shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 3, 2014 23:56:02 GMT -5
Detective Comics #526
"All My Enemies Against Me" writer: Gerry Conway art: Don Newton and Alfredo Alcala
Grade: B+
Grand doesn't begin to describe it. This 56 page culmination to Conway's run on Batman is filled to the brim with good guys, villains, and dense plotting. Joker has teamed up most of Batman's classic villains (including most of Conway's creations and re-envisionings) to kill Batman and Killer Croc at the same time. Admittedly, the plan doesn't make a whole lot of sense, but it makes for an exciting story.
While the villain team is forming, Bruce ends up aided by a squabbling Talia and Catwoman, while Robin teams up with Batgirl (who reveals that she has figured out his and Bruce's identities). Meanwhile, Jason Todd stumbles upon the Batcave, tries on one of Dick's old circus costumes, and ends up traveling along in the trunk of the Batmobile. Ultimately, the whole team ends up united against Croc, and the outcome is inevitable.
Unfortunately, we discover the final fate of Jason's parents shortly before the climax, leaving Dick in an impressive rage, and dampening the triumphant climax of the story, as Jason saves the day at the last moment, leaping onto Croc literally half a second after hearing that his parents are dead. It's an odd, odd moment, and I honestly can't decide whether it's delivered clumsily or with brilliant realism.
From a thematic perspective, Batman's having to work with two former lovers and keep both at a distance throughout, but ultimately ending by having to take Jason under his wing, is a logical conclusion to the trust issues he'd been battling for several months now. However, his whole subconscious issue with Croc never gets explained. It just gets forgotten in this issue. Wherever Conway was going with Gordan being stressed out and suddenly having medical issues gets ditched as well.
Art-wise, it's great to see Newton and Alcala back this issue (it certainly explains why they weren't working on the last few), but Newton still seems rushed in this issue, delivering some truly brilliant and iconic panels, but absolutely looking like they finished others entirely too quickly. This surfaces in Batman's chest emblem rapidly changing in size from one panel to the next, and in instances like when Jason leaps from one roof top to the next, unsure of whether he'll make it. The artwork in one panel CLEARLY shows that he's not even close to making it, but, in the next, he's made the distance comfortably.
There's also one particularly weird lettering error, where Gordan calls his daughter "Babe" instead of "Babs." That little oversight gave me the creeps.
Finally, Conway's characterization is very uneven in this issue. He does a decent (though somewhat insulting) depiction of Talia and Selina fighting over the man they love while being forced to work together, and he makes up for any insult there with a brilliant depiction of Batgirl -- bold, strong, and brilliant. However, the rogues are completely devoid of characterization. If you're going to bring together nearly all of Batman's greatest villains in one issue, make it count! These guys get out one or two lines each to demonstrate who they are, and that's the end of it. Even the Joker, who gets the bulk of the attention in this issue, is almost completely devoid of personality. He gets off a few gags, has some expository inner-monologue for the sake of moving the story along, and Conway even makes the intriguing point that the Joker isn't as insane as he pretends to be (a read on the character that I thoroughly endorse), but none of that comes across in the stale and practically-minded writing surrounding him.
Most significantly, I'm incredibly disappointed in how Jason was handled. His stumbling upon the Batcave (and I have a VERY hard time believing someone was careless enough to leave the grandfather clock entrance open!) felt just like Anakin Skywalker stumbling upon that fighter craft cockpit during the fire fight in Phantom Menace. It was ridiculous, and his inner monologue is stale and annoyingly simplistic. There are no complex thoughts or feelings as he stumbles upon such a big secret; just a "I probably should mind my own business--but mom always says I'm as curious as a cat. Whoops! Something tells me I could be in big trouble." It's, quite frankly, boring, and this should be a BIG, powerful, dramatic discovery that helps to introduce and develop this new protagonist. Fortunately, it sounds like Moench has a better idea what to do with him when he takes over next issue.
All in all, Conway delivered a thoroughly compelling plot and concluded most of the themes still left open in his story arc, leaving us with one powerful new beginning at his own personal ending. Still, characterization was a major turn-off here. Even Croc didn't become any more interesting as a character in his final, climactic battle.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 3, 2014 23:56:33 GMT -5
(Doug Moench run begins)
Batman #360
"When Slays the Savage Skull" writer: Doug Moench art: Don Newton
Grade: A-
It seems like Moench did his homework. In so many ways, this issue seems like an answer to everything that was lacking in Conway's mostly impressive (but, in some significant ways, flawed) run on the title.
The story, itself, is set up exactly like Conway's cookie cutter plots from the beginning of his run, with a new villain that gets a long flashback/origin story two thirds through. However, the execution is so smooth and the art so competent that you almost don't notice. It actually works for once.
While doing this, Moench is careful to continue the two storylines still left open from Conway's run. One of these is the issue of Jim Gordon's health, which Conway had set up in his final stories and then abandoned in the final issue. Moench takes great pains to emphasize them again, leaving us to genuinely fear that he's going to have a heart attack soon.
Of course the other storyline that was left unfinished is that of Jason Todd, whose parents just died last issue. A month has passed, and Bruce has taken the boy under his wing. Whereas Jason had no discernible personality before, Moench uses the tragedy to complicate the character, having him walk a balance between bright eyed idealism and intense sullenness that even Jason can't predict. Stronger still is the characterization Moench allows this to add to Batman, so concerned with Jason that the narration has him intently watching Jason's cup of hot cocoa for clues as to whether he'll ask to come along on the next adventure, which Bruce fears because he'll have to say no and depress the boy further. It's a fantastic and (I believe) purposeful contrast to the Bruce of Conway's run who was trying to detach from everyone. At the conclusion of his run, Conway gave Bruce someone to let in again, and Moench has taken the reigns on that theme with impressive skill.
Finally, what stands out the most in Moench's writing is his innate sense of characterization. Whereas Conway could write an entire issue without a single personality shining through, Moench lends a strong sense of characterization to literally every bit character that gets a line in this issue, including a guy at a newsstand with a dark sense of humor, a random bystander whose simple world gets shattered when he witness the death of a cop, a pushy detective who should have left the force years ago, four cops (each of which comes off very differently) and, of course, the deranged villain. This is a very satisfying change for me. I almost felt nourished in this issue after going a very long time without sustenance in the form of characterization.
The plot in one really long sentence: A mysterious villain called The Savage Skull is killing police officers, leading Batman to tire himself out, going day and night without food and rest, to find the killer, all while Gordon has a talk with Mayor Hill, nearly dies right in front of him, and gets yelled at and threatened by Hill for being in poor health, just as Batman finds the killer and discovers that Gordon is next on his list, leaving him to find Gordon, have Gordon tell him that The Savage Skull was once a gun-happy police officer who had his face burnt off in a fire, killed an innocent kid, and was kicked off of the force, leaving him to want revenge against the cops that betrayed him, just as The Skull bursts through the window and has his final battle with Batman before hitting his head, falling in the Gotham River, and presumably dying.
I'm really digging Moench thus far. He may not be crafting the elaborate continuity that Conway spun so well yet in this issue, but his ability to make such a generic story sing is damn right impressive.
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Post by shaxper on May 3, 2014 23:56:54 GMT -5
Detective Comics #527
"Avatars of Vengeance"
writer: Doug Moench art: Dan Day
Grade: A-
Once again, Moench employs a rather generic story, in which Kirk Langstrom manages to forget his anti Man-Bat pills once again, producing a monster that still, for some inexplicable reason, believes that Batman killed his daughter (who is very much alive). It sounds like a terrible story, but Moench infuses it with energy.
Once again, Moench picks up on the unresolved themes from Conway's run. We've got an exhausted and clearly ill Jim Gordon being belittled and bullied by Mayor Hill (it's powerfully infuriating in this particular issue), as well as Batman feeling like he's overextending and exhausting himself, but not sure why or how.
Upon coming home from a particularly exhausting evening with no thoughts but a desire to quickly see Jason and then head off to bed, Jason suggests they go out for a movie that night. Bruce instantly puts off all other thoughts to make that happen. It's both touching and almost funny as we watch the two in parallel, dressing for the evening with the hopes of impressing the other. In contrast, Vicki Vale receives word that Bruce has broken a date with her again, and Man-Bat patrols the city looking for Batman...a reminder that Bruce truly is over-extended.
The issue culminates with Man-Bat finding his way into Wayne Manor from the Batcave (this is actually plausible considering their last encounter), correctly inferring that Jason is a sort of "son" to Batman, and then flying off with Jason, threatening to kill him like Batman killed his daughter. Batman, who has clearly made Jason the first priority in his life at this moment, screams after Man-Bat in a thorough rage:
"This is IT, Man-Bat! You've gone too far! No more will I treat you with kid gloves simply because I feel sorry for you! You've crossed the line--and I'm coming after you with blood in my eyes! DO YOU HEAR ME, MAN-BAT? I'M GOING TO KILL YOU!"
In stark contrast, an astonished Alfred can only offer:
Good lord, Sir, you're...you're hysterical...almost mad--!"
It's a powerful, powerful note to be continued on.
I should also add that Dan Day makes outstanding contributions to the success of this story as the new artist. His work is nearly as potent as that of Newton and Alcala, and his framing, perspectives, and action sequences are far more inventive. I was thoroughly impressed with his work.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 3, 2014 23:57:34 GMT -5
Batman #361
"The Most Successful Species!" Writer: Doug Moench art: Don Newton
Grade: C
Moench takes several steps back in this issue, which continues the Man-Bat storyline from last month's Detective Comics. Whereas we left off last issue with Bruce swearing to kill Man-Bat and Alfred watching, dumbstruck, we get a lot of back-peddling in this one. First, we get a reenactment of the end of the last issue, only it's far tamer this time, with Bruce only swearing "This time you'll pay in Blood!" Of course, two panels later, he goes on to explain to Alfred, "Don't worry--What you just saw was frustration with myself." And, ten pages later, Batman reflects to himself, "I was wrong to want Man-Bat's blood--and I knew it the moment I looked into Francine Langstrom's eyes." In every possible way, Moench is backing off from and rewriting the cliffhanger he left off with last time. I wonder if this abrupt shift came from Wein, from even higher up, or maybe lower down (from Moench, himself). Whatever the case, it was a supreme disappointment to me because Bruce's rage was justified, and it was also understandable considering all the stress and strain he'd been feeling in that issue.
Unfortunately, there isn't much to the rest of the story. Man-Bat tries to turn Jason into a second Man-Bat to serve as his offspring, Bruce saves him with a semi-clever plan, and the whole thing ends with a chuckle as Bruce has to cancel his date with Vicki AGAIN, as Bruce stares, bewildered, at the phone after being hung up on while an elated Jason cheers "Oh boy, Bruce--can we see a 3-D science-fiction [film]?" from the background.
The one nice addition at the end is the introduction of Harvey Bullock, the assistant Mayor Hill has appointed to Gordon with the express purpose of driving him off the force.
All in all, though, this was nothing more than an adequate Batman story, and that's a sincere disappointment considering where Moench left us hanging in the previous issue.
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:36:06 GMT -5
Detective Comics #528
"Requiem for Skulls" writer: Doug Moench art: Gene Colan
Grade: C
With neither the inspired characterizations that Moench demonstrated in his first two stories nor the kind of compelling plotting that Conway demonstrated best during his tenure, this issue descends into blandness. Harvey Bullock is taking every opportunity to show up Gordon, beginning with reopening the Savage Skull case and attempting to prove that Gordon closed the case on a dangerous man still at large. Sure enough, they do find The Skull, but Bullock's reckless tactics get a good officer killed.
Ultimately, Bullock gets a lead on The Skull and finds him at an old Police Youth League building, with Gordon following, and Batman following Gordon. It just gets silly from there, as The Skull challenges Batman to a boxing match and is winning. Gordon has to root on The Batman and espouse his faith in him for Bruce to finally turn things around. What kind of crap is that? How does an ex-cop who boxed in his spare time at the Police Youth League take down a man who has spent years training his body and combat skills to the point of perfection in a fair fight? I also enjoyed Batman's boast of, "I've yet to duck a fight in my life." Ummm, how about twice with Killer Croc just a few months back?
There's also a random 2 page B plot where Waldo comes to visit Jason. That's really all there is to it, but Colan draws him menacingly, and Alfred comments "oh, dear" even though he was the one to bring Jason outside to see Waldo. I have no idea what Moench was trying to get at here, but I'm sure we'll find out next issue. Maybe it's really the Joker or something since Waldo is oddly still in his clown makeup, but Moench's words don't hint at any sense of foreboding beyond Alfred's odd comment.
Thank God for Gene Colan. His art is just about the only interesting aspect of this issue. Though I miss Newton/Alcala and even Dan Day (after that one powerful issue), Colan is still a master that absolutely makes the panels exude tone where Moench's words don't necessarily provide them with one.
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:36:16 GMT -5
Batman #362
"When Riddled by the Riddler" writer: Doug Moench art: Don Newton
Grade: C-
And if you thought that title sucked, just wait until you hear about the story. Look, I'm not even a fan of the Riddler, but if you're going to use him, you'd darn well better make the story clever. Unfortunately, this quickly becomes one of those train-wrecks of a story where Batman and Gordon end up leaping to ridiculous solutions to ridiculous riddles and always end up being right. For example:
Batman (reading a clue): "When riddled by the Riddler you'll find the answer to this, my perplexing rhyme..."
The Riddler had just tried to mow down Batman with a machine gun (thus the "riddled by the Riddler" bit), and Batman and Gordon automatically leap to this conclusion:
Batman: What would have happened if I HAD been riddled by the Riddler's machine gun?
Gordon: You'd be dead.
Batman: In Heaven, hopefully...
Gordon: You'd be in Paradise, Batman! There's the Paradise Theater."
And that's the kind of shoddy sleuth work we get.
They also conclude that an egg with "M A" written on it is "An egg ma" (enigma). Come on. If that's really what the Riddler was going for, that's just terribly lame.
Sure enough, there's a new quiz show called Enigma being filmed live at the Paradise Theater where contestants are given riddles that begin with "Riddle me this..." and have to solve them for prize money. How did Batman and Gordon not jump to the conclusion that Riddler would be headed there RIGHT AWAY, and why in the world didn't someone suspend that show while the Riddler was on the loose in Gotham??? Stupid, stupid, stupid.
We also get a brief origin for Riddler, but it's terrible, just showing Nigma cheating to solve a puzzle in his elementary school classroom and then working at a riddle-oriented carnival booth. How the Riddler cheats in either circumstance isn't even made clear, and forget about characterization or motivation.
Really, the only likable aspect of this issue is Batman and Gordon fluidly unraveling the Riddler's riddles (albeit ridiculously) as Bullock watches in complete bewilderment, comically fifteen steps behind them.
There's also an annoying tidbit at the very beginning, where Batman talks about getting his mind off "Jason and his renewed fascination with the circus" and a note indicating that we should see the next issue of Detective to find out about this. How odd to refer to something in the past that we won't see until next issue, even moreso because it doesn't sound even remotely intriguing or problematic and because it goes back to that stupid moment with Waldo last issue. Whatever Moench is going for with that storyline, he's only managed to piss me off with his ambiguity twice in two issues now.
Once again, art is really all that this issue has going for it. Even without Alcala, Newton does a nice job here.
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:36:36 GMT -5
Detective Comics #529
"The Thief of Night" writer: Doug Moench art: Gene Colan
Grade: B+
One page in, it's already obvious that Moench is putting forth a more serious effort this issue. He's already giving that fantastically rich characterization again, providing glimpses of ordinary Gotham citizens, all working the grave-yard shift at their own particular jobs and, in doing so, gives a soul to Gotham and, more specifically, night time in Gotham. This is a gesture that's answered by both the tone and plot of the story as it progresses, as each of these people reenter the story in some way, and the new villainess described and barely seen in this issue will go on to portray herself as the embodiment of the night, itself.
Sure enough, this is the setup for, and cameo first appearance of, Nocturna, and Moench coats the book with intense, eloquent, borderline flamboyant narration and tone in anticipation of her arrival. It's a beautiful gesture, and I absolutely savor it here. Already, I can see how some fans claim that they eventually get sick of these overly poetic words, ideas, and tones that always accompany Nocturna, but they're certainly welcome at this early point.
The plot, itself, isn't anything all that special. It still appears to be Moench's weak point. The Thief of Night is working for Nocturna and, somehow, after a week of losing to him night after night, Batman still can't come up with a single strategy to take down an otherwise average thief who blends into shadows. There are some other smaller plot problems as well, though nothing major. Meanwhile, Bullock is still causing trouble for Gordan, and Jason becomes tired of being a secondary priority in Bruce's life, spending more time with Waldo and wanting to rejoin the circus. This last problem really doesn't interest me as there's no real threat involved. Waldo wants what's best for the kid, and there's no way anyone's going to think that Jason would be better off leaving a willing adoptive parent in order to be an orphan in the circus. Yeah, it always takes a suspension of disbelief to wonder if Batman will overcome his obstacles, but I just can't get myself to worry about this particular obstacle, especially after all the anticipatory build-up Moench gave it in the last two issues.
Finally, there's an odd moment in the Wayne Foundation boardroom as Lucius Fox is briefed on a tragic work-related accident involving a Ms. N. Knight (who will obviously and conveniently turn up as Nocturna just next issue) and the question of whether or not the Foundation should pay for her extremely costly medical bills. Lucius' response is to postpone the payment so that the Foundation can look into whether or not she's due for even more compensation than she's requesting. I realize that the dual purpose is to give Nocturna motivation for turning to crime as well as to depict how kind and charitable the Wayne Foundation is, but I have several problems with this:
1. It's one thing to be a generous and equitable company that pays a fair wage and looks out for its employees, but why in the world would you offer an employee more than they're looking for without even knowing the story? It's one thing to feel responsible, but Lucius knows almost none of the facts involved.
2. From the report's perspective, the accident sure sounds like it was Nocturna's fault, in which she decided to utilize a laser in her astronomical studies and was injured in an accident that stemmed from such a decision. Granted, only a jerk would automatically jump to that conclusion without seeing the evidence, but it certainly should be looked into. How can any company stay afloat if, every time there's a work related claim, the CEO personally and automatically decides to pay out more than the person is asking for REGARDLESS of fault and facts?
3. How in the world does Lucius think he's helping by holding up the status of the claims? These are old bills and Nocturna probably needs them paid asap.
So there's a lot about this issue that doesn't make sense, but the overall tone and characterizations more than make up for it.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:37:41 GMT -5
Batman #363 writer: Doug Moench art: Don Newton
Grade: B-
The first Nocturna story. Melodramatic dialogue and narrative to the core. And, like most people, I enjoy a little bit of melodrama now and then, but there's also a part of me who easily equates Nocturna, the Thief of Night, and even the Bruce Wayne that flirts with Nocturna, with those weirdos we all knew in college, thought were cool for two weeks, and then got thoroughly sick of.
There really doesn't seem to be anything else worth discussing in this issue, as the plotting is just a means for the characters to wax melodramatic as they perform their melodramatic crimes. Jason does finally run off in the night to see Waldo, and Vicki Vale hates Bruce for the moment, but I care about those plot lines even less.
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:38:22 GMT -5
The major differences between Bronze and Modern age comic storytelling
Ever since I began this run back in June(?), I've held off on reading current comics. I've mentioned this before, but somehow I always find switching between older comics and new comics jarring. They just feel too different to me. Well I finally did spend tonight catching up on four months worth of new Batman and Detective comics, and a lot came into focus as I read them. There really is a total difference in the way new comics are done versus the way old comics were done, and it isn't just decompression and glossy paper.
As I followed these newer stories, what became immediately apparent to me is that each storyline is an island unto itself. Whereas Conway (improving upon a strategy first begun with Wein, and furthered by Wolfman) plotted his arcs like a professional boxer, throwing one story concept at you while pulling back the other arm and preparing to hit you with another after, all the while using careful footwork to shape a larger pattern that would only come into focus with later successive hits, the new style seems to be bludgeoning the reader with one fist repeatedly. We're generally given one plot, existing outside of any other meaningful continuity of events, stretched out for five issues (where one or two would have done), and attempting to justify itself by making the story out to be so much larger than anything that came before it; so much more personal, complicated, dire, or what have you, than anything the hero has ever faced before. There's no A plot, B plot and C plot occurring within the span of a single issue. It's one A plot dragged out for ever and ever. Even Morrison, who has free reign over the Bat books, writes each story arc in this way, with each threat or mystery fully occupying an issue, unwilling to share with any other ideas Morrison might be entertaining on the sidelines or setting up for future issues.
My mind goes back to Marv Wolfman's highly anticipated return to Nightwing a few years back. It was terrible, and I think that was largely due to the fact that Wolfman handled this new style of plotting worse than most. One story spent five issues trying to show how Dick taking down a bunch of mutant experiments was the pinnacle of his entire identity search, culminating in his bursting out of a grave, figuratively and triumphantly reborn. The next one spent five issues on Bride and Groom, a semi-intriguing villain pair that might have made for one good issue, but they got extremely boring by the end of five. Wolfman, a master of the bronze age, could not work his magic in this new age of comics, hands figuratively bound by this new vision for how comics should be written.
I wonder if the reason these Bronze Age books work so much better is that the comic industry was afraid of its fans back then. You can see the desperation and uncertainty in the letters columns, as writers and editors panicked to try to understand these new adult readers who would no longer go for the old style of stories targeted at kids. The only thing they knew how to do in response was to write with as much quality as they could, and though they weren't always successful, the ambitions were honest. Now it's all a machine. They understand us well, and they know how to manipulate us. They know exactly how to create the hype to get you reading the first part of a story arc, keep reading with interest for another two, and then finish up the last two because you might as well -- you already bought the first three. Then they reprint the whole thing as a trade to attract even more readers and make even more money. And the true beauty is, with no real continuity, and with constantly rotating creative teams on most books, you keep coming back to these stories without any real impression of what it will be like and whether or not you'll like it, all while the hype keeps on enticing you to try it just in case. It's an incredibly successful business model, but it's optimized for churning out fluff. Many of these arcs have decent ideas at their core, but that's all they are -- five issues exploring one idea to a fault.
Modern writers would have had us spend an equal five issues on the Thief of Night and Killer Croc, on the Sports Master and The Lazarus Affair. There are no bigger stories and smaller ones, no greater and lesser villains. It's all treated equally, both in length and in tone. It's all about selling the 5 parter, not telling good stories, one after another, and crafting a continuity in the process. Worse yet, when each and every story idea gets 5 months to run its course, it's a total slow down in ingenuity. The Bronze Age gave us new villains and conflicts nearly every month. Now we get 2.5 of them a year.
I don't know. There's still something charming about picking up new books each month, but I'm really starting to see the strings operating the puppets. Reading semi-quality classic books is killing new ones for me in contrast. I wonder if, in a sense, I can now look back at the second half of Conway's run on Batman as a sort of Golden Age for plotting and continuity. Sure, the stories had their flaws, but those one-two punches of A, B, and C plots, all developing in concert, is something that had never been done well prior to Conway, and I'm beginning to doubt that it will ever be done better after.
/end rant
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:39:23 GMT -5
Just read Batman #703 tonight and am now completely caught up with the title. I mention this for two reasons:
1. As if in direct response to my previous post, this was a single issue story and it paid homage to a lot of old continuity, not just operating as "an island unto itself."
2. The old continuity it brought up came directly from this Bronze Age run of Batman I've been reading, particularly the Conway Killer Croc arc. It specifically mentions Joker and Croc working to have the criminal underworld kill Batman, and it references Vicki Vale's break-up with Batman, which also happened in that storyline.
On the one hand, I found this gratifying. These later Bronze Age stories are where Batman's continuity first really took shape but, occurring right before the first Crisis, that continuity also got discarded only a few short years after it began. These stories NEVER get referenced, even though it was a very impressive run, as a whole.
On the other hand, there's a real problem here. The Killer Croc/Joker plan from "ten years ago" is being discussed by Dick, Tim, and Damian, three of the four Robins (okay, there was also Stephanie Brown for a few months). Still, Jason's absence seems particularly pronounced in this discussion not just because he's the missing Robin, and not just because Tim walks in in the Red Robin costume that he got from Jason. Instead, these two facts only play up the relatively big problem that Jason's parents died in the very issue being discussed. The biggest, most memorable aspect of that individual issue was that it left an orphaned Jason Todd in Bruce Wayne's care.
Of course, of all the characters and continuities revamped during the first Crisis, none was changed more heavily than Jason's. The Jason Todd that was killed by the Joker and came back as the Red Hood who is still at large in these comics was an entirely different character, and his parents met very different fates.
So...now that we're post-post crisis, and everything counts again, how are we supposed to reconcile this? Did writer Fabian Nicienza intentionally reference this old story in order to make us wonder, or is this still a 100% post-crisis Jason Todd, with the original guy still totally obliterated from continuity?
It would be interesting to see all this old continuity starting to count again. As it stands, I found the references in this issue incredibly gratifying and oddly timed.
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:39:39 GMT -5
So...it only took me a month to get to the next issue in the Batman run. Sorry for the long delay, but I spent the past month catching up on nearly six months worth of unread new comics. Now that I'm caught up, I'm ready to jump back into things.
Detective Comics #530
"Passion Nocturnale" Writer: Doug Moench Art: Gene Colan
Grade: B
First off, anytime you ever have Gene Colan on art and Dick Giordano inking, you're inevitably going to be in for a treat. Portions of this issue are a visual feast, especially the climax, in which Moench's words, Colan's layouts, and Giordano's inks almost seem to sing in angelic harmony. Additionally, Adriane Roy does an excellent job giving color and, therefore, expression to the night during this scene, playing with shades to keep the panels dynamic, yet also providing a uniform identity for the backdrop.
Of course, then there's Moench's writing and plotting. Moench is desperately trying to make this story a thing of literature, which I respect but, as a piece of literature, it absolutely fails. The writing is stilted and over the top, even having Batman deliver the line "She's long gone...leaving nothing but an arrogant scatter of gem fragments." Why Batman, I had no idea you were such a fan of personification and playful adjectives.
There are a few lines that do connect, such as when Batman "roves streets starved for love, driven by a passion dangerously close to hate," but most of the rest is arrogant, overly-stylized fluff.
Moench attempts to employ metaphors and thematic parallels, beginning and ending with an owl attempting to find love, and attempting to link Jason and Nocturna's pursuits of love, though the connections are never crisp and clear. I still can't decide which love Nocturna is referring to when she tells Jason "Maybe his hands are tied. By emotion. Maybe he loves you too much...and fears losing you to the freedom of what you want to be." Obviously, she is saying this to Jason about Bruce, but it's clearly meant to be taken on another level as well. On the one hand, she might be referring to Batman loving her too much and fearing what she wants to be, but such feelings are never hinted at between the two of them anywhere in this story. It's also likely that she means the Thief of Night, since she then goes on to rescue him, but what does he fear her becoming, and why does Moench warn at the end that "obsession changes the love which spawned it," when neither Nocturna nor the Thief of Night are spurning the other nor seem to be particularly obsessed? Is the love a more existential love of crime or consciousness? The most likely bet is that Moench does mean there's an obsessive love between Nocturna and Batman, but the clues are beyond subtle in this story...they're non-existent. As a result, the whole owl metaphor seems labored, unnecessary, and irrelevant by the end. If an English teacher with years of writing and editing experience can't easily decipher the theme and metaphors of this story, how the heck is the average reader going to?
There's also a troubling moment in the story where Bruce learns Jason has run away and decides to pursue Nocturna instead of trying to get him back. He tells this to Alfred and asks Alfred to go instead. Now Alfred's primary function in the Batman mythos is to give Bruce a chance to talk about what he's thinking inside, but that opportunity is entirely wasted here. I need to know that he (and Moench) understand the consequences of this decision; that there's a motivation behind it. Instead, Bruce simply makes capturing a white collar thief more important than getting back his confused and angry ward with no hint of this being out of the ordinary nor a cause for concern. That bugged me.
I think Moench has an amazing story in his head, one in which all of these motivations and actions make complete sense and, together, weave a powerful tapestry that warrants heavy metaphors and dense, descriptive language, but little of that is actually coming across at this point. I love Nocturna visually and as an idea, but what the character actually says and does fails to impress me, as does the way that Batman responds to her, making his pursuit of her his #1 priority without any real explanation nor hint of why. If it's out of obsessive love, we need to see and feel it, and we need to understand why. What attracts him to her beyond the fact that they both have a deep connection to the night?
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:39:58 GMT -5
Batman #364
"The Man of a Thousand Menaces" writer: Doug Moench art: Don Newton
Grade: B+/A-
Moench has toned down most of his "poetry" in this post-Nocturna issue (of course, we know she's coming back). Though Vicki Vale has been reduced to another useless train-wreck of a woman who doesn't know how to go on living without the love of Bruce Wayne, and though Jason Todd still isn't winning me over with generic, under-explored motivations and virtually no personality traits, I really enjoyed the plot and tone of this story.
For one thing, I feel that Moench and his art teams have a better appreciation for Batman being a creature of the night than previous creative teams. Though it's never acknowledged in this issue, the solitude, uncertainty, and dreaminess of night continue to pervade in this issue. Virtually nothing about this story would have worked during the day, and it's hard to explain why.
The other aspect I enjoy of this story is the plot, itself. Chimera, a quick change make-up artist who changes his horribly disfigured appearance each time (Newton must have loved taking on that challenge), with a practical and clever plan for burglary, remains an enigma throughout this issue. While Moench has been feeding us clues all along that it's Waldo the Clown, it can't be. Chimera's first crime was performed while Waldo was performing. So Moench does an excellent job of toying with us...or he's a sloppy plotter. I'm hoping for the former. We did see Chimera changing in a truck labeled "Olob the Clown," so I'm guessing that's who this is. It would have been nice to have seen the character earlier though; to have been given a fair chance to guess at who Chimera really is.
Finally, I really enjoyed Chimera's response to Batman arriving on the scene. Most villains are either just terrified or defiant. Chimera is frustrated and puzzled: "But it doesn't make sense--I..I'm just a thief--and you came all the way from Gotham to stop me?" It's a unique reaction. That, coupled with the great deformed face, made the struggle a real treat.
The plot in one long sentence: Chimera is stealing wallets from people at the circus and then robbing them while he knows they aren't home, Jason is attempting to catch Chimera and therefore prove his worth to Bruce, Bruce is tracking Jason and making sure he doesn't get himself hurt while doing so, Chimera decides it would be profitable to kidnap Jason, Batman and Chimera fight, and then Chimera catches Jason, apparently revealing himself to be Waldo the Clown.
Oh, and Bullock pulls a prank on Gordan that results in a heart attack. it's a pretty powerful moment.
All in all, this felt like a strong issue, which is impressive when the plot isn't all that dire or on all that grand a scale. It's just nicely done throughout.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:42:32 GMT -5
Detective Comics #531
"The Face of the Chimera" writer: Doug Moench art: Gene Colan and Alfredo Alcala
Grade: B+
The conclusion to the Chimera storyline doesn't disappoint, for the most part. Jason grows a bit more of a personality as he's left to wonder how to handle Chimera, believing that he's alone in handling all this. His methodical solution in searching for the Chimera is practical, and his final guess as to the true nature of Chimera is quite brilliant. Granted, it was only a guess that ended up being completely true, but it was still brilliant.
I really like the final answer to who Chimera was. He was never any of the individual circus members. He was a master of disguise floating amongst them all along, changing faces as often as necessary in order to blend in. Fascinating. I still would have liked to have seen his real face and learned his true identity in the end. Jason is only partly right that it doesn't really matter. There's always that need for a sense of closure, and if he ever comes back again, I'd like to know his true alter ego. It's not like Batman doesn't know his identity now, so it's a bit of a stupid mystery to leave open for us.
It seems that Moench must have changed his plans for Chimera partway through. When Waldo first showed up at Wayne Manor several issues back (Detective #528), there was a dark undertone to the visit, and Jason wondered out loud why Waldo was wearing his makeup while he was off duty. The answer to those odd clues would appear to be that it was Chimera, but in the next issue, that same Waldo talked to Jason like a friend without any clear agenda in mind, and we saw only last issue that Chimera hadn't considered kidnapping Jason until just then. Oh well. Loose ends.
Oh, and by the way, why the heck would Chimera make a second attempt to get Jason if he now knows Batman is pursuing him? Just last issue, he was terrified at their first encounter. Why not let a good crime spree be good enough, go back to hiding amongst the carnies, and keep making scores the way he'd been making them all along? Sure, Jason would fetch a large ransom, but Chimera was clearly way out of his league.
Such confusion aside, my only regret with this issue is that it doesn't leave much for the artists to do. Colan and Alcala teaming up on art is a dream come true, but Moench has all the action take place during the daytime when their best work is in expressive shadows, and his focus is more on tying up the story than it is on tone and drama. The script works fine on its own, but it doesn't really consider the visual aspect. Colan and Alcala still do an amazing job, especially on faces, but they lack the freedom of expression that comes with Moench's moodier scripts.
The plot summary in one long sentence: Batman wakes up and scares away a bunch of lions that were planning on eating him, Jason decides Chimera isn't Waldo and escapes, Gordan is in a coma from which he may never awaken, Jason begins a systematic check on all members of the circus to see who wasn't there the night before and is therefore Chimera, he figures out what Chimera really is (actually, it's a wild guess), he finds Batman and Chimera (only he's confused which is which), a fight ensues, Chimera is captured, Bruce agrees to take Jason on as a partner, and Vicki Vale begins a plan to go undercover and expose a weapons deal between Russia and Cuba.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:42:48 GMT -5
Batman #365
"Ruins" writer: Doug Moench art: Don Newton
Grade: B+/A-
Another great issue simply because of the freedom it allows to Newton's art. South American jungles and Mayan ruins at night make for fantastic visuals. In that respect, the relatively simplistic story really didn't matter. I was hooked.
Essentially, all that happens in this issue is that Vicki gets herself trapped in a secret hideout under a Mayan pyramid (even she comments on how far-fetched this seems) and manages to sneak out a note for help, all while a mysterious bad guy with a purple sleeve and glove looks on from off camera. Of course it's the Joker leading Batman into a trap. Still, Moench's writing is good, the plotting is competent, and the art is just awesome.
A few minor details:
Harvey Bullock feels bad for hurting Gordan this seriously and apologizes to his coma-ridden body. Impressive!
Really loved that Bruce thanked his cab driver by name in this issue. That's true class.
How does Newton pencil such a flawless issue and then screw up so thoroughly on the Joker's appearance in the final panel's big reveal? It's the weirdest looking Joker I've ever seen.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 0:42:59 GMT -5
It's funny. As I was heading to bed tonight, I was thinking to myself what my dream-team would be if I had to pick from all the creators I'd seen in this run of Batman and Detective thus far. The funny thing is, what I came up with is very close to what we're getting in these most recent issues.
Here's my dream-team for a Batman book, assembled only from creators that I've seen contribute to this run:
Editor: Len Wein Art: Don Newton Inks: Alfredo Alcala Colors: Adrienne Roy Plotting: Gerry Conway Writing: Doug Moench
The absence of Conway's plotting aside, this really is the dream team. What a very cool time to be reading!
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