'As Always' was written by Scott Snyder with art by Ivan Reis. It is a look at the Bat Signal and also a peek into the Comissioner Gordon/Batman relationship. But the part I liked best was in the middle.
Batman streaks off.
Gordon talks about all the super-heroes with massive powers trying to save the world. The Green Lanterns try to will a new sun into being. The magicians try to reignite or recreate the sun. Superman (and Supergirl!) consider bottling the planet to save it.
And in the midst of these gods is Batman. I like how Gordon wonders how Batman ... just a man ... feels in the crowd. It is this aspect of Batman which is the one big draw for me to the character.
Of course, Reis draws a great Supergirl!
In the end, a machine is designed and built to recreate the sun. It is heavily implied that Batman designed it.
With the Earth saved, he returns to Gotham and chats with Gordon. He smiles and shows Gordon the machine which would get people through this night and Batman smiles and lights the signal.
For me, I love the smile. Gordon and Batman should smile together. They are comrades in arms. After this stressful experience, Batman should feel like he can let his guard down a bit.
I also really liked 'The Master Class' by Brian Michael Bendis and David Marquez. All the ex- and current sidekicks as well as Batman run across a dead body and together the solve the mystery of who killed this man.
Bendis always has a great handle on dialogue so it was fun to read him get the voice of all these Robins and Batgirls. From Jason's paranoia to Dick's cool demeanor, everyone sounded like who they are. It was fun to see how all these partners, while all trained the Bat-Way, have their own personality and approach.
And again, we see a Bat-smile, the proud papa saying that everyone is a great detective.
That's the Batman and Batman Family I want to see! Fabulous story!
But my favorite story was 'Detective #26' by Grant Morrison and Chris Burnham.
In it, a new vigilante prowls the roofs of Gotham. The Silver Ghost, in his dapper suit and fedora and armed with machine guns, is the 26th detective to try and get control of Gotham.
But on his first night out, The Silver Ghost runs into Batman (drawn in the style of Detective #27) and to hang up his suit before he even gets started. He knows Batman is what the city needs.
And thus, no other detective appears in Detective since #27. Clever.
There are other great stories in this issue (in particular Many Happy Returns by Fraction/Zdarsky) but I don't have the stamina to review the whole thing like Mart Gray. So head to his site for more snippets. But I liked this issue a ton. And nice to see Supergirl even briefly!
Overall grade: A
2 comments:
Great review, and many thanks for the link. Bendis is definitely better at capturing different voices than he was in his Avengers and X-Men days, I hope he sticks at DC.
And yes, Superman and Batman should always be pals. I’m still not over the final issue of the original World’s Finest Comics.
It sounds like Grant Morrison took his Silver Ghost from The Grey Ghost who appeared on an episode of Batman the Animated Series. The Grey Ghost was a TV hero of young Bruce Wayne. Adam West provided the voice.
I remember that final issue of World's Finest, with Batman lecturing Superman and Superman standing there silent before flying off. Not a good way for the book featuring "your two favorite heroes" to end.
Post a Comment