[ SHINE A LIGHT ON MY SALE ] |
TO QUOTE Gabe Paul: 'There is no such
thing as second place. Either you're first or you're nothing'.
THE REVIEW:
For the sake of simplicity I'd like to break down this issue
of Detective
Comics into the following four sections.
Section one, the introductory scene, is two pages long, and
comprises of a sequence where we see a group of Indian business-people,
presumably crooked, getting killed by a strange water-based apparition. Now in
of itself, this scene is basically a tease, and is put into place merely to
show us, the reader, that there is a dilemma, as of yet not fully explained.
Funnily enough, you can also say exactly the same thing
about the second section too. Or as I'd like to call it, 'The Justice League
goes to Wayne Manor' section! Essentially, what we see next is the League paying Bruce Wayne a visit at
Wayne Manor, with the intent of figuring
out how bad he is, as well as asking him for some help on a past case. But as
we all know, Bruce isn't able to help them out, is he? Especially since his
brain has had a thorough spring cleaning! And this point is then substantiated
even more so with some help from Wonder Woman's lasso of truth (good job), plus
some carefully chosen words by Alfred (bravo!).
I must admit, there was a small part of me that didn't see
the point of including this scene: As all it did, conceptually, was to show
that Bruce is still Bruce, the League is still the League, whilst totally
disregarding Superman's involvement with him over on the pages of Batman #43 and the Batman / Superman book. That said, however, I did enjoy it's very
lively spirit, and the way in which this section touched upon certain aspects
of Bruce's back-story. Plus, of course, seeing Bruce with the League is always a
blast, no matter how fleeting or superficial it is.
As a matter a fact this scene was so tonally uplifting, as a
scene in itself, regardless of its overall intent, the two scenes that then came
afterwards felt fairly disappointing in comparison.
You see, scene three was the usual call to arms type of a
scene. It started off with Jim Gordon enjoying a children's ball game in the
park, watching and seeing and reminiscing as you'd expect. When suddenly,
ring-ring, he's called up on the phone, and asked to help out with a couple of
airplanes on the loose. Of course, he helps. Biff-Bang-Pow-Obligatory cameo!
And in so doing then bumps into, surprise-surprise, the Justice League.
So yes. That is right. A large portion of this book is
dedicated to a fairly long-winded plot-revelation we all could have guessed by
looking at the cover alone. So Bat-Jim joins the League. Ta-Dah! Joining him
with some nicely paced dialogue provided by Peter Tomasi (love the way he makes
Jim more of an every-man type character), which is complemented by some
simplistic visuals provided by Marcio Takara (simple, yet gritty in tone).
Whatever next? Will Jim quit the League and form a band of
Outsiders? Ouch! Let's hope not. Too soon. Too soon.
THE MUSIC:
If you ever watched the Ben Stiller film, Mystery Men, then you know that
this is a comic book movie about a group of heroes trying to replace a fallen
one. Sound familiar? Sure it does! Especially if you replace the word 'heroes'
with the singular word, 'hero', and the comic book theme to this one sung by Kel Mitchell,
who co-starred in the flick.
THE COMPARISON:
For all intense and purposes, Jim Gordon is a substitute for
Batman until he gets better again. Or in other words, he is a substitute
teacher, Hint-Hint, filling in for someone else until they return.
Comparison made.
THE CONCLUSION:
At the end of this
issue the Justice League transports Bat-Jim to a very peculiar location. So --
wait for it, wait for it -- just for fun, can you guess where they all go?
Could it be...
- The Thrift store: To buy some thrift.
- Karbul: Not a car pool.
- The land of make believe: As paraphrased
in a song sung by the English pop-group, Bucks-Fizz.
- Funky-Town: Next door to Frigid-Ville.
- A desolate and barren waste-land:
Somewhere way above Jim's pay-grade.
- Heaven: I hear it's a place on Earth.
- The Justice League's Orbiting Satellite:
Does that still exist?
- Time Square: So they can tell the time to square people.
Nuff said.
DETECTIVE COMICS #45
Reviewed by David Andrews
on
October 26, 2015
Rating: