shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 8:50:40 GMT -5
Detective Comics #547
"Cast of Characters; Sequence of Events" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Pat Broderick inks: Klaus Janson letters: Ben Oda colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: B
So it wasn't just Newton. Colan's gone too. Possibly the two finest pencilers of this era (certainly for Batman and for Moench's style) both gone at the same time, and both replaced by people I've never heard of. Granted, Broderick does an admirable job in this issue. His abilities are definitely well above average, but he isn't able to make Nocturna glow in the way that Newton and Colan could, and his arrangements just aren't as interesting. He likes to center things a little too much and doesn't seem comfortable with negative space. However, Klaus Janson as inker is a serious disappointment in this issue. I know the name (I don't know many inkers), so I assumed he was a pro (and I KNOW someone's going to respond by saying they love the guy), but his work here was disastrous. He does some very nice pages, but there are many times throughout the issue where it actually looks like he just spilled ink on someone's face. A few other times, it definitely looks like Nocturna has a mustache. The rest of the time, the blacks are just too thick and saturated. The pages almost look wet to me.
I like the beginning of the issue. The first page, does an excellent visual job of reminding us who's involved in the story thus far, and Moench follows with a quick (though sometimes confusing) synopsis of Hill's crusade up to this point. In that sense, the opening title was appropriate. Beyond that, "Cast of Characters; Sequence of Events" really doesn't fit this issue. I guess you could argue that Batman and the city are trying to figure out who he is in light of the recent switch with Anton, and Nocturna and Robin are trying to figure out themselves and each other, but where's the "sequence of events" aspect to the story? Sometimes, I think Moench just tries to be clever with a title, metaphor, or theme, without putting in the effort to make sure he actually is.
Overall, I did like this story a lot more than the last one, though it was still a mixed bag.
In light of Batman getting confused and running off as the Night Slayer, Jason and Nocturna are now forced to work together. It's a believable way to achieve the teamup that Moench was going to force, one way or another. I can't say I enjoyed their teammup; there was no natural rapport that made us want this relationship to continue. It didn't entice me the way Nocturna once enticed me to believe that she, Jason, and Bruce could make an incredible Dark Family. It feels like a lost cause here, long before Moench wants it to. Worse yet, Nocturna's in her darn superhero costume again. And besides, a boy fighting crime with a mother figure is absolutely not my fantasy of a good time -- not the way a boy fighting alongside his father figure is. It just isn't a natural relationship to me. that's not how mother and son should be close.
Oh, and Jason is now relegated to saying things like "Holy Cats!" Really? We're going in that direction with Robin AGAIN?
Anton is too stupid to have shaved his beard while masquerading as Batman, and no one seems to notice. Was this just done with the belief that the audience would be too stupid to understand that it's not really Batman without adding a beard?
Alfred gets a half second touching moment as Julia comes to visit him, and he confesses how hard it is being alone in the mansion with Jason lost to Nocturna and Bruce missing. The final blow is the fact that Julia got her first stories printed and did not use the Pennyworth name. It's powerful until Julia gives a lame "Father, father, father" while hugging him, and Moench tells us that "a daughter has come home." Really? All it takes is a hug? I don't see that connection happening in that moment, so Moench has to tell us it's there. He really has no idea how to write Julia.
Oh, and Alfred thinks Bruce has been gone for three days because he's sad about Jason. Isn't that a little odd? Hasn't he bothered to check whether or not the suit is missing? Hasn't he seen ANY of the headlines all over the news about Batman going bad? Heck, Julia wrote the damned article!
The plot in one ridiculously long sentence: The random uncle of a random assistant to Mayor Hill (whom we've never seen before) feels guilt over the fact that he made the glove Hill used to frame Batman, Anton is dressed as Batman and knocking off banks to destroy Batman's identity while getting rich, Bruce sits on a rooftop and arranges pebbles as means of making sense of his psyche (actually a VERY cool moment in the story), Alfred and Julia get closer, that weird dude is still hitting on Vicki Vale (PLEASE ditch this side plot, Doug! No one cares!!), Hill is worried that the Batman imposter is someone trying to frame Hill in framing Batman (Yeah, it's confusing), the blind girl finds Anton's stolen stash and realizes he wasn't Batman (of course, why did Anton not take the stash with him?), Jason and Nocturna take on Anton and Nocturna tries to hurt Anton to save someone else once again, Anton escapes, Jason suddenly wants nothing to do with Nocturna again (huh?), Bruce finally figures things out, the random uncle from the beginning of the issue runs to Batman (Anton) to tell him about the setup and gets mistreated, and just as he's about to change his mind about Batman, the real Batman approaches him in Nightslayer garb, hand outstretched and offering to help.
I have to say that I REALLY liked the Batman moments in this story. Assembling the pebble hill and the last minute entrance at the end were both stylish and very cool. I'm not feeling the Jason/Nocturna relationship at all, though, and it feels like Moench is just trying to string together too many plotlines that I do not care about (Vicki and creepy dude, Julia and Alfred, the blind girl). I have a feeling that, were I looking at Colan's art and some better inking, I still would have found myself enjoying this story more though. The pacing was excellent, as was the weaving between storylines. I just don't care about most of the storylines Moench is weaving.
Can't wait for Hill to take the fall and Anton to go away so that we can clear the board and start some new stories in this run.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 8:53:27 GMT -5
Batman 381
"Darkly Moved the Pawns" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Rick Hoberg inks: Alfredo Alcala letters: Ben Oda colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: B+/A-
I have no idea what's up with that title. I'm not even going to try to make sense of it.
Well here it is: the culmination of a six month long story arc weaving between Batman and Detective (that's got to be a record by 1984's standards!). Jason's custody issue gets resolved here, Mayor Hill's fate gets (more or less) resolved here, and Nocturna's role in Batman's universe gets mostly resolved here, as well.
I've truly loved many parts of this run and was hoping to adore this issue, but I didn't. I think a big part of that has got to be Rick Hoberg. As I said last issue, he's a fine penciler, but he doesn't have the eye for tone, pacing, and arrangement that Newton did. It's a well drawn but visually boring story. Like last issue, he pulls off one clever visual concept (this time, the single panel page re-establishing Batman on p.18), but (like last issue) the visual, itself, hardly lives up to the concept. Again I wonder if the idea for this panel was his or Moench's. Oh, and Nocturna undresses on panel again. This is getting silly.
There are a few nonsensical moments in Moench's writing again, for example having Robin and Nocturna swinging around on patrol all night without anyone noticing while, literally the second Nocturna and Batman (dressed as Nightslayer) swing out a window, it makes front page news as proof that she's a criminal. Why is no one similarly troubled that Batman's longtime sidekick is out on patrol with her all night long on at least two occasions?
I still hate the whole Nocturna as superhero thing. She was a crime boss before, not a trained physical warrior who can swing across cityscapes and take down criminals.
And speaking of swinging, now that Anton is in Batman's costume, he swings around everywhere. How is he suddenly trained to do this? It's not like having a grappling hook suddenly gives you the ability to expertly use one. Why would he even bother to change anything about how he conducts himself beyond his outward appearance? He was a master thief to begin with. Why risk bungling it up by using a device that you are not familiar with? Once again, Moench treats it as if Batman and Anton literally became each other rather than having just switched costumes.
Enough nitpicking. Now onto the really strong aspects of this issue:
I really like how Moench makes this story about a battle for Gotham's trust. We get a lot of street-level chatter about Batman being suspected of criminal activity (thanks to Anton impersonating him) at a newsstand, a diner, and the entrance of a hotel(?). Moench gives the people of Gotham some credit, portraying differing points of view in intelligent, believable ways. He really shows an honest diversity of opinion out there, not a mindless sea of blank faces that all easily accept one fact or the other. These people get souls for the one or two panels in which they exist.
As a result, Batman's stunt at the end of the issue to expose Hill and Anton to the media/public at the same time felt really good. He won them all back, and he did it with brains. I can honestly say I wouldn't have had the foresight to have planned what he did, and yet it made sense and was believable. This would have been a far more powerful moment had that splash page of Batman's triumphant moment on page 18 been done by a different penciler. "Pretty good" just can't cut it here.
Still not sure why Gordon is able to take Hill away at the end of this scene, though. Gordon is still off the force for the moment, and Hill hasn't actually been charged with anything yet. I guess this is Moench's way of showing us that he has no intention of dragging out the denouemont in real time; no slow downfall for Hill as he faces hearings and lawsuits. It's just over.
I really liked the mini climax Moench gave to Jason's struggle with being Nocturna's ward. A nice rapport has clearly formed between them as they come off of patrol (though not comparable to the one between Jason and Bruce), but a little thing like Nocturna telling Jason to go to bed reawakens discontent between them. As Nocturna goes to bed, Jason reveals that he's been, at least partially, playing her and waiting for an opportunity like this one. He finds her stolen goods and lays the revelation on her in the most realistically adolescent of ways:
Jason: (sing songy) Moth-er Na-tal-i-a...
Nocturna: Mhn?
Jason: I think it's time to come out and face the Mu-u-sic...
Nocturna: Jason! What is it? Are you all right--?!
Jason: I'm feeling GREAT Nocturna, but YOU'RE in the soup. Proof. Your lily-white hands have just turned very red.
The conversation that ensues is a strong one, in which Jason raises very valid concerns about Nocturna's reformation, especially when, after she pledges to never steal again, he says, "And what're you gonna do when there's none of this left to fence? Go out and provide for me by being a waitress?"
I'll give credit to Hoberg here. He does a pretty good job of conveying just a little too much smugness and cruelty on Jason's face, contrasted against Nocturna's honest shock and hurt. As a result, it makes perfect sense, a scene later, when Jason decides not to call the cops ("I just wish there was some way to convince the courts she's an unfit mother -- so they'll send me back to Bruce without putting her in prison...after all, she's not really a bad chick."). All of this feels so genuine to me, so close to my own memories of being an adolescent who could feel so righteous one moment and thoroughly remorseful of my actions in the next. That gray line of appropriate response was always so tragically elusive.
As a result of all this, when Bruce appears to make the same decision by the end of the story, setting it up so that the press does see that Nocturna is a villain, yet inviting her to the Batcave and never turning her over to the law (Nocturna answered his invitation assuming that he would), she's earned an uneasy place in both of their lives, surrendering Jason's custody (she would have lost it anyway, of course) and having been willing to let both Jason and Bruce turn her in. Though Nocturna has lost most of her original intoxicating charm for me (perhaps, upon reflection, some of this was intentional, since she has lost some of that appeal to Batman as well), she is earning a real place for herself in the Batcave. Moench is making her work, once again.
Bruce's return to Wayne Manor in this issue felt really good. I especially loved Bruce's prophetic line: "But explanations will have to wait. Right now, events are gathering both speed and force." It helps that Hoberg has Bruce smiling for the first time in many issues as he announces this. And, after all, Bruce had everything figured out from before the beginning of this issue. Part of the fun and triumph of this issue, after Bruce had lost so much (his ward, his reputation, and even his identity) was in watching him make a complete return to a state of control in the most clever of ways. Every event that happened in this issue was just a cog in his great plan. I really dug that. What an affirmation of who Batman truly is!
I'm loving the new relationship between Bullock and Gordon. Nothing new happens between them here, but it's still incredibly heart warming watching them talk like old friends as Gordon watches over Bullock's room, ready to put his own life at risk to protect him.
I hate that Anton is still out there by the end of this issue. I truly don't like the character and positively do not want to see him make a return.
Hoberg penciled the epilogue all wrong, in which Bruce returns to the blind girl in order to offer her some comfort. Moench's narration is ambiguous enough with lines like, "and he will make her fantasies come true," and "In the morning he will tell her about the Wayne Foundation and its excellent facilities..." But Hoberg's art puts their faces too close together and gives Bruce bedroom eyes as the girl caresses his face. I have to assume Bruce did not go back to offer pity sex to a destitute young blind girl, regardless of what Hoberg is showing me.
As a sad coda to this relatively strong conclusion to a near-epic storyline, this issue features the first ever teaser ad for "Universe: Crisis on Infinite Earths." Worlds will live...worlds will die...and all of this beautiful storytelling will soon be unceremoniously wiped from continuity as if it never occurred.
Sad timing.
Oh, and Ben Oda was apparently having a rough time concentrating on this issue. Twice he accidentally leaves out a word.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 8:53:37 GMT -5
Added to the "highlights" section of the first post in this thread:
Detective #542-547 and Batman #376-381: The Jason Todd custody battle/Nocturna's return/the fall of Mayor Hill. Very uneven, and a lot of the secondary characters and plot lines are obnoxious, but there are many truly great moments. Certainly, this was the heart of everything Moench was trying to do in his run.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 8:53:47 GMT -5
Detective Comics #548
"Beasts A-Prowl" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Pat Broderick inks: Bob Smith letters: Ben Oda colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: B+
Problem: you've just come off the conclusion of a 12 part story arc, and you only have 17 pages to transition from that into new territory. What do you do?
Looking at this issue from that perspective, Moench's solution is a good one. We get a very strong one page epilogue to the previous story arc in which an amusingly content Jason Todd explains all the ends that have wrapped themselves up while stuffing himself on Alfred's sandwiches. It's an endearing all-clear signal for the title. Finally, things have wrapped up neatly.
The remaining sixteen pages are spent on starting new stories, and none of them managed to turn me off in the short time that they were allotted. A new villain called Darkwolf is committing acts of terror in order to get Syrian prisoners freed, Catwoman is back (though her motives are not yet explained), and Batman fails in a mission against Darkwolf while Jason successfully completes his end of it. The seething rage and shame venting from Batman in the aftermath is impressive. I'm very curious to see where this goes.
As for the other two plots, Darkwolf may prove to be an interesting antagonist. Obviously, the whole terrorist aspect rings a more immediate tone to a reader of today, but his brief characterization seemed interesting (albeit difficult to describe). He seems to be wearing the actual cut and skinned head of a Jackal. That, in and of itself, is impressive.
I'm very very disappointed to see Vicki and Julia at the center of a storyline again, but everything Moench does with them in this issue, all the warning Vicki gives to Julia about how insane and dangerous Catwoman is, all lead me to believe he's going to redeem Catwoman's character and undo the damage that Conway dealt with her previous depiction. I think there's a reason Doug gave Vicki all that time to whine about her before Catwoman even made her entrance. Hopefully, the lovesick stalker Conway depicted is gone, and the damnright impressive villainess turned unreliable ally that Wein wrote will return.
There are several mentions made in this issue of two rival gangs battling for territory in Crime Alley, the Metal Knights and the Skull Smashers. We see some of the Skull Smashers in this issue, and they're alternatively and indecisively played for jokes and presented as being dangerous to Vicki and Julia. I have a feeling Moench is going somewhere with these two gangs, and I also have a feeling that he'll have no idea how to depict street thugs. This seems like it's going to be painful.
No sooner do Vicki and Julia reemerge in the story than we get back to Bruce's blatherings about how he loves different women as Bruce than as Batman. This all occurs while Moench devotes nearly an entire page to a conversation Bruce and Jason have about how he used to be in love with Catwoman and thinks he's finally over her. I'd hoped Moench had finally gotten all this romance crap out of his system. It's not that I'm particularly opposed to romance; it's just that Moench keeps giving it the primary focus of the book, and he doesn't even write it well.
Things in the romance department get particularly weird when Alfred chimes in about Bruce's love life at the beginning of this issue: "...particularly with two fine women like Vicki Vale and my daughter Julia eager to...er, 'jump his bones,' as it were." I have not been able to understand in all this time why Alfred is okay with his daughter having a thing for Bruce, and this completely absurd moment just takes it way over the line. Alfred, mister prim and proper, as well as the person on the planet who understands more than anyone else why Bruce can never truly settle down with a normal woman and will most likely only break her heart (as he's done countless times before), is joking about the fact that his daughter wants to jump him. Doug...what in heck are you thinking??
So, it's not much of a story in and of itself, but considering the demands and limitations placed upon this particular issue, I think it meets its goals quite well.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 8:54:57 GMT -5
Batman #382
"The Vengeance Spiral" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Rick Hoberg inks: Rudy Nebres letters: Ben Oda colors: Adrienne Roy
Grade: C+
First off, this cover isn't even remotely related to what's inside the book. On the cover, an enormous Batman (presumably for dramatic purposes) is hunting down a bunch of criminals while a mob of people follows behind him. Nothing like this happens anywhere in the issue. Batman only fights one criminal in this issue, and he isn't on the cover.
The story begins by recapping all of last issue. Yet, strangely, it revises a lot of it as well. Batman is now unwounded by the grenade from last issue, simply watching Dark Wolf get away instead of fighting for consciousness on the ground, Vicki and Julia get a lot of new dialogue before the panther attacks, they are carrying different improvised weapons, and (most significantly) Batman's rage at having failed to stop Dark Wolf, the single most compelling aspect of last issue, gets completely omitted here. Now he tells Robin, "Come on, Robin -- Now we've got two beasts to hunt..." without missing a beat.
My second regret is that Moench does not undo Conway's characterization of Selina as some kind of psychotic stalker, as I hoped he would. Selina is every bit as unbalanced as she ever was in this issue. She doesn't even argue when Batman condescendingly refers to her "predatory madness."
Finally, we had small moments of logic lapses and poor art decisions throughout the issue. Be forewarned -- nitpicking follows:
- Hoberg makes some weird choices with Selina. When Batman confronts her, she randomly bends away from Batman as if trying to touch her toes, but then cranes her neck upward to face him. It's like watching the dynamics of Kirby used horribly wrong. In the very next panel, she promises to do her worst and proceeds to powerfully rub the side of her hand against Batman's face, which causes an energy/impact mark to be made on the back of his head (you know, on the completely opposite side), all while the exclamation "CHAT" is proclaimed beside it, Adam West style. I'm sorry...What?
- Dark Wolf apparently wears his mask because his face was horribly disfigured by Selina's pet panther, Diablo, but we see his face later in the story while infiltrating an airport, and absolutely no scars are visible.
- The entire premise of this issue depends upon your understanding that Diablo is Catwoman's cherished pet. However, when he was used in Catwoman's previous appearance, he was a completely forgettable weapon used by her to attack Batman. I don't recall him having a name or an important relationship to Catwoman. And, unfortunately, Moench and Hoberg do little to sell me on this relationship here. When Diablo dies, we're told, "And even those trained to be objective in the face of horror cannot help but feel the loss," but nothing about the art in this panel nor in the writing prior to this panel conveys this in any way.
- Vicki and Julia have an entire conversation about whether Catwoman is leaping at them or over them as she does it. I have major timing issues with this.
- A very minor point to some people, but Dark Wolf's initial motivation for terrorism is to stop Egypt's peace negotiations with Israel, so Catwoman then makes the following observation: "There are not three things he hates even more than Jews...Egypt, me, and Diablo." I REALLY don't like how casually Catwoman confuses Israel and Jews as being the same thing. One is a nation with its own politics, history, and decisions and actions. The other is a religion and culture. They are not interchangeable terms.
- Dark Wolf specifically decided to commit his act of terror in Gotham so that he could get revenge against Catwoman and her panther while there, yet he tries to hijack a plane home (note: he makes no demands or political statements. This is simply his way of getting home??) after going to Selina's place once and finding that she's not there. I guess he hoped her poisoned panther would kill her in a blind rage, but that's hardly a fool-proof plan. I've never heard of a lazy terrorist before.
- Dark Wolf hijacks a grounded plane while passengers were still boarding. There's still a gangway connected to the plane. So, when Dark Wolf goes into the Pilots' Cabin and gets on the radio with Gordan and the police, why don't the passengers try to leave?
- Gordan manages to make Dark Wolf agree to take another stewardess aboard (Catwoman in disguise) in order to calm the passengers. Why in the world doesn't Dark Wolf find it suspicious that the police WANT to send another victim aboard or that a victim is willing to do this?
- Once Selina is aboard, Batman gets on the wing, and Dark Wolf goes back into the Pilots' Cabin. Why in the world wouldn't Selina instantly start getting passengers off of the plane, and why wouldn't Batman sneak on now instead of holding on for dear life and waiting for the plane to be in the air before getting inside?
- So much of the deception against Dark Wolf in this issue only works because he believes Batman is dead, but no one knows that he assumes this. It just as easily could have ended with the deaths of a lot of innocents, particularly when Robin came sprinting after the plane to get Dark Wolf's attention away from Batman's hiding place. Under normal circumstances, wouldn't he have wondered, "That's odd. Where's Batman? Oh, wait..."
- As soon as Batman crash lands the plane in the middle of nowhere and knocks out Dark Wolf, he goes running off to look for Selina's body...leaving everyone on that plane alone with a terrorist who could wake up at any time and (presumably) still has live grenades in his possession.
- Julia gets the damn epitaph at the end of the story. Give it up, Moench. She's not a compelling character, and her writing isn't as clever as you think it is.
The plot in one ridiculously long sentence: Catwoman explains to Vicki and Julia that the panther is her pet, Batman shows up, Catwoman reveals that Dark Wolf poisoned the panther (thus explaining his attacking innocent people in a blind rage...I guess. Poison does that to animals??) and that Dark Wolf decided to commit his act of terrorisim in Gotham to get revenge against Selina and her panther for thwarting him once before, the panther dies, Selina is sad, Dark Wolf hijacks a plane, Selina sneaks aboard as a flight attendant while Batman rides on the wing, Robin prevents Dark Wolf from noticing Batman on the wing by chasing after the plane and hoping Dark Wolf sees him, the plane takes off, a battle ensues, Selina gets blown out the emergency escape exit while grabbing a grenade out of Dark Wolf's hand, Batman assumes she's dead, Batman lands the plane, knocks out Dark Wolf, and searches in vain for a body, Julia correctly presumes that Batman loved Catwoman, and Batman stares off, thinking of how much he loved her.
Batman really gets hung up on crazy stalker chicks, doesn't he? Vicki stalks him and calls his house to check up on where he is -- and he loves her, Nocturna steals his kid to get him to marry her -- and he loves her, and Catwoman tries to kill him and Vicki out of jealousy -- and he still loves her.
These people need counseling far more than I need these plot lines.
Oh, and what the heck was the point of reading the previous issue? It was all set up for the one issue (which recapped all the setup from the previous issue).
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:16:52 GMT -5
Detective Comics #549
"Dr. Harvey and Mr. Bullock" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Pat Broderick inks: Bob Smith letters: Ben Oda colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Let Wein
Grade: B+
While last issue brought back my absolute least favorite aspect of Moench's run (all the melodramatic romance), this issue brings attention back to the run's most successful aspect: the development of Harvey Bullock.
For the first time ever, Bullock gets a story entirely to himself, and we get a glimpse into his inner self. That being said, I'm still not positive about what I saw.
I've been trying to ascertain who Bullock is ever since he made his big transition into a hero in Detective #546 and became a true friend to Gordan in the process. Parch's observation that Bullock is still being presented as a clumsy oaf in Batman #381 intrigued me because of this. Was Bullock again being relegated to comic relief? What a tragedy that would be.
At the beginning of the issue, Bullock is exactly that. We watch him loaf around the office, asking random cops how to get a hold of Batman because he has some valuable info on the remainder of Dr. Fang's gang, knocking over every item imaginable in the office, acting tough while his colleagues essentially laugh at his back, and then having to be told by Gordan that the Bat signal doesn't work during the day time. It's damn funny and impressively done, but it's also frustrating if you've watched Bullock's progression throughout this run and expected something more.
Then Bullock get back to his apartment. The narration explains:
Even in the trashed vestibule, and only halfway down the filthy hall, Harvey Bullock already feels it falling away...slipping behind him like a snake's shed skin...the retreat of everything on the outside and the release of everything he is on the inside...and as he crosses the threshold--the change is complete.
Sure enough, Bullock's apartment is an incredibly neat shrine to classic cinema. He examines his framed movie posters knowingly, quoting movie lines and having conversations with the actors and characters in his head. He is intelligent, passionate, and sensitive, and Moench works hard to emphasize that the Bullock of the outside world is an act -- something a sensitive man put on in order to survive in the tough world.
It's a cool idea, but I don't buy it. I don't understand why Bullock would ever choose to play dumb (and not just tough), why he'd go out of his way to be so clumsy, or why he wouldn't allow even a little of this to come across during those long nights with Gordan in his hospital room, when the two appeared to be developing a bond tighter than friendship. This feels like an arbitrary attempt to produce a clever twist as opposed to a revelation of something that had been there all along.
True, we don't get a full sense of who Bullock is at home. Maybe he's a little more like the outside Harvey than we see here, simply making an effort to be cleaner, less clumsy, and more cultured, though still a clumsy idiot at heart, but Moench doesn't seem to suggest as much.
This complaint aside, the rest of the issue is quite strong, as Harvey's sacred apartment is violated and vandalized by a neighborhood gang, prompting a teary eyed Harvey to take on the gang member himself, resulting in the entire gang showing up to take him on. Batman rushes to his aid, and a real feel-good fight ensues with Harvey playing the hero/protagonist instead of the bumbling sidekick.
At the end, he's able to take his awareness of his own dual identity and apply it to the punk who vandalized his apartment. It's a touching moment as Harvey picks the kid up, walks him home, and says:
'Scuse me, Batman, but I almost forgot what was real...like the fact that no one's all good or all bad.
Come on, son.
Let's go talk about our good sides...
and the issue ends.
Very nice story all around, beside the fact that I don't buy this new twist to Harvey Bullock. I preferred the slow evolution of a selfish simpleton who felt a little too real into a hero that I could get behind. Bullock was Gordan's greatest victory, a testament to his own example. Now though, Harvey is an exceptional man, and so the exceptional transformation of his artificial facade seems a lot more hollow as a result.
"Night Olympics" writer: Alan Moore pencils, inks, and colors(?): Klaus Janson letters: Todd Klein editor: Len Wein
Grade: B+
Can you believe it? Cavaleri takes a break from Green Arrow, and Alan Moore fills in as guest writer. While I am not among the many who revere Alan Moore as a god, I enjoy his work and was therefore excited to read this issue.
I was also curious to see what Klaus Janson could do as an artist after the bad impression I got of his work when he inked Detective #547. Sure enough, his art looked GREAT here, though still a little bit over-inked in places.
The issue essentially presents Ollie and Dinah's crime-fighting as a kind of olympics,complete with individual events. It's a cute story, filled with humor and great ponderables about superheroes ("It's like Darwinism or something...we're gradually weeding out all the just-plain-average goons, gradually improving the strain until only the flat-out-dangerous psychos are left in the running"), all while introducing a new villain with a mohawk and long bow who will clearly become important in the next issue.
Favorite moment from this issue: Dinah is about to take on two thugs in an alley.
Dina (in her head): "It's only a frail. Let's bust her head in."
Crook 1: Hey man, it's only a chick! Let's bust her head in.
Crook 2: Uh, listen, man. I dunno...I think we oughtta surrender, y'know?
Crook 1: Say what?
Crook 2: My brother, you know, my brother Artie? He got beaten up by Batgirl this one time. She broke his nose, man...all the guys started makin' remarks an' he had to leave town.
Crook 1: Artie did? Gee, I didn't know that...Hell, I guess you're right. I don't wanna be beaten up by no super-bimbo. Let's give up.
Crook 2: Right. We give up, Wonder Woman.
Dina: Wonder Woman?
A fun story all around, though nothing particularly exceptional yet.
EDIT: Neglected to mention an odd promise on the cover of this issue: "Plus Selected Short." I have no idea what this is in reference to, as the only features contained in this issue are the two reviewed above. Perhaps the initial plan during Cavaleri's absence was to provide a series of short Batman stories in lieu of the Green Arrow feature? It's been obvious for quite a few issues now that these covers are being drawn up far in advance and often don't end up matching the content as a result. This was just a particularly weird mismatch. Couldn't they have colored over that "Plus Selected Shorts" caption at the last moment?
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:18:20 GMT -5
Batman #383
"Just as Night Follows Day" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Gene Colan (WELCOME BACK!!!!) inks: Alfredo Alcala letters: Ben Oda colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: B-
How you feel about this issue will inevitably depend upon how you feel about light-hearted gag stories in a bronze age superhero book. The entire premise of this issue is that Bruce has had a long week in both identities and desperately needs a chance to rest, but things keep coming up to prevent him from sleeping.
Yep. That's it. 23 pages of that.
I have to say that this plot would have worked brilliantly for Donald Duck, but I'm not sure I liked it here.
I get that Moench just came off of the culmination of a massive, incredibly draining story line. When Wolfman finished the Lazarus Affair, he was done with the book. When Conway wrapped up the Killer Croc storyline and finally got Jason primed for his new destiny, he was done with the book. At the end of the Nocturna/Mayor Hill/Jason Todd Custody storyline, fan letters poured in wishing Moench well and offering suggestions for who the next writer should be. But Moench stayed, for better or worse, and now he seems to be trying out some simpler, more playful stories while regrouping.
Maybe this was just the wrong time for Colan to return. His strong art, aided by Alcala's rich shadowing, just doesn't seem compatible with comedy. I was sure...absolutely sure...that this story would turn serious at the last moment: Bruce would never get that nap, go out on patrol as Batman, and make a rookie error at the worst possible moment.
We actually got to the next night, Bruce went on patrol, and as we saw a never-ending line of crimes requiring his attention, I was more and more sure that my prediction was correct. It got to the point where there wasn't even any doubt in my mind anymore. But we never got there. Batman solved all the crimes and then, quite ridiculously, stretched out luxuriously to take a nap in costume beside some gargoyles on a roof top.
It just didn't work for me.
Oh, and Calendar Man next issue? WHY??? I'm beginning to suspect that this run has nowhere left to go but downward.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:18:34 GMT -5
Detective Comics #550
"The Spider's Ninth Leg" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Pat Broderick inks: Bob Smith letters: John Workman colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: C-
It was a really good idea that fell under the weight of Moench's weaknesses. This next stand alone story tells the tale of Joey Redwine, a criminal attempting to flee from Batman. As he runs and is pursued, Moench takes us on a tour of his life, exploring exactly what chain of events led him to this moment. It's a very cool idea...a very Wein idea, but it just doesn't work.
For one thing, the character never becomes likable or sympathetic. We first see his father beating a blank slate of a kid with no apparent hopes/dreams/personality, and next see that kid at around 9 years old beating up a girl and making her cry. Where was our chance to start liking the kid? There's no moment in the story where he becomes someone you can understand or relate to. I don't think Moench understands him either.
Broderick's art doesn't help. Granted, it's gotten MUCH better in this issue, but it has no opinion on Joey or his flashbacks. No emotion is conveyed beyond over-exaggerated tears and fear when appropriate. Neither writer nor artist gives this guy a soul nor evokes any feelings from us. I suppose his final heinous crime (beating his long lost first love to death--who is now a nun) was powerful in concept, but it lacked feeling and seemed a little over the top.
I also have to ask why Batman is spending all this time chasing and trying to reason with Joey to give himself up? He could take an average junkie like Joey down in a second, and we even see panels where this seems abundantly obvious (for example, pleading with him on a fire escape while Joey is literally four feet away and climbing a ladder). In the end, when Joey falls to his death, I see that as being Batman's fault. If he'd just taken Joey down, he'd still be alive. Since when does Bruce play guidance counselor to junkies whose souls were lost the minute their fathers beat them at the age of four?
Worse yet, Bruce waxes poetic (as only Moench can have him do), while trying to reach Joey:
There's no refuge in the dark, Redwine! What you've done is part of the night--a black face hungering for your soul.
Sigh.
There's also some reference to Redwine keeping a journal with two columns: fate and circumstance. I can't say this run of the mill high school drop out junkie seems like the type. Moench goes on to build some kind of metaphor about fate and the spider's ninth leg, but it was all noise to me (and I'm an English teacher!). In the end, we actually see Joey go to hell, get impaled by a giant spider's ninth leg, and then tell the ghost of his dad:
Hello, dad. Long time, no see. So tell me, how was the heart attack? And hey, dad--thanks again for the ride...
All of this awful anticlimactic sarcasm while Batman stands over Joey's body, mourning like he's witnessed a terrible loss. How could someone in Batman's position not see a junkie like Joey as someone who's already dead...been dead for years? He's got to see a dozen of these guys a night, and he surely doesn't stop to council and feel bad for all of them.
A better writer could have at least sold me on why Bruce chose to care tonight. What was he going through that made him want to invest so much into championing a lost cause?
"Night Olympics, p.2" writer: Alan Moore pencils, inks, colors(?): Klaus Janson letters: Todd Klein editor: Len Wein
Grade: B
Whereas the first part in this story was cute, but also primarily a setup for the introduction of a new villain, this issue resolves that plot line with astonishing speed and little interest, delivering an epilogue, and then being done before you can say "What the...?" It's a very odd pace, to have spent so long on setup and resolution with almost nothing inbetween.
Essentially, the new bad guy shoots an arrow at Ollie(?), misses and hits Dinah in the shoulder (leaving her seriously injured), gets confronted by Ollie, passes out from anxiety, and then Ollie goes to visit Dinah in the hospital. It's nearly as cute as the first part, and some of Janson's layouts are fantastic, but what a thoroughly frustrating way to tell a story!
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:35:08 GMT -5
Batman #384
"Broken Dates" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Rick Hoberg inks: Rudy Nebres letters: John Workman colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: A-
I do believe Moench has successfully managed to employ a clever double meaning as the title of a story. He's tried many times before, but it actually works this time.
I think that's a good set up for discussing the story in general -- much of it works better than usual.
I should begin, though, by making note of this story's odd tie-in to Crisis on Infinite Earths. At the time of this story, the first two issues of Crisis had already hit stands. This issue explicitly and unnecessarily ties into Crisis by having a bunch of scared thugs from Dr. Fang's old gang call a number they were given and hire The Monitor to broker a contract on Batman. One phone call later, and Batman has a motivated villain for this story. The Monitor's involvement in this story was largely unnecessary. The criminals could have hired someone themselves.
The odd part about this tie-in to Crisis is how uneven it is. At this point in Crisis, Batman has witnessed a dying Barry Allen, appearing panicked before him and announcing that the Earth is dying. It spooks him enough that he calls upon Superman to discuss the issue and is then promptly visited by Pariah, who explains the exact same thing. Batman is indisputably freaked out by this. Yet, in this story, there's absolutely no acknowledgment of this. We see Bruce haunted by the loss of Selina and haunted by his obsession for Nocturna, but larger concerns like what's happened to Barry or what's up with the Earth dying never seem to cross his mind. So Moench fully and clearly wants to acknowledge that the Crisis is happening, yet he largely ignores it when it threatens to derail the focus of his storylines.
Still, there's a lot working in this issue.
I'm mixed on Moench's depiction of Calendar Man, though I definitely liked him more than not. There's a tremendous effort on the part of Moench to sell us on the idea that Calendar Man is a major Batman antagonist when, in fact, in his two previous appearances, he was a thorough joke. Yet, when The Monitor must call on a villain (any villain) to kill Batman once and for all, the call goes out to Calendar Man (odd since he admits, only a page later, that he's never killed anyone). This Calendar Man is no longer a demented obsessive personality. He's a refined, apparently wealthy (so that's how he can afford all the costumes and vehicles) and elegant man who is more fascinated by, than clinically obsessed with, calendars. I must admit, Hoberg and Nebres help to sell me on the guy by drawing and inking his face so well. The eyes are deep, serious, and complicated. He could say nothing, and I'd still feel like I understood and even admired him. Still, Moench may push it a bit far when he attempts to make Calendar Man's relationship with Batman as time-honored and personal as The Joker's when Calendar Man comments:
Could it be that I actually respect the Batman--and look forward to our periodic contests? Of course it could, and were I to kill the Batman--red letter day aside...the rest of my days could well be blank boxes. With the Batman dead, would I have any reason to live?
Buddy, you fought him twice, and neither struggle was particularly epic.
So the romantic drama continues this issue with one noticeable difference -- it works. Yes folks, this is where Moench really surprised and charmed me this issue. Batman's revelation that Selina survived her fall a few issues back, and his mixed emotions and internal struggle between Selina and Nocturna that follow, are both done quite well. Even when Vicki calls, ending their relationship (again), I didn't mind. Once again, Hoberg's art helps here. He's the first to draw Vicki in an endearing way.
A nice touch here are the subtle continuity points brought forward from last issue. As Moench walked us through the gag of Bruce not being able to get sleep, Bruce unwittingly made a date with Julia and half-slept through a serious talk with Vicki about their relationship. Both points seemed incidental then but have had consequences in this issue. Both women were hurt by Bruce's actions.
The real charm of the romantic plot in this issue is Julia...Yes, I said Julia. My second least favorite character in Moench's Bat Universe really really pulled it off this issue. First, Alfred had an earnest talk with Bruce, finally explaining why he wants Julia and Bruce to be together, so it no longer bothers me that it doesn't bother Alfred when Bruce comes onto his daughter. Next, Julia expresses true concern for Vicki's hurt feelings, even volunteering to cancel her date with Bruce in order to comfort her (of course she never says the date is with Bruce), and finally, the big moment for me comes when Alfred comforts Julia over Bruce breaking their date yet again. He wants to explain things with all his heart, but only allows himself to say, "He...he is a complex, many-sided man..." to which Julia gives the surprising reply:
That much I know. Vicki may think of Bruce as an irresponsible playboy...but from the moment I first met him--I've sensed deeper dimensions...
True, this could just be Julia being love-sick and seeing what she wants to see in Bruce, but (once again) Hoberg and Nebres convey it all with an intelligent, focused face that strongly suggests that Julia has, in fact, tapped into a part of Bruce's inner self. For once, I get what makes her special and why she feels she belongs with him.
And then the conversation goes further:
Alfred: I'll say only one thing in his defense, Julia, asking you not to repeat even this much...He has legitamite cause for whatever seemingly callous actions he takes.
Julia: I notice Jason is not here. Does the "legitimate cause" involve him?
Alfred: Yes...but we'll leave it at that...
Wow. No "I knew it!" or similarly shallow reaction followed by an emotional outpour of gratitude and relief. Instead, her reaction is purposeful, intelligent, and further proof that she understands Bruce a little too well. I'm actually rooting for Julia now.
The Calendar Man story continues (and will carry over to the next issue of Detective) but, for once, I'm more interested in Moench's romantic subplots than the core storyline. He's doing more with Calendar Man than I ever imagined someone could (or would even try to), but at the end of the day, it's just another forgettable villain.
Worth noting: I believe the portable Bat Signal makes its second appearance in this run. I neglected to mention it in Batman #383. Cei-U could better answer whether or not it had appeared prior to this run, but I'm too pressed for time to consult his index right now.
Funny, it seems that Colan's return to this title was a tease. Hoberg is back on for at least this and the next issue...but I'm not disappointed. He and Nebres really did something magical in this issue, and I have high hopes that they will continue to wield that magic consistently.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:36:43 GMT -5
Detective Comics #551
"The First Day of Spring" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Pat Broderick inks: Bob Smith letters: John Workman colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: C+
I can't tell if this is something new, or if I'm just now noticing it in contrast to the fine art that Hoberg is dishing out in Batman, but Broderick is very very lazy. Overall, his art isn't bad, but there are numerous times in this issue where he'll just get a face COMPLETELY wrong, and I think most self-respecting artists would have gone back and made a change. On page six, for example, Bruce's jaw is larger than the rest of his head. He literally looks like an ape. On page 11, Julia looks happy and excited while pleading for Vicki to come back so that they can remain friends. Even on page 2, Broderick draws the grid on Calendar Man's smoking jacket from last issue (no attempt at drawing realistic dips, rises, and creases, by the way. The lines are completely straight) but neglects to fill in the days of the calendar on it. More generally, though, some of these panels look fantastic and some look terrible. Also, several times in this issue, the placement of word balloons makes the dialogue order very difficult to follow.
Regarding the story itself, the bulk of it centers on Batman arguing with Robin that he should not come out since Calendar Man has marked him for death. Of course, we have no reason to take Calendar Man seriously as an opponent, but Bruce and Doug Moench feel differently. As usual, Bruce tells Jason to go to bed, and for two years now, any time he's told Jason to do this, we've known he'd just sneak out as Robin and get into trouble anyway. So why doesn't Bruce know this?
Julia confesses to Vicki that she had a date with Bruce, so now Vicki isn't talking to her either. This, as well as Bruce's heart to heart with Jason, really need the Hoberg touch to make them accessible/interesting. Right now, it just feels like Moench is spinning the same tired wheels.
We meet Gotham's new mayor, Skowcroft, in this issue. While not apparently a bad guy, he's presented as a shameless self-promoting politician. I'm pleased to see that Moench avoided the easy solution of bringing in a "good" mayor to signal the end of the Hamilton Hill fiasco. A gritty city like Gotham deserves real politics at its center.
The plot in one relatively short sentence this time: Bruce grounds Jason to protect him from Calendar Man, Vicki isn't talking to Julia for dating Bruce (even though he stood Julia up), Calendar Man attacks an event hosted by the new mayor, Batman fails to catch him, and Jason is missing (presumably out as Robin).
A thoroughly adequate issue. Very little that stood out in a good way, and (aside from Broderick's laziness) very little that stood out in a bad way.
Oh, Calendar Man references Green Arrow in this issue and talks about taking him on as a nemesis once he kills Batman. A nice plug for the backup feature!
"Oliver Queen, for a change!" writer: Joey Cavaleri pencils: Jerome Moore inks: Bruce Patterson colors: Jeanie Casey letters: Bob Lappan editor: Len Wein
Grade: C-
No way this was an accident. For the second issue that Alan Moore wrote of this feature, it got a huge plug on the cover, making it clear that Alan Moore was writing. Clearly, they knew he was a draw. So this issue leaves out first names and jobs, simply (and largely) advertising itself as "A Cavalieri Moore Patterson Lappan Casey Wein presentation". The only reason I bothered to read this was because I knew Moore was a part of it.
But it wasn't Alan Moore.
"Moore" refers to penciler Jerome Moore. He's a solid artist, to be sure, but this was cheap bait and switch.
The story that follows is actually a half decent one for Cavalieri, though I'm sure the excellent art helped make it more digestible.
Ollie and Dinah are in a rundown hispanic diner when two immigration officers bust in waving guns, forcing Ollie to punch one out. If that didn't seem a little over the top, Ollie is told by a hispanic friend to visit his immigrant brother, who will tell him the immigrants' story (why Ollie needs this enough to go on a trip to get it, or why the friend couldn't just relay it to him, is beyond me). Immediately after Ollie finds this brother in a church basement, immigration busts in, waving guns again, and they're surprised to see Ollie there again (which means they hadn't follow him).
Hmmm.
Same officers...
other side of town...
exact same timing..
same over-the-top entrance...
Yup! It's bad writing.
This time around, they arrest Ollie too (presumably for punching the one officer). Now, I may be wrong on this, but it's my assumption that it would be beyond the jurisdiction of an immigration officer to make non-immigration related arrests. Maybe not, but it's not like the issue had a whole lot of credibility prior to that moment, anyway.
Considering the source, this is not a terrible story. It doesn't have the ridiculous villain, and it's trying to promote a necessary social consciousness message (very appropriate for a Green Arrow story). It's just that Cavalieri sucks. You don't blame an ugly person for being ugly or a mentally challenged person for being mentally challenged, so I don't fault Cavalieri for being Cavalieri. I do, however, fault, DC for tricking me into reading his work yet again.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:58:04 GMT -5
Batman #385
"Day of Doom" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Rick Hoberg and Chuck Patton inks: Alfredo Alcala letters: John Costanza colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: B
An adequate conclusion to an adequate story featuring Calendar Man (which makes it Calendar Man's best story to date) manages to distinguish itself in two ways.
The first is most certainly the art. Alcala inks on Hoberg's pencils for the second time, but this time Hoberg is continuing to bring his A game, so we get work like the full page title panel featuring Robin, which I absolutely want framed on my wall. WOW. Chuck Patton shares the penciling credits on this one, and I know absolutely nothing about him. Since I'm still getting used to Hoberg as well, it's not completely obvious where one penciler ends and the other begins. My best guess is that Patton only did pages 13, 14, and maybe 22, because they all felt a little less dense, and Alcala doesn't seem to be the one inking them, or at least he inked them differently. Though my appreciation for comic book art has grown immeasurably since I began these reviews, I still don't have a fully developed eye for it. I suppose it's possible that Patton worked on some of the same pages Hoberg did because we get a few moments like the one on page 7, where Robin's face is drawn two completely different ways on the same page. It's possible that this was purposeful; Robin has pupils and a more realistic looking face when he gives the more personal lines, but the differences between how these two faces are drawn is jarring. There are also at least two moments in the story where Batman and Robin should be profoundly worried or sad, but they appear to be smiling.
The other aspect of this story that really stood out was an attempt to justify Robin's existence in the Batman mythos as Jason and Bruce debate about whether it's safe for Jason to accompany him on a mission against Calendar Man. Cei-u!, I think Moench wrote this one for you:
Jason: Look, Batman, I'm supposed to be your partner! I'm supposed to be a help to you, not a hindrance.
Bruce: You are a help to me--in the right situations.
Jason: And in other situations, all too many of them, all you do is worry about me, try to shield me.
Bruce: Robin, I told you--
Jason: Would any businessman take on a partner who did nothing but distract him?
Bruce: Jason, you're still a very young...
Jason: I'm Robin, and being Robin gives me magic. It saw Dick Grayson to a pretty ripe age, and it lets me do things I never even dared on the circus highwire!
Bruce: Talk like that only hurts your own case...because if I think that costume is making you reckless--
Jason: Not reckless...confident--older than I am! Being Robin lets me take a shortcut to maturity. Don't you see, I'm not a "normal" kid...A normal kid couldn't be Robin.
Bruce: I do understand, but sometimes--
Jason: Yeah, yeah, I know...Sometimes the Batman must act alone--and I agree! I don't wanna smother your act! I just wanna be there when I should, and if this isn't one of those times, then Hell just turned into a skating rink, 'cause Calendar Man is threatening me--trying to turn the very concept of Robin into a drawback. If I let him succeed--if we let him succeed--we'll be admitting that I'm a danger to you rather than an aid. Batman plus Robin must equal more than Batman--not less.
Take it or leave it, but it's the first rational defense of Robin that I've seen in these pages beyond Dick's claims that his presence as Robin kept Bruce sane.
One weird moment in this story: As Bruce is trying to decide whether or not to let Jason on the mission, he sees a silhouette of the Bat symbol on the wall, and that convinces him to let Jason come along. I absolutely do not understand the significance of this.
The story in one sentence: Jason has snuck out to track down Calendar Man, confronts him, fails to stop him, reports back to Bruce, and convinces Bruce to let him come along for this mission, so the two shake down gang members for info on Calendar Man's whereabouts, they fail to stop Calendar Man again, Vicki pimp-slaps her annoying boyfriend, Bill, when he suggests that she was after Bruce's money, Bruce and Jason take on Calendar Man again (this time at the zoo where Jason's parents were killed), and Jason is the one to take him down and save Batman in the end.
Still don't understand why anyone ever considered Calendar Man a reasonable threat. He gets in one good shot at Batman with his high tech laser (where did he get that??) and misses by a long shot. Of course, he does take Batman down in hand to hand combat. That was a little ridiculous. Moench lets anyone beat up Batman. It's getting silly.
LOVED Vicki slapping Bill. I generally hate this secondary plot line, but I've been wanting to smack Bill since we first met him many issues back.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:58:17 GMT -5
Detective Comics #552
"A Stump Grows in Gotham" writer: Doug Moench pencils: Pat Broderick inks: Bob Smith letters: John Workman colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: D
One of the appeals of following this particular run of Batman stories is a very personal one. These were the issues published as I was growing up, even if I wasn't old enough to read or understand any of them. Batman #311 was published in the same month that I was born (February 1979), and only six short years later, we've now arrived at the very first comic book I ever bought. Of course, I flipped through the pages and had absolutely no idea what was going on, so I've been particularly interested in getting to this issue and finally reading and understanding it after all these years. This is the actual copy my mother purchased for me in a five and dime back in 1985. I was very touched to finally be getting around to reading this.
Then I read the damn issue.
Terrible. Just terrible. Once again, Moench acts on the temptation to have a character spend the issue waxing poetic and, once again, it's far more terrible and far less clever than he thinks it is.
This is an issue about Julia writing a front page newspaper article (she seems to have finally moved on from Vicki's paper) about a tree being cut down. No, it's not a special tree, a landmark, nor something even in a location that would matter to most people. It's a tree in front of an abandoned factory. That made the front page headline. I'm all for the environment, for protecting neighborhoods from rampant progress, and all that other fun stuff, but even I couldn't help but laugh when I read this crap.
An excerpt:
Man being interviewed by Julia: That tree's always been there--just can't imagine the corner without it--can't imagine the block without it. Its shade was a real comfort--security, permanence, and strength--and you always felt safe walking under that tree.
Man #2: Yeah--people in a city need a tree like that.
Julia's narration (a bit later): And then it was taken off, leaving only a stump of death and a void in the lives of the people on the block. By 6:33pm its remains were delivered to the North Gotham lumber yard, where its heart and soul would be cannibalized for lumber and cabinets...and whatever else dead trees become.
It gets worse. Moench tries to turn the tree into some sort of metaphor, going on to describe Batman as a mighty oak and repeatedly referring to criminals wanting to cut him down. The guy who finally tries it in this issue is even named "Cutter."
Cutter is a hotshot assassin who strolls into town, hitting mob bosses up for a contract to kill Batman. So much of this doesn't make any sense. What kind of an idiot who's never faced Batman strolls into town and promises to kill him? His deal makes even less sense. A thousand dollars a piece from every gang in town...each month from the moment Batman dies and for as long as their organizations last. What kind of an idiotic business deal is that? Whatever you do, DON'T pay me up front, but I'm somehow going to enforce you paying me for the rest of your lives long after the job is completed? Beyond the obvious enforcement problem, I'd be concerned that mob bosses would try to kill him later in order to get out of the contracts. And how would they know it's the corpse of the real Batman and not just some random body in a costume? All of this is just plain stupid.
So Batman confronts Cutter, pretends to get knocked out and killed entirely too easily (at least he thought to disguise his face in case Cutter unmasked him), induces himself with a pulse-slowing drug to induce a temporary death-like state (boy was he lucky Cutter didn't finish the job just to be sure!) and later busts out of his coffin to take down Cutter and the mob members at the end, all while Robin had been recording the evening's events and gathering evidence against all of them. As Robin later explained, "If not for Cutter, you never could've gotten so many choice mugs together at one time...there was enough said to put every one of these jokers away on conspiracy to commit murder charges...every word of which is on this tape." At least that aspect of the story made sense.
So Batman "came back from the dead" just as Julia noticed that a new sprout was coming out of the removed tree's stump. Not quite the poetic and meaningful metaphor that Moench and Julia thought it was. It's not like the city was trying to "cut down" Batman in the name of progress.
And Broderick's laziness is getting worse. While most of the issue looks quite good, there's a key panel where he has the wrong bad guy talking which completely mucked up the premise of the story for me. I had to re-read the page three times to figure out what had gone wrong. And he didn't even bother to pencil in the guy's hair in that panel. It's one solid piece.
Worse yet, a page later, Jason is drawn on the scale of a dwarf. I think it's just an awkward perspective issue since he looks okay compared to Alfred, but he comes up to Bruce's stomach while Bruce is seated. If he's actually in the distance as compared to Bruce being in the foreground, then why is he looking up at Bruce? I'm really losing my patience with Broderick. He does some great panels, but he absolutely does not seem to care when he produces crap along with it.
So this was my first comic. Strangely, as bad as it was, it was no worse than Batman #311. Somehow, both of my historic childhood moments thus far seem to correspond to the absolute worst Batman/Detective issues.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:59:33 GMT -5
Batman #386
"Black Mask: Losing Face" writer: Doug Moench pencils/inks: Tom Mandrake letters: John Costanza colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: B+
Before discussing the story, itself, there are two things worth noting about this issue. For one, Tom Mandrake begins penciling for the series. While I was absolutely in love with Hoberg's ability to compensate for Moench's weaknesses (adding personality visually where Moench didn't in the script), I think Mandrake experience success by doing the exact opposite -- expressing Moench's vision as if Moench had penciled the work, himself. He really accentuates the dark expressiveness of Moench's words with his pencil. However, it remains to be seen if he can save characterless characters like Vicki Vale and Julia Pennyworth with his art in the way that Hoberg did.
The other noteworthy thing about this issue is the introduction of Black Mask. It's comforting to know that, even with a full reboot impending, we're getting a new villain who will survive into the reboot continuity in one form or another. The same won't be true for Nocturna, of course, and I'm curious to see whether the post-Crisis Black Mask will maintain the spirit of the original better than the post-Crisis Jason Todd, Killer Croc, or Catwoman did.
Then again, I don't really like Black Mask in this issue, but I'll get into that later.
Essentially, this issue is a pretty bold experiment. Most Batman stories that introduce a new villain will give him a few pages (usually toward the end) where we find out his origin. Moench does something very different here, essentially making this a Black Mask story instead of a Batman story. It's a full length origin, with Batman and Bruce Wayne only serving cursory roles in it.
All in all, I like the idea, and the origin is a compelling one (clearly influencing the Joker's depiction in the Burton Batman film and probably laying the groundwork for the post-Crisis Hush as well), but it doesn't quite tie together. I still don't truly understand how being dropped as a baby and being bitten by a rabid raccoon in childhood influenced Black Mask's personality, even though they're both presented as incredibly defining moments for him. Furthermore, I don't ever feel/understand his motivations (to kill his parents, to marry that model, to make some incredibly stupid business decisions that nearly destroy his company, etc). We see him do these things, and Moench keeps attempting to give us valuable insights into his mind, but I just don't understand what Doug is trying to tell me about this guy. This is probably the longest, most in-depth origin story a Batman villain had ever been given up to this point, and yet I understand him exactly as well as if he'd never been given an origin at all.
He resents masks (metaphorically) as a kid. Now he's obsessed with masks (metaphorically and literally) as an adult, and he somehow feels that becoming Black Mask has been his reincarnation after a failed life. I could have been given that in two panels of dialogue.
All in all, I still really enjoyed the writing and art behind this story. The dots just didn't connect to provide any reasonable understanding of this new character.
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:59:45 GMT -5
Detective Comics #553
"The False Face Society of Gotham" writer: Doug Moench pencils/inks: Klaus Janson letters: John Workman colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: A-
Along with new penciler Tom Mandrake in Batman this month, Detective gets Klaus Janson. Both are extremely capable, and both do their own inking. Once more, Wein has managed to make art a priority in these titles, and I appreciate that immensely.
Well now that the origin/explanation of Black Mask has been covered, Moench is free to simply advance the plot this issue, allowing Black Mask to seek vengeance as Janson pours on the style. It's a darn fun issue. Black Mask is given to graphically torturing his victims by forcing them to wear masks that are essentially lined with poisonous acid. I'm not aware of any Batman villain acting in so gruesome a fashion prior to this. I'm ashamed to admit that it's really fun to watch.
Gordon presumes that Black Mask is filling the power vacuum that gets left every time a crime boss in Gotham gets taken down (let's see: Falcone, Thorne, Squid, Croc, and Fang, thus far), but Black Mask doesn't appear to be any kind of expert crime lord, here. He's just a guy with a lot of money who knows how to get the attention of common thugs. He's simply paying them to enact his vengeance and (I presume) keeping his wallet safe at home so that they have no reason to take him down. He's more a crime customer than a crime boss in that respect.
An interesting twist with Black Mask in this issue -- he's convinced for some reason that the elements used to make up the mask help to forge the wearer's new identity. As a result, he carves his mask from the wood of his father's casket. Doesn't exactly make sense, but it's morbid and intriguing.
Certainly my favorite part of this issue was Moench's follow-up on Bullock. He's done very little with the character since we found out in Detective #549 that, essentially, everything we know about Harvey Bullock is an act that he puts on. It was an odd, out-of-nowhere twist that didn't sit right with me, but Moench does a little more with it this issue. First off, we watch him purposefully "accidentally" spill his mug all over the Bat Signal. I'm still not sure why he'd ever go out of his way to pretend to be a Klutz, but there it is. Moench is at least being consistent.
But this is all handled in a more meaningful way when Gordon gets called in to have a meeting with the interim mayor. Skowcroft wants to bribe Gordan (who is now a celebrity after taking down former Mayor Hill) into endorsing him in his bid for mayor. Gordon discusses this with Bullock, and the following conversation ensues:
Gordon: Whatever you do...for once, just remember to be yourself in the acting mayor's office, all right?
Bullock: Huh? Whaddaya mean, commish?
Gordon: Just don't freeze up on me--don't get suddenly careful, if you know what I mean.
Bullock: Heh heh--you sly old fox. Gotcha, commish.
I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure that was Gordon telling Bullock that he's onto him; he knows it's all an act, and he wants Bullock to keep using the act to their advantage.
Sure enough, Bullock intimidates the heck out of Skowcroft and puts him in his place, "accidentally" knocking things over everywhere as Gordon calmly explains why Skowcroft needs a deal far more than Gordon does. The two walk out victorious and giggling like school girls.
As I've said several times in these reviews, Bullock is the character I've enjoyed watching develop the most on Moench's watch, and his growing relationship with Gordon has been immensely gratifying to follow. Gordon letting on that he knows Harvey's secret here, and their using it together to make the two of them unstoppable in the face of shady politics, was a powerful turn of events and a great way to use the twist that Moench just seemed to dump on us last time. I still don't fully understand why Bullock needs to execute his deception to this extreme length, but I'm feeling a lot better about it here.
The plot in one long sentence: Black Mask assembles his False Face Society, they torture and kill members of the Wayne Foundation who were involved in the takeover of Black Mask's cosmetics company, the deaths are threatening the the value of the entire Wayne Foundation (this actually makes sense when you read it), Bullock and Gordon intimidate the new acting mayor and show him who's boss in the wake of the Hamilton Hill scandal, some of Black Mask's people start following Bruce Wayne, Bruce and Jason are able to change into costume and take them down, and Black Mask deforms his former lover who had left him, now forcing her to be his partner in crime.
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shaxper
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Posts: 22,865
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Post by shaxper on May 4, 2014 9:59:57 GMT -5
Batman #387
"Ebon Masquery" writer: Doug Moench pencils/inks: Tom Mandrake letters: John Costanza colors: Adrienne Roy editor: Len Wein
Grade: B+
The culmination of the Black Mask storyline is an entertaining one, but Moench's old habit of attempting to apply layers of meaning that just don't make sense rears its ugly head again.
For one, the story begins with Bruce Wayne and Black Mask planning against each other in parallel. Each sums up the other's motives, abilities, and weaknesses, but Bruce appears to be correct whereas Mask appears to be way off base. Not sure what the point of pairing them up like this is. They're not long time rivals or foils. There is nothing special between these two characters beyond knowing each other in boyhood (though not specifically being friends) and being on opposite sides of the buyout of Maks's cosmetics company. This treatment just isn't earned and doesn't add anything to the story. It's simply done to look clever.
Moench turns on the empty layers of meaning again when Mask fails to kill Bruce Wayne and returns to his childhood home, vowing to kill the boy that he once was. We get three pages of Black Mask talking to himself and his boyhood dolls, spewing out meaningless lines like:
You see, Roman, when I was reborn as black mask, you should have had the sense and courtesy to make room for me...but since you refuse to cooperate, Roman, you must be executed.
All of this is meaningless blather. There is absolutely no distinction made between what Black Mask is and what Roman was other than the fact that one wears a mask. Both were killers, after all. And we see no indication in the story of any latent secondary personality resisting Black Mask. There are no internal conflicts, no hesitance to pursue an agenda. As a result, all of these lines sound awfully deep, but they mean absolutely nothing.
Finally, at the end, Black Mask's former girlfriend returns to see him in prison, right after Batman was explaining to Gordon that she never committed any crimes and isn't a danger to anyone. She gets the last lines of the story, asking an officer to "Just tell him a witch was here...", handing him the mask, and then stepping out into the rain as Moench tells us, "The night wind is bitter...and so very harsh on her cheeks." Man, it sure sounds poetic, but what does it mean? There's no meaning in her message to Black Mask beyond the acknowledgment that he called her a witch. So what are we supposed to make of this ending? Is she the innocent victim who is finally free, the tortured soul forever marked by his misdeeds, or a vengeful survivor relishing his just deserts? Moench makes nothing clear in this thoroughly unintentionally ambiguous and unnecessary ending.
An odd moment in this story. Shortly before Batman risks his life to save Black Mask from a fire that he set, Batman and Robin punch out two cronies, and one goes backward down a flight of steps as the narration tells us:
Thespis may fall farther, but Tupeng's fall is just as final.
This is probably just Moench having fun with words, but it sure sounds like Robin just killed the guy. That couldn't have been what Doug was going for, could it?
Mandrake still does an awesome job in this issue, but there are a few minor panel details that either looked odd (Alfred loses his mustache once, for example) or are confusing. I won't nitpick and list them here; The quality assurance just seemed to be a little more lacking this time. Oh, and Mandrake draws Vicki Vale (who is proud of the new body she's earned by working out) as a lesbian body builder. She's overly muscular and has a mullet. It's just weird. She's only been working out for two months.
The plot in one long sentence: Bruce invites Black Mask to a masquerade party, both Bruce and Black Mask realize this is an obvious trap, but both know Black Mask will go anyway, Bruce gets chewed out by Vicki Vale, is told by Bill Modell that she dumped him too (and why the heck were either of them invited to this event?), Black Mask confronts Bruce, Bruce deflects the attack as BM escapes, Robin tracks him to his hideout, Batman and Robin pursue him there, but BM escapes again, they pursue him to his childhood home, he argues with himself while Batman and Robin take on his cronies, he sets the place on fire and gets trapped inside, Batman and Robin save him, but not before his face is permanently scalded into a new black mask, and his former girlfriend leaves a message for him at Arkham.
So what exactly was Bruce's plan in trying to trap Black Mask at his party? Take him down as Bruce Wayne and hope that none of the guests notice or get killed in the process? Wouldn't it have at least made more sense to have all the masked guests be cops instead of having innocents like Vicki and Bill walking around? This didn't make sense to me.
A good story over all, though there were lapses in logic, and Moench's attempts to bring a more literary style to his writing continue to be disappointing, only delivering the most superficial aspects of theme, underlying meaning, and large metaphors.
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