Friday, September 11, 2009

Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?

"Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?" is a two-issue Batman storyiline written by Neil Gaiman and drawn by Andy Kubert. It was written to be, essentially, the last Batman story, no matter how many Batman stories come after it. This is because WHTTCC is about Batman's funeral.

Batman himself incorporeally watches as his friends and enemies eulogize him with their stories of his life and his death. The thing is, no one's story of Batman is exactly alike, and the incorporeal Batman remarks in confusion that none of their stories matches his own life. But each Batman has a few things in common, even though their realities are drastically different: each one is brave, and self-sacrificing (it's remarkable how many of the stories end with Batman sacrificing homself to save someone else), and each one never gives up, ever. It's a wondrous tribute to Batman (there are references to things from throughout Batman's career peppered through the story), and I loved it. I can only imagine what Batman fanatics would think of it (new Bible, perhaps?).

After WHTTCC, there are preliminary sketches from Kubert and some other short Batman stories that Gaiman did earlier in his career. Unfortunately, although the stories are mostly good, they really suffer from the bad art and coloring standard to the late 80s and early 90s comics. My favorites were a very meta black and white story where Batman and the Joker sit around small-talking as they wait to go on the comics page (however, this had the worst art of all of the stories) and a neat little story where a recruiter for the Suicide Squad visits Poison Ivy in jail to possibly recruit her, and finds her a much trickier opponent than he was expecting. the first was funny, and I did kind of like the self-aware comic book characters (the art is even excusable as a parody of stereotypical Dark Age art), while the second really delves deeply into what drives Poison Ivy, and how she's possibly one of Batman's most deadly foes (even though the big Bat only appears in a few flashbacks).

But these are all merely extras. Why you should really look into this book is the main event: a brilliant and touching tribute to one of the most iconic superheroes ever, written by a master storyteller and drawn by a great artist.

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