found a dial that gave him superpowers (don’t ask), he recruited a couple of thugs and made a short-lived attempt to start an independent criminal enterprise, with its own ethos:

h-e-r-o 10H-E-R-O #10

I’m afraid people still don’t know you exist, Tony. Blame the system: Gotham is a tough city for the small entrepreneur, which may explain why so many goons gravitate towards the big rogues.

In fairness, the False Face Society of Gotham does have a reputation for paying well. Moreover, as mobs go it is a relatively successful one, having managed to establish a monopoly of Gotham’s organized crime plenty of times. That said, it’s not as if its leader, Roman Sionis, is not an eccentric egomaniac as well, what with wearing a mask carved out from his father’s coffin, insisting that all his gang members disguise their faces, and even disfiguring his poor lover just so that she too must wear one of his damn masks… He makes Tony Soprano look like a well-adjusted gangster!

Speaking of dysfunctional mobsters, there is also the Penguin’s gang. Say what you will, but as bosses go, at least the Penguin is concerned with the education level of his staff…

batman adventures #1The Batman Adventures #1

…which is not to say that you actually want to show off your knowledge in front of him:

batman adventures 01The Batman Adventures #1

Lacking class consciousness, some henchpeople are actually quite devoted to their exploitative employers. A notable example of this kind of Lumpenproletariat is Frederick Rhino, who for years remained Scarface’s loyal henchman despite all the abuse he took from what was literally a delusional puppet. Another well-known case are Query and Echo:

detective_comics annual 08Detective Comics Annual #8

This wild pair left a promising career in an underground dominatrix club to embrace a life of crime and adrenalin, and soon found themselves hired full-time by the Riddler. Their coolest story is probably Detective Comics #705-707, which starts when they seemingly try to spring their boss from a courthouse with great panache:

Detective Comics 705Detective Comics #705

(Another high point for Query and Echo is their independent gig with Slyfox, in the rollicking Nightwing #1000000.)

If you’re looking for an amusing take on the plight of the henchman, however, what you’ll definitely want to check out is ‘Help Wanted.’ This fun issue of the second volume of Batman: The Brave and the Bold follows the trials and tribulations of a professional henchman called Joe, who works for respected, so-called job creators like the Toyman, Clock King, and Ocean Master. Yet Joe’s long-term employment prospects are consistently cut short as Batman arrives on the scene to kick ass and take names, so he keeps moving from city to city, much to the chagrin of his wife and kid.

batman brave and the bold 10Batman: The Brave and the Bold (v2) #10

The twist ending may not be exactly world revolution and classless utopia, but it’s poignant in its own way.

At the end of the day, to quote a classic treaty on the subject, the henchman remains the human analogue of the suffering multitudes who like good dogs sit and lick for their reward. Even on the few occasions when Gotham henchworkers join forces, it’s not to chant The Internationale, but to follow the footsteps of their employers:

World's Finest 02World's Finest 02World’s Finest (v2) #2

NEXT: Batman investigates The Beatles.

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Top 10 Batman covers by Ed Hannigan

In a world of uncertainty and subjective truths, inexorably spinning towards its entropic doom, there is one unshakable idea we can all hold on to: Ed Hannigan is one of the greatest cover artists to have ever graced Batman comics with his pencils.

Hannigan illustrated different titles, including the first five issues of Legends of the Dark Knight, which featured a clever motif of faces breaking through masks and vice-versa… this was conceptually interesting and it fitted in well with the story going on inside (for which he also provided interior art), but the images themselves were not that memorable. By contrast, working with inker Dick Giordano and colorist Anthony Tollin, in the 1980s Ed Hannigan drew a long run of unforgettable covers for Batman and Detective Comics. And because no one demanded it, here are my top 10:

10. Batman #355

Batman 355Hannigan’s very first Batman cover has a nice concept: Batman fights Catwoman, and their shadows are those of a humanoid bat and a humanoid cat. I would have done away with the caption identifying them as ‘The bat… and the cat!’ though, as it doesn’t add anything – readers can easily tell what the conflict in the comic is going to be without this tagline. Then again, if I actually had a say, 50% percent of Batman covers would feature dinosaurs, so take that as you will.

9. Detective Comics #524

detective comics 524This one is so visually striking that I considered moving it up, but there is too much goodness still ahead! The dramatic pose, the encroaching shadows, the way the smoke from the gun merges with the logo… Furthermore, if you had been following the story on the monthly titles, you would have known that the shooter is called Squid, which is just what his hair looks like in the silhouette.

8. Batman #360

Batman 360As it will soon become clear, I’m a huge fan of covers that play with the titles’ logo on top of the page. You can tell from previous examples how during this period the logos featured Batman’s tiny head at the center of the Bat-symbol… In this cover, the way a skeleton’s strategically placed skull replaces Batman’s face may be meaningless in symbolic terms, but it looks freaking cool!

7. Batman #377

Batman 377Besides playful logos, the other trick I’m a sucker for are homages… This is why I’m so grateful to Brian Cronin for using his encyclopedic knowledge to spot cover homages each week. Here Hannigan, Giordano, and Tollin riff on the classic strip Little Nemo in Slumberland, with Jason Todd as Nemo being carried through the land of dreams. What makes it even cooler is that this fits thematically with the story inside – which involves a nightmarish Nocturna and a desperate Batman fighting for Jason’s custody.

6. Batman #356

Batman 356This is one of those covers that just gets engrained in your memory. Besides the neat visual of the Dark Knight’s reflection on Professor Hugo Strange’s lenses, there is the enthralling notion of Batman strangling another Batman, made even more intriguing by Strange’s ominous words.

5. Batman #358

Batman 358Such a powerful image doesn’t need much explanation. The shooter (Killer Croc) seems to be shattering the cover itself as he presumably pierces the Bat-signal with his bullets. Also, because part of this month’s Bat-logo is black, it gets diluted in the image’s black background. Neat.

4. Batman #362

Batman 362Speaking of putting a twist on the logo’s bat-shaped portion… Here Hannigan tilts the title to the left and projects a huge Batman shadow on top of it, which basically replaces the usual design. Also, you’ve got to love the contrast between the Riddler’s gloating rhetorical question and Batman’s I-just-defeated-your-henchmen, straight-faced reply!

3. Batman #369

Batman 369Here the logo gets shot up, like everything else, as the hitman Deadshot shows off his marksman skills, almost castrating the Caped Crusader in the process… There is nothing particularly clever about this, but it is nevertheless an awesome image.

2. Batman #367

Batman 367Another one where the logo comes under attack by a villain, this time by Poison Ivy’s weeds. I love the whole green effect and just wish they had gone overboard with the concept, also partially covering up the tagline, the price, and DC’s boasting in the lower corner.

1. Batman #370

Batman 370And finally there is this gem. The Dynamic Duo fighting a gang of hoodlums in an alley which is so crowded that they find themselves with their backs against the book’s title. As if the notion of the Batman logo painted on a wall wasn’t cool enough, the logo is amusingly framed by other walls that are also filled with writings, the closest one adding ‘and Robin the Boy Wonder’ (and another one sporting Hannigan’s and Giordano’s signature). Plus, the flying trash and the dripping pipes manage to give the scene even more of a gritty vibe. So groovy.

NEXT: The henchman manifesto.

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The Batman spirit on the silver screen – part 2

If you read the last post, you know what’s going on. Here are another 10 movies that fans of Batman comics can enjoy instead of Zack Snyder’s upcoming blockbuster:

Ed WoodEd Wood

Forget Tim Burton’s Batman films. It’s in this biopic of real-life, overenthusiastic, transvestite, vampire-toothed, and reputedly worst director of all time Edward D. Wood Jr – and to some degree in Sleepy Hollow – that Burton truly brings to life the kind of gothic, quirky atmosphere where Bruce Wayne dressing up as a bat to fight crime would not seem totally out of place.

Foreign CorrespondentForeign Correspondent

Alfred Hitchcock directed a number of films with Batman-worthy set pieces, from spy yarns – The 39 Steps, The Lady Vanishes, The Man Who Knew Too Much, North by Northwest to dark psychological thrillers – The Lodger, Spellbound, Strangers on a Train, Vertigo, Psycho, Frenzy. Moreover, there is a cat burglar at the heart of To Catch a Thief, and The Birds features bird attacks straight out of a Penguin tale. Yet Foreign Correspondent is the most fun of the lot, as well as one where the hero is not just reacting to bad luck – he actually throws himself gleefully at the evil plot in front of him, just like the Caped Crusader would! The movie also belongs to a set of adventure movies made *during* World War II that seamlessly combined escapist fun with real world terror, much like the Batman comics of the time.

Human NatureHuman Nature

All the lead characters in this movie seem to have sprung out of the Silver Age, including the world’s hairiest woman (Patricia Arquette), a psychologist trying to teach table manners to mice (Tim Robbins), and a man who believes he is an ape (Rhys Ifans). All that’s missing is Robin in a corner, shouting ‘Great Scott!’

Rio BravoRio Bravo

I had to include at least one western. Despite the genre’s non-Batman-y predilection for heroes that carry guns and kill their opponents, so many other conventions fit like a glove, what with all the honorable, brooding protagonists working within and beyond the confines of the law to protect their cities from sadistic murderers. I went with Rio Bravo for two reasons. First, because Batman is such a Hawksian character, stoically carrying out his mission without mincing words, caring for those around him but more often showing it rather than saying it out loud. And second, because of the whole intergenerational bonding thing… I can just picture Alfred, Bruce, Dick, and Tim playing ‘My Rifle, My Pony, and Me’ in the Batcave.

Maltese FalconThe Maltese Falcon

The doomed atmosphere, the hardboiled dialogue, and the byzantine plot of Dashiell Hammett’s novel and John Huston’s powerful film adaptation have been reverberating around Batman stories for decades (perhaps never more clearly than in David V. Reed’s script for ‘The Daily Death of Terry Tremayne’). Despite his sharp detective skills, Humphrey Bogart’s Sam Spade is perhaps too morally ambiguous to serve as an ersatz-Batman. The other characters, though, would feel right at home in the Dark Knight’s rogues’ gallery – it’s a small step from Sydney Greenstreet’s Gutman to the more recent iterations of the Penguin.

The Murderer Lives at Number 21 The Murderer Lives at Number 21

There are plenty of murder mysteries around to satisfy fans of the World’s Greatest Detective, but not many are as amusing as this one, or feature a denouement that could have just as easily come out of Mike W. Barr’s typewriter.

Seven PsychopathsSeven Psychopaths

Martin McDonagh, probably best known as the writer-director of In Bruges (and of several twisted plays about rural Ireland, as well as the vicious head trip that is The Pillowman), is behind this black comedy, which has absolutely no relation to the (also darkly funny) graphic novel of the same name about 7 clinically insane secret agents trying to assassinate Adolf Hitler. Rather, this is an L.A.-based cult film waiting to happen, a 21st century The Big Lebowski. At first sight, tonally and plot-wise Seven Psychopaths couldn’t be further removed from the world of Batman comics, even if the levels of blood and violence aren’t that far off from the Bat-titles circa ‘War Games.’ Yet you can just imagine Arkham Asylum harboring characters like serial killer Jack of Diamonds, who murders mid-to-high-ranking mobsters, or the Quaker, who kills through the power of guilt-tripping his victims.

The Thing from Another World The Thing from Another World

This one is for those who like stories in which Batman and his clan triumph over a supernatural threat through determination, ingenuity, and team work.

The UnknownThe Unknown

This cult classic about a circus freak and criminal called Alonzo the Armless looks like the darkest, most tragic secret origin of a soon-to-become Batman villain. And that is saying something.

White HeatWhite Heat

In this energetic and suspenseful gangster yarn, James Cagney plays a psychotic criminal that seems right out of an Alan Grant comic.

Finally, what would Batman himself recommend? Well, it is a well-known fact that his favorite movie is The Mark of Zorro, but he has also been known to spend his evenings watching Japanese erotica:

Gotham Adventures 56Gotham Adventures #56

NEXT: Batman strangles Batman.

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The Batman spirit on the silver screen – part 1

detective comics 596While I couldn’t be more cynical about the ridiculously titled Superman v Batman: Dawn of Justice (is it a court case exposé?), I’m here to argue that cinephile fans of Batman comics should have nothing to fear. If you dig the Caped Crusader’s adventures on the page, there are still plenty of films for you to enjoy!

Now, needless to say, over the years Batman stories have drawn inspiration from more movies than you can count. Heck, the Dynamic Duo has even – kind of – fought Charlie Chaplin:

detective comics 341Detective Comics #341

In fact, cinema has played a role in the Batman mythos from the start – the character’s origin has usually been tied with Bruce Wayne’s parents getting killed while coming back from the movies (although Christopher Nolan pompously changed this to an opera). There is even a memorable story in which the Dark Knight literally defeats the Joker by recalling scenes from Marx Brothers comedies (Batman #260).

A less known fact, Bruce Wayne also happens to be one hands-on movie producer:

batman 398Detective Comics #398
detective comics 404Detective Comics #404

Regardless, outside of movies with the words ‘Batman’ or ‘Dark Knight’ in the title – and even including those – it is not easy to find films that fully reproduce the feeling of a vintage Batman comic. There is some of the Caped Crusader in a lot of action heroes, but they tend to be more gun-toting and bloodthirsty. Psychotic villains that play games with their hunter have populated the screen for decades but post-Speed terrorists and post-S7ven serial killers tend to be merely scary, not fun. And film noir and gothic horror – two major visual cues for the comics’ look – are vast and varied genres in which not all movies equally resemble the work of the most striking Batman artists.

In drawing up the following list, for the most part I tried to think outside the box and avoid obvious trappings. It would be too easy to recommend other superhero movies, or even Sherlock Holmes material. Also, unless you live in a (non-Bat)cave, you probably already know that any fan of the globetrotting side of the Dark Knight can find a similar breed of stories – including megalomaniac villains and deathtraps galore – in movies featuring Indiana Jones or James Bond. Let me get Citizen Kane out of the way as well: yes, its cinematography has been influencing comics – and particularly Batman comics – ever since the film first came out and yes, the story is about a millionaire who lives in a huge mansion and obsesses over what he lost as a child, which should strike a familiar chord.

But what about movies you don’t know or have only heard of without ever realizing how close they may appeal to the Bat-fan in you?

abominable dr phibesThe Abominable Dr. Phibes

The cops may be too bumbling and polite for the standards of the Dark Knight, but this movie’s villain – played by a seriously creepy Vincent Price – would not be at all out of place in a Batman comic. Dr. Phibes is at once tragic and camp, his origin and voice have echoes of Mr. Freeze in the ’90s animated series, he lives in bizarrely decorated headquarters surrounded by henchwomen, and his crimes are as theatrical as anything the Joker ever pulled – including hilariously impaling a victim with a unicorn’s head. The first ten minutes even feature a bunch of bats!

AccidentAccident

What if Rube Goldberg was a killer for hire? There are enough ingenious and overcomplicated deadly contraptions in this thriller to satisfy any fan of Denny O’Neil’s work. And in the best Batman tradition, under all the elaborate planning lies a story of loss and obsession.

And Then There Were NoneAnd Then There Were None

Ten people find themselves on a mysterious, gothic-looking island getting killed one by one in eccentric ways, so the survivors have to figure out who the villain is before it’s too late. Sounds like a Batman tale to me! (And Grant Morrison agrees.)

Bad Day at Black RockBad Day at Black Rock

Even if Batman were a one-armed vet kicking ass in a small town after WWII, he probably would sound nothing like Spencer Tracy… and yet, there is something about this movie that just makes it feel like it belongs next to one of those politically-charged stories that we get every once in a while.

Being John MalkovichBeing John Malkovich

Here is a film that captures the kind of darkly surreal atmosphere I imagine you would find in Gotham City. There are pet monkeys, puppeteer superstars, and architectural oddities like the low-ceilinged 7 ½ floor where the protagonist works. Being John Malkovich’s plot is like a cross between a Gardner Fox comic and a Bob Dylan dream.

The Big ComboThe Big Combo

I hear you: if we’re going with 1950s’ crime films, why not choose one of that decades’ many phenomenal thrillers about doomed heists (like The Asphalt Jungle, Kansas City Confidential, Rififi, The Killing, Odds Against Tomorrow, or even B-movie gems such as Appointment with Danger, Time Table, Plunder Road, or The Burglar)? It is true that Batman stories tend to be more about doomed heists than police detectives obsessed with a suicidal gangster moll, but if you enjoy stylish crime stories that take place almost entirely in shadowy streets and barely lit rooms, nothing can beat The Big Combo.

The Black BookThe Black Book

Imagine Batman getting involved in the French Revolution. Or you can just watch The Black Book (also known as Reign of Terror). Seriously, Anthony Mann directed one merciless rollercoaster of an adventure movie where each frame could be a page from the best-looking Elseworlds tale never drawn. (And if you enjoy it, check out Mann’s The Tall Target, where you can picture the Dark Knight in 1861 trying to prevent Abraham Lincoln from being assassinated during a train ride).

Brothers BloomThe Brothers Bloom

The two brothers from the title are a couple of con men who – together with a sidekick called Bang Bang that specializes in explosives– pull off zany capers around the world. A Batman crossover waiting to happen, if there ever was one.

Dead of NightDead of Night

A group of guests in a country house share horror stories and, almost 70 years on, they remain more chilling than a breath full of Scarecrow fear gas. These tales are made from the same cloth as comics taking place in the haunted corners of the Batman universe such as ‘The Secret of the Waiting Graves,’ ‘Wail of the Ghost-Bride,’ or ‘A Contract With Death!’ As a special treat for Bat-fans, the most frightening story even includes a long-distance relative of Gotham’s Ventriloquist.

DelicatessenDelicatessen

This surrealist fantasy takes place in post-apocalyptic France, but it could just as easily have been Gotham City during the ‘No Man’s Land’ storyline. Like in Being John Malkovich, everything and everyone seem a bit off, from the deranged Frog Man (pictured above) to the vegetarian guerrilla group who live in the sewers – you know things are going to get messy if they ever bump into Killer Croc or the Ratcatcher down there! Also, there is this totally Airwolf montage.

NEXT: More films!

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Denny O’Neil’s pulpy Batman

Denny O’Neil has shaped modern Batman more than any other creator. And while he consciously sought to put the ‘dark’ in ‘Dark Knight,’ part of what makes his output so appealing is the fact that the ‘knight’ side is usually there as well – O’Neil’s Batman is well-travelled, chivalrous, brave, and certainly not above some good old fashioned swordplay:

BATMAN 244Batman #244

Take O’Neil’s first issues, in the early 1970s. These featured mostly done-in-one solo stories (sans Robin) that unapologetically embraced the pulpy conventions of the material. Most of them were adventure yarns in which Bruce Wayne would roam the world with the bat-cowl in his suitcase (and no one ever found it suspicious that he and Batman would always show up in the same places). More than a strong-willed powerhouse, the Caped Crusader was depicted as a deductive genius and master of disguise, although still fallibly human. Villains would leave him to die in an elaborate deathtrap rather than simply kill him and Batman would inevitably escape through a clever loophole in the trap.

BATMAN 224Batman #224

Taking advantage of Neal Adams’ and Irv Novick’s atmospheric pencils, beautifully inked by Dick Giordano, Denny O’Neil’s earlier tales were unabashedly gothic and full of over-the-top purple prose. His debut story, ‘The Secret of the Waiting Graves,’ starts by asking readers to ‘Stand still and hear the wind howling like souls in torment… see the rise of an ashen moon… breathe deeply and sniff the scent of death…’ Given the prowess of the artists working on these comics, O’Neil’s narrative captions are mostly unnecessary in terms of storytelling, but his poetic flights of fancy help create a genuinely eerie mood. ‘Legend of the Key Hook Lighthouse!’ even kicks off in verse:

detective comics 414Detective Comics #414

O’Neil would later take his literary affectations to the extreme in the brilliant ‘Death Strikes at Midnight and Three,’ which is part dense prose, part experimental montage, and 100% hardboiled goodness:

dc special series 15DC Special Series #15

Denny O’Neill was also great at murder mysteries, which is no small feat when you have around 15 pages to set up the crime, introduce the cast of suspects, and throw in enough red herrings to make it challenging. What’s more, as these were fair play mysteries, his comics often included a neat panel directly daring the reader to spot the necessary clue to solve the puzzle.

detective comics 399Detective Comics #399

No tale combines all these trademarks as powerfully as the classic ‘Ghost of the Killer Skies!’ which features a foreign setting (Spain), a gratuitous yet exciting death-defying challenge that Batman has to overcome through ingenuity (air battle between vintage aircraft), elaborate prose adorning Neal Adams’ majestic drawings (‘Leave now the eyes of the dread Batman and follow the caped avenger through a tangle of crime and into the bleakest corner of a man’s soul…’), and an intriguing whodunit premise (a pilot strangled in mid-air, in a single-seater plane). Throw in an anti-war message and the ghost of Enemy Ace – the German WWI pilot of the amazing war comics by Robert Kanigher and Joe Kubert – and you’ve got one hell of a story in your hands!

As if all this was not enough to ensure Denny O’Neil a firm place in Bat-history, he created two of the most fascinating characters in the Batman cast – love interest Talia al Ghul and her father, the megalomaniac, repeatedly resuscitated, eco-terrorist Ra’s al Ghul. Most of these comics, reprinted in the Tales of the Demon collection, have become so engrained in the imagination of Bat-fans that it is easy to miss the slow-burn build-up of the original saga… At first sticking to the formula of done-in-one stories, O’Neil kept revealing new layers and gradually escalating the stakes until what started as typical Batman mini-adventures culminated in arguably the most memorable showdown of the Caped Crusader’s career.

In the otherwise forgettable Detective Comics #405, Batman bodyguards a shipping magnate by facing kamikaze dolphins (where do you think the Soviets got the idea from?) and a martial arts killer, only to realize that his opponent belongs to a much vaster League of Assassins. In the following issue, the Dark Knight has his first confrontation with the League’s president, Ebenezer Darrk – despite the villain’s uninspired name, this is a nice little tale of secret passages, medieval traps, double-crosses, and last-minute escapes. Also, it opens with a bang:

detective comics 406Detective Comics #406

Detective Comics #408, scripted by Len Wein (with an even more gothic voice than O’Neil’s), is tangentially related to the Masked Manhunter’s feud with the League of Assassins, without adding much to the overall saga. Neal Adams draws some breathtaking hallucinations, but reading the issue means stomaching one of Batman’s most racialized foes, namely the Fu Manchu-inspired Dr. Tzin-Tzin (whose only redeeming quality as a character is that a few years later he stole all knowledge of Christmas from Gotham City, which even for Gotham standards is a pretty eccentric heist).

Dr. Darrk meets his demise in Detective Comics #411 – yet instead of bringing closure to the story arc, this instalment hints at an even more complex web of international intrigue. Readers meet Talia al Ghul, whose father had a falling out with Darrk ‘over some sort of business.’ We are definitely in grand adventure territory here. Accepting the genre’s inherent orientalism, O’Neil combined different cultures with gusto in order to provide an out-of-this-world sense of exotic excitement: the tale takes place in an unidentified Far East country (‘a tiny Asian nation tucked into the mountains between two hostile super-powers’); we are told Ra’s al Ghul is Arabic for ‘The Demon’s Head;’ a plot point involves arms deals in South America; and in a great sequence Batman literally has to bullfight for his life. O’Neil followed this with Batman #232, where the Caped Crusader wrestles a leopard in Calcutta and climbs one of the Himalayan Mountains, under fire. The stakes feel higher than usual – Robin gets shot in the very first page and Ra’s al Ghul makes his entrance by revealing that he has figured out Batman’s secret identity.

Batman 232The big picture continues to unfold, as we are introduced to Ubu and to the Brotherhood of the Demon. Ra’s is not even revealed as the villain until the end… and even then his motivation appears to be a melancholic wish to retire and to satisfy his daughter’s infatuation with Bruce. Indeed, in Batman #235 and Batman #240 the Dark Knight is still willing to trust and even partner up with Ra’s and Talia, whom he apparently doesn’t yet consider all that evil… although the al Ghuls’ decision to remove the brain of the director of a think tank in order to extract confidential information about the Vietnam War finally changes that.

It’s with Batman #242 that the narrative picks up speed, turning into a no-holds-barred rollercoaster ride. Batman fakes Bruce Wayne’s death on the first page. By page 5, the Dark Knight himself is apparently murdered. We are introduced to Matches Malone, who will remain Bruce’s moustachioed slimy crook alter-ego for the following decades. There is a plot twist on every page as Batman rounds up a ragtag team (‘a reluctant scientist, a superstitious bandit, and a dead gangster’) to wage war against Ra’s al Ghul and his hordes of trained soldiers. By Batman #243 we’re in full-on James Bond mode, with a dynamic martial arts combat, proto-Bond girl Molly Post (who sadly only reappeared one more time, in Detective Comics #451), and henchmen getting knocked out all over the place as the heroes make their way to the villain’s lair in the Swiss Alps. This is also the issue in which we learn that a dead Ra’s al Ghul can be brought back to life by being dipped in the magical Lazarus pit. The whole thing climaxes in Batman #244, where the Caped Crusader chases a hovercraft on a pair of skis, duels Ra’s under the burning desert sun, gets poisoned by a deadly scorpion, passionately kisses Talia, and saves the world, although not before bursting into one of the most iconic Batman panels of all time in all his hairy chest glory:

BATMAN 244 Batman #244

Batman #245 serves as an epilogue, wrapping up the Bruce-Wayne-is-dead plot thread. It is dated October 1972, two years after the saga first started on the pages of Detective Comics.

After this globetrotting extravaganza, Denny O’Neil’s Batman stories grew increasingly urban, most famously in ‘There is No Hope in Crime Alley!’ where O’Neil established the place where Bruce Wayne’s parents were killed – Park Row, now known as Crime Alley. He also created the character of Leslie Thompkins, the kind old woman who represents all that’s worth saving in Gotham City and who became a recurrent character in the Dark Knight universe.

detective comics 457Detective Comics #457

The comic became such an instant classic that the sequel, written 3 years later, directly echoed its beginning:

detective comics 483Detective Comics #483

These are cornerstone Batman comics, which not only heavily inspired Mike W. Barr but also the awesome Batman: The Animated Series episode ‘Appointment in Crime Alley.’ The latter of these issues also marks the debut of Maxie Zeus, the crime boss who swears to anyone who’ll listen that he is an actual Greek god.

Besides introducing new elements into the Batman mythos, Denny O’Neil did a great job of breathing life into old villains who hadn’t been seen for years. Out of all the classic rogues he brought back, O’Neil’s most lasting update concerned the Clown Prince of Crime:

Batman 251 Batman #251

After three decades of being depicted as little more than a wacky prankster, under O’Neil the Joker returned to his roots as a sadistic murderer. His take on this rogue proved so popular that O’Neil even spun it into its own series, where the Joker faced off against other characters.

The Joker 1This series started out strongly by pitting the demented antics of the Joker against Two-Face’s own brand of twisted logic, but soon lost its footing… although in The Joker #6 O’Neil did write a particularly fun story entirely based around Sherlock Holmes references.

Denny O’Neil would continue to write Batman comics for years. He tried his hands at different kinds of stories, including a couple of Unsolved Cases of the Batman, where he challenged himself to write tales in which the Dark Knight would fail while still providing a satisfying resolution (he came closest with ‘The Galileo Solution’). O’Neil also returned to the al Ghul clan quite a few times – under his scripts, Talia married Bruce against his will (‘I Now Pronounce You Batman and Wife!’); Ra’s had the original Batwoman killed off as part of a plan to take over the League of Assassins (‘The Vengeance Vow’); Batman and Ra’s teamed up first to prevent the Earth from turning into crystal (‘The Crystal Armageddon’) and then to keep the Sensei from assassinating the world’s religious leaders for purely artistic reasons (‘Requiem for a Martyr!’); Talia and Batman had a bittersweet reunion (‘The Monkey Trap’); and we were finally given a close look at Ra’s origin (‘Birth of the Demon’). Oh, right, and the al Ghul family also hung out with the Batman-wannabe hero Azrael a bunch of times, even helping him discover that he was a motherless test tube baby whose genes had been spliced with those of various animals (‘Fallen Angel’). Bummer.

O’Neil’s other massive contribution to the Batman universe may not be as evident at first sight. I’m talking about his phenomenal series The Question:

The Question#01The Question #1

This was one of those runs, so in vogue in the ’80s and ’90s, where the author shockingly killed off an established protagonist on the very first issue in order to completely reinvent the character. Although not as extreme a revamp as Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing, Neil Gaiman’s Black Orchid, or James Robinson’s Starman, O’Neil nevertheless had the objectivist vigilante known as the Question (Vic Sage) practically beaten to death, shot in the head with a pellet gun, and thrown into the river, only for him to come back as a Zen martial arts expert who fought against villains of different philosophies.

The series was not set in Gotham, but in Hub City – which somehow managed to be even more corrupt and decadent, run as it initially was by a crazy reverend and an alcoholic mayor. Yet there were key links to the Batman universe: the Dark Knight had a cameo early on and the two heroes soon teamed up (it was the Question who set up Batman’s first encounter with the cult character Lady Shiva); the series introduced Santa Prisca, birthplace of the villain Bane, as well as the mute Harold Allnut, who became a regular assistant in the Batcave. And in an inspired move, the Question fought the Riddler… and won by asking him about life’s greatest mysteries!

The Question and his supporting characters would later show up in various Batman-related comics, most notably in those starring Azrael and the Huntress. Furthermore, when Vic Sage died of cancer in 2006, fan-favorite ex-Gotham City cop Renee Montoya took over his legacy.

52The Question’s biggest impact on Batman, though, was arguably more subtle. Its twisted crime stories and the proto-noir mood evocative of Will Eisner’s The Spirit (which, for those of you not in the know, is the highest compliment you can pay to a comic) seem to have hugely influenced a whole generation of writers. I wonder how many of the sickest Batman tales in the last decades were a product of the trauma inflicted by this page:

The Question 06The Question #6

Regardless, as writer alone – which is to say, even disregarding his decisive role as group editor for Batman’s various titles from 1986 to 2000 – Denny O’Neil was responsible for some of the coolest stories and characters in the Dark Knight universe. This, my friends, is why we owe it to O’Neil to collectively forget that he also wrote over a hundred god-awful comics about the aforementioned delusional, genetically engineered human-animal hybrid killer brainwashed by a secret religious society, so-1990s-it-hurts, Azrael:

Azrael 18

NEXT: Batman vs Charlie Chaplin.

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More gold from Batman #50

My post on Golden Age splashes a while back highlighted a great opening teaser page from Batman #50. In fact, that was only one of a handful of funky-looking pages in this (otherwise not exactly a classic) comic. So, for geekness’ sake, I figured today I’d draw attention to another five of them.

Dated December 1948–January 1949, Batman #50 was officially illustrated by Bob Kane (although according to the GCD he only drew the Batman & Robin figures, the rest of it was actually penciled by Lew Sayre Schwartz, and the whole thing was inked by Charles Paris). As was usual with the Batman series at the time, this issue contains three stories. The first one – ‘Lights- Camera- Crime!’ – features photographer Vicki Vale. In case you don’t know, Vicki Vale is the Batman comics’ equivalent of Lois Lane (except that there is no catchy song about her). Well, honestly, she’s more of a shameless copy of Lois, i.e. a nosy reporter and love interest out to expose her hero’s secret identity. In this story, Vicki’s editor assigns her with doing a series on various law enforcement groups, including on-the-spot pictures of lawmen cracking on criminals, which leads to this handsome page:

Batman 50It really feels like a movie montage. Instead of a traditional comics grid, the panels – some of which framed like photos – flow across the page and lie on top of each other, and Vicki is all over the place (she shows up seven times), facing different directions. I also like the detail of the crooks’ car smashing against an Orwellian Batman billboard.

Batman 050This beauty is the title splash for the second story, ‘The Return of Two-Face!’ It is so striking that it was also used for the issue’s cover, presumably due to its hypnotic potential. Notably, there is a neat symmetry (always suited for a Two-Face story) between the two sides of the page. On Harvey Dent’s right side (our left), everything is brighter: not only his face and hand, but Robin’s colorful clothes, Bob Kane’s orange signature box (which leaves more space for the yellow background)… even the spinning coin features the word ‘Liberty.’ On the other side, Two-Face’s darker skin is complemented by Batman’s comparatively darker outfit and a text box obscuring the background. This could be the cover to a Pink Floyd concept album that never happened!

Batman #50Again, Two-Face’s split features are at the center of a pretty symmetrical page, this time illustrating a Felliniesque dream sequence. Batman comics being as loony as they are, it may not be immediately clear that something is off, but that final panel with the squiggly borders – not to mention the huge, phantasmagorical hand – is an effective reveal.

Soon, the Dynamic Duo finds itself chasing Two-Face through a stadium, during a motorcycle race:

Batman 50If the last page looked like the product of shrooms, this one is even trippier. It’s not just the massive spiral track where Batman chases Two-Face… the layout itself seems designed to make us dizzy with its non-linear reading order (helpfully clarified by the letters A to D in the panel corners, in case you get lost). What I don’t get is the guards’ surprised reaction – this is Gotham City, guys, by now you should be used to crazy stunts like this. Hell, this isn’t even the wackiest chase in the comic: 4 pages later Batman rides an elephant!

Batman 050Finally, there is the splash page for the issue’s third story. From the Boy Wonder’s melodramatic tears to the kaleidoscopic effect of the four Robin suits, the whole image is a delight. The campiest aspect, though, is the fact that they’re clearly not in the Batcave (hence the window), which raises the question of why Batman would have a portrait of the Dynamic Duo on top of Wayne Manor’s fireplace… won’t guests get suspicious, Bruce?

NEXT: Batman shows off his chest hair.

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