[ BARGAINS OF STEEL ] |
To QUOTE BF Skinner: 'The real problem is not whether machines think but whether men do'.
THE REVIEW:
Initially I was going to start this review by saying
something like, 'this whole issue of Batman is basically one giant excuse explaining
why Jim Gordon is filling in for the title character'. But then, I said to
myself, hold it a moment there, boy-oh! If I say this, tonally it would make me sound as if I didn't like reading it. And no,
that would not be the case. Not at all. I did like reading this issue an awful
lot.
On a conceptual level I'd say this dual stranded story-line explained
the circumstances behind Jim being chosen as the new Batman (mainly because
Geri Powers, the head of a secret police faction, whom we don't really know a
lot about yet, feels that he'd be a more procedural and down to Earth fit than
a new recruit). And while this is being relayed, at the same time a modern day tale is also presented, involving a disfigured hood that kidnaps a
sports celebrity with the use of an electrified... errr... thing.
Granted, a part of me would have preferred it if the present
day section could have been replaced with another explanation. One involving as to
why someone like Dick Grayson or Jason Todd never attempted to fill Bruce's
mantle after his so-called demise. Or for that matter, a small token acknowledgement, highlighting what the other member's of the Bat family feel about this new take on an
old character.
Of course, I'm sure these topics
will be picked up at a later date. Leaving this issue right here, this exquisitely
illustrated issue drawn by the one and only, Greg Capullo, to deal with the
start of Robo-Gordon Mark-Two: Now In A Bat-Suit With Bugs-Bunny Ears.
Well, let's face it. This new mechanised version of Batman
does look a tad too Robocop
inspired, doesn't he? Still, that's most probably why the suit in question
is mechanised! To justify to us -- the readers -- why a character such as Jim Gordon would be so good
in it: he's a man first, a tool second, and a cop third.
What's more, I also enjoyed all of those other little tit-bits which added to the plot, like the color variations on the Bat-suit, what Jim had to mentally go through to prepare for his role, as well as the way Harvey acted as a pseudo Robin figure, telling Jim why he shouldn't be Batman, and just stick to his usual job.
What's more, I also enjoyed all of those other little tit-bits which added to the plot, like the color variations on the Bat-suit, what Jim had to mentally go through to prepare for his role, as well as the way Harvey acted as a pseudo Robin figure, telling Jim why he shouldn't be Batman, and just stick to his usual job.
THE MUSIC:
I'm sorry. I'm so-so sorry. But because of the central theme
running throughout this urban adventure, a theme relating to a good honest cop
being persuaded to wear a mechanized power suit, I feel, so sorry, that I have
to musically match it up to, again, sorry, the theme tune to...
THE COMPARISON:
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.
Sorry. Next month I promise I won't compare anything related to Batman to anything
related to Robocop.
THE CONCLUSION:
At the end of this
issue something happened that was so surprising I'm not sure if I should reveal
it here. So, to disguise this fact, how about you try and guess what this
something is out of the following eight options.
- A man working at a restaurant unveils
himself as being Jim's long lost brother. The man's name is Ramsey, Gordon
Ramsey.
- Harvey Bullock joins Jim by dressing up
as the new Robin, wearing a trash bag and a pair of rubber gloves in the appropriate places.
- Barbra Gordon walks in on her Dad in the
new Bat-Suit and is immediately shocked.
- A man in the street recognizes Bruce
Wayne sitting at a park bench.
- Jim starts making his own brand of gin,
and calls it Gordon's gin.
- Alfred Pennyworth gives Jim a hand with
his new role. His left hand that was chopped off by the Joker.
- The Joker jumps out from under a pile of
rubber gloves and asks Jim to be his new Robin.
- Robin, the brat Wonder, wants to team up with Jim, but only if he allows him to play on his Wii.
Nuff said.
BATMAN #41
Reviewed by David Andrews
on
June 29, 2015
Rating: