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TO QUOTE Julie
Madison talking to Bruce Wayne this issue: 'You channeled whatever fear you felt into making other people feel brave. I loved you for that'.
THE REVIEW:
I think that the
best way for me to explain to you what I feel about this issue of Batman
is to break it down into the following four sections.
Section One -- Clicking
Into Auto-Pilot -- Now at the start of this episode we're presented with a pretty
dynamic looking sequence where we see Bat-Jim getting, getting, getting, a lot
of get for a go-to type of a guy. First he manages to get out of a fire based
trap. Then he gets his ass kicked by a group of horn-headed street-punks. And
to top it all off, he finally gets his said same ass saved by an automated software
program, operating out of his bat-suit.
Yeah. That's what I
thought too. It all sounds like a pretty pedestrian set of circumstances for a sequence
involving an automated Bat-suit, doesn't it? And kind of plays out in the same
way as well! Particularly when you factor in that the scene in itself was largely
about Jim trying to save himself whilst comparing his abilities to his predecessor's!
Not the smartest thing to do in a fist fight. Agreed. Although from my point of view Jim's
narration was the best thing about this scene, as it gave it a lot more
substance than your usual run-of-the-mill action-based introductions.
Section Two -- Bruce
And Julie -- Once Jim is out of harms way, the next scene we get is one where Bruce
and Julie are taking a nice, leisurely stroll around their compound, talking
about what's happened to Gotham City and Bruce himself since Joker's Endgame.
Personally speaking,
I thought this was one of the best scenes in the entire book. Not only because
we got some more Bruce for our buck, but because it also touches upon Bruce's
own inner turmoil on who he once was, how he now is, and what he's going to try
to do about it next. I also liked the way that Julie defined Bruce's past
personality, whilst acting as a present-day anchor to whoever Bruce may
eventually become, hint-hint.
Section Three and
Four -- Stuff About Stuff -- To be honest with you, dear reader, I wasn't quite
sure about the next two scenes at all. Scene Three reminded us that Jim is
alive and well after scene one, and that he's working for Geri Powers, the
head of Powers Corp, who's trying to utilize advance technology to preserve
both the concept of Batman plus the world at large. Scene Four, on the other
hand, was a reminder type of scene. Basically it reminded us about the Mister
Bloom sub-plot, as well as that there is a link with this book
and another book called, 'We Are Robins'. Nudge-Nudge! Wink-Wink!
Now in of itself,
both of these two scenes were pretty nice to follow, despite being fairly top
heavy in the exposition and the continuity department. Not that this is a bad
thing mind you. But tonally I did find that these two scenes took me out of the plot on occasion, especially when it came to highfalutin rhetoric and
associations associated with another title.
Section Four -- Here
Comes The Grand Finale -- Yep. That's right, comic book fans. This comic does
end on one hell of a great cliff-hanger. Proving once and for all that Bruce is
still Bruce, Jim is still Jim, and no matter who you are, or who you think you
are, at the end of the day what you truly are will shine through, no matter
what.
Obviously I don't
want to tell you too much about this section or else I might spoil it for you.
That said, however, what I can say is that Greg's artwork really kicked home
this month (I strangely loved the look of the horns the street gangs wore on
their heads, plus the joker inspired dinosaur model was a right blast). What's more,
surprise-surprise, on the whole I'd say Scott's tale was a nice mixture of
exposition (you know who you are), high-octane action sequences (Ditto), and
earthy voice over narration and prose (see previous).
THE MUSIC:
This months musical match-up has to be a song sung by Terry
Jacks called 'Seasons In The Sun'. Want to know why? Well, basically
this is a fairly reminiscent song about death and rebirth, even though you
don't really get the death part of the equation from its fairly upbeat
tone.
Plus it's cool to listen to. Too cool for school in fact.
THE COMPARISON:
On a conceptual level one slice of this story was about how
certain people have the ability to inspire others. Of course, in this case it's
none other than Batman himself. But for me to compare a Batman comic
to the titular character, well, that would be too obvious, wouldn't it? And we
can't have that now, can we?
So instead, I want to compare it to something just as
inspiring... the group of men and women who fought in World War 2.
Say no more.
THE CONCLUSION:
At the very end of
this issue Bat-Jim suddenly jumps on Geri Powers for a very specific reason. So,
just for the sake of me not typing a proper conclusion, can you guess why Jim
does this out of the following eight scenarios? Could it be because he wants
to...
- Kiss
her.
- Push
her under a train.
- Push her onto a trampoline.
- Push
her onto an angry looking dwarf with a lisp.
- Save
her from an onslaught perpetuated by Mister Bloom.
- Prompt
her to dance with him, using a melody composed by Rodgers and Hammerstein.
- Shag her.
- Do something dynamic looking.
BATMAN #45
Reviewed by David Andrews
on
November 10, 2015
Rating: