Sunday, July 22, 2007
Injustice League
October 2007
The League loses a member as writer Dwayne McDuffie turns up the heat in the "Injustice League" story arc! A party has turned very deadly for the World's Greatest Heroes when they find themselves prisoners of the Injustice League!
Injustice League Unlimited
Green Gotham
Detective
a night out
Batman Strikes
How To Take Out A Roomful of Goons
Stalked
While struggling to protect his enemy, Batman is drawn deeper into a forest of intrigue where he uncovers a horrifying secret from Ivy's past. Don't miss this thrilling tale of one of Batman's deadliest femmes fatale by writer Paul Dini and artists Joe Benitez (WRAITHBORN) and Victor Llama!
Face the Face, Part 2
Face the Face, Part 1
Justice #11
Justice #6
Justice #4
Justice #2
Dead Robin, Part One
Poison
Poison" by Brian Azzarello being the weakest, a run-of-the-mill Batman/Poison Ivy story whose flowery narration from Ivy isn't really very convincing or meaningful. The other three stories are very much in the EC Comics vein, whether it's the murder revelation in "Drive" by Joe Kelly (which uses an unnecessarily confusing off-panel conversation as it's driving force), the intriguing examination of prison politics and aging in prison of "Old Dog/New Trick" by Andy Helfer or the gory shock ending of "The Stalking Horse" by Chuck Dixon.
Whether or not the stories resonated deeply or not with me is hardly the point, though, as the artwork looks great throughout. Bernet really sells the grossout factor and the comedy in "Back Bone," the lurid doings of "Drive," the intricate routine of the prison in "Old Dog/New Trick," the madness of revenge in "The Stalking Horse" and the sensuality of Poison Ivy in "Poison." Each story also features a different colorist, or in the case of "Drive," a black and white motif, and this variance of style in color and writing allows Bernet to show off a different aspect of his art in each story.
Nature
The Fury of the Super Foes
Joker/The Mask
Superboy/Robin World's Finest Three book two
1997
Superboy/Robin World's Finest Three book one
1996
the girl of steel
Human Nature, Part 5
Human Nature, Part 4
Human Nature, Part 3
Human Nature, Part 2
Human Nature, Part 1
“The Games People Play
February 2005
Alfred was accosted when he stopped to help a woman with car trouble. Batman, quick to the scene, checked on Alfred and went after the attackers. One let loose they were just there to get Batman away from the old man. He was shot by a sniper on a nearby rooftop. Alfred was delivered to Hush. Batman encountered Poison Ivy, who refused to help him. He found Hush on his own and rescued Alfred. Pennyworth received a concussion, which caused him to lose the memory of seeing one of Hush's other hostages - Tommy Elliot
Low, Part Three
Low, Part Two
Low, Part One
Pushback
The Bride of Joker/Flower Girl
Hush Vol. 1
Dangerous Dames and Demons
Batman Adventures: Dangerous Dames and Demons
2003
The Batman Adventures Annual 1-2, Batman Adventures: Mad Love; Adventures in the DC Universe 3; w Paul Dini; a Bruce Timm). [From DC Comics: Paul Dini and Bruce Timm were two of the primal forces that rewrote the rules for television animation with their work on The Batman Adventures. Inspired as they were by the comics they read as kids, it seems only fitting that they would bring their talents to the printed page as well as the TV screen. Their first comics collaboration, Batman: Mad Love, garnered tremendous critical acclaim and won the 1994 Eisner and Harvey Awards for Best Single Issue, as well as the Thunderbolt Award for Best Graphic Novel. The following year their story "Laughter After Midnight" was a 1995 Eisner nominee for Best Short Story. Now all of the best of Dini and Timm's collaborations in the world of the Dark Knight - many of them long out-of-print - are collected here for the first time, presenting readers with the fruits of a truly inspired partnership
Black & White: Vol. 2
Dark Victory
Love on the Lam
Given Judd Winick's talent for hilarity in his own creation, The Adventures of Barry Ween, Boy Genius, I expect a riotous read from Harley & Ivy. Sadly, it was not to be found. Nor did I find much of an examination of the more touching or disturbing aspects of the Joker/Harley Quinn relationship. The art is fun, inventive and light, but I expected a lot more from this book, especially given the hefty cover price.
The Joker boots the ever-delusional Harley Quinn to the curb, so the peppy sidekick sets out to commit a crime that'll help her set things right with her puddin'. She plans the perfect scheme, but she needs help from her pal, the lovely environmental villain known as Poison Ivy. The pair aims to pilfer funds from an industrialist and expose his destructive schemes during a big bash, but the attendance of Bruce Wayne and Tim Drake could throw a wrench into their plans.
Chiodo's art captures the super-sweet tone of the story nicely, but it's primary purpose to present the title characters as sexy sirens. It's a Chiodo specialty, after all. The art is cheesecake, but it doesn't go too far with the sexuality, especially considering the simpler tone of the story. The painted colors are rich and textured as well.
To my surprise, Winick delivers a rather... ordinary story. The twisted nature of the Harley/Joker romance in Mad Love is nowhere to be found. The strength of character and search for independence we've seen in the past year in Harley Quinn is absent as well. Instead, we get a cutesy script that really doesn't delve into the characters at all.
Now, "ordinary" doesn't mean "bad," keep that in mind. Winick captures the innocence of Harley Quinn and the savvy and singlemindedness of Poison Ivy. He also has a little fun with Batman and Robin. At times, this story came off as a pastiche of the old Adam West Batman TV show.
Crimson Mist
2001
Crimson Mist (Elseworlds OGN; w Doug Moench; a Kelley Jones & John Beatty). [From DC Comics: The vampires have been defeated, and the undead no longer stalk the streets of Gotham. The creature that was once Batman -- now with a stake through is heart -- had earned his rest. Or so it seemed. When the undead return to Gotham, James Gordon and Alfred Pennyworth must remove the stake from Bruce Wayne's heart... but will reviving Batman unleash an even greater threat? The answer to this and other questions is revealed in the long-awaited softcover edition of BATMAN: CRIMSON MIST, an exquisitely rendered tale that concludes the Elseworlds trilogy of a dark Batman's battle with demons both within and without that began in the pages of BATMAN AND DRACULA: RED RAIN and in the pages of BATMAN: BLOODSTORM. Produced by the award-winning team of writer Dough Moench and artists Kelley Jones and John Beatty, CRIMSON MIST finds a revived Batman pursuing the monsters that plague Gotham with a bloodlust that threatens to consume him. As he drinks the blood of the marauding creatures, Batman finds that purging Gotham of evil may require an even greater sacrifice than the one he made before.]
The Long Halloween
Collected Legends of the Dark Knight
War on Crime
1999
As Batman encounters a young boy whose parents have been murdered, he sees a reflection of himself as a youth, about to choose the path led him into endless conflict with evil. It is this parallel that haunts him as he examines the nature of crime, from Gotham City�s dingy back-alleys to its plush corporate suites. The second in the award-winning series, BATMAN: WAR ON CRIME is a graphic novel in a unique, oversized format combining aspects of both comics and picture books. Writer PAUL DINI (BATMAN: MAD LOVE), the Emmy Award-winning producer of BATMAN BEYOND, has joined forces with illustrator ALEX ROSS (SUPERMAN: PEACE ON EARTH)
Batman: Nosferatu
Batman in the Sixties
The book starts with a forward by Adam West, appropriate for a sixties collection. Unfortunately it is brief and not insightful. Unlike his autobiography, which was a hoot.
The stories are presented in chronological order
Four of a Kind
Haunted Knight
The Poison Tomorrow
Cast Shadows
The City Is a Jungle
July 2004
Batgirl enters the new garden 'artwork' to find out what it is in there which is making people act according to their baser instincts. Here, she is attacked by Barbara Gordon, who explains, once clear of the garden, that it is something in the scent of the flowers that causes this. Batgirl confronts the artist, discovering that Poison Ivy, his 'muse', is behind this, and the garden is spreading. Encountering Ivy, Batgirl throws a flare into one of the central trees, burning it and halting the garden's growth. Batman then arrives, having been held up by JLA business. Life returns somewhat to normal, but the garden is still there...