Batman: the Return of Bruce Wayne


By Grant Morrison, Chris Sprouse, Frazer Irving, Yanick Paquette, Georges Jeanty, Ryan Sook, Lee Garbett & various (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-4012-3382-2

At the climax of a harrowing and sustained campaign of terror by insidious cabal The Black Hand, immediately followed by an all-out invasion of Earth by the hordes of Apokolips, the Batman was apparently killed – slain by Darkseid‘s lethal, time-rending Omega beams.

Although the larger world was unaware of the tragedy, the superhero community secretly mourned and a small, dedicated army of assistants, protégés and allies – trained over years by the contingency-obsessed Dark Knight – formed a “Network” to police GothamCity in the days which followed: marking time until a successor could be found or the original returned…

Most of the Bat-schooled battalion refused to believe their inspirational mentor dead. On the understanding that he was merely lost, they eventually accepted Dick Grayson – the first Robin and latterly Nightwing – as a stand-in until Bruce Wayne could find his way back to them…

That fantastic voyage was detailed in the 6-issue miniseries Batman: the Return of Bruce Wayne (July-December 2010), scripted by Grant Morrison and following the indeed alive Wayne as he leaped through the eons, gradually getting closer and closer to his home, each chapter a different era illustrated by all-star creators…

It begins with ‘Shadow on Stone’ (limned by Chris Sprouse & Karl Story) as a hunting party of the Deer tribe discover a gleaming fallen “sky-cart”. The object is in fact a time capsule from our time and nearby Bruce Wayne is slowly adapting to being marooned in Palaeolithic times. His gradual acceptance by the awestruck cavemen is interrupted by the attack of marauders from the Blood tribe, led by the immortal killer the future calls Vandal Savage.

Despite valiant resistance the Deer warriors die, until only the bat-draped stranger and a lone cave boy remain. Badly wounded and taken for sacrifice, Batman is later rescued by the lad who brings trinkets from the time capsule and the time-lost hero’s utility belt. As an eclipse covers the sun, Man of Bats routs the Blood Mob and defeats Savage, before plunging into a pool and vanishing…

Only the boy remains and he is met by gods. Superman, Green Lantern, Booster Gold and Rip Hunter are tracking Batman through time and arrive just as he vanishes. They are determined to stop him returning to the 21st century at all costs…

Even as the amazed boy begins to record the stories of the mysterious Bat warrior, Wayne resurfaces in Puritan New England, saving a woman from a hideous tentacled demon…

Illustrated by Frazer Irving ‘Until the End of Time’ relates how, even with his memory failing, Wayne impersonates a witch-hunter and befriends shunned spinster Goodwife Annie Tyler in the failing colony of Gotham. As Brother Mordecai he is a most unconventional witch finder, ignoring obvious signs of Satan and solving a murder with unseemly observational tricks…

Vanishing Point is a fortress-university at the End of Time and here, as Reality counts down its final minutes, a quartet of costumed time-travellers quiz the Biorganic Archivist AI, hoping to track Batman’s erratic course through the time-stream. They’re all painfully aware that cruel, subtle Darkseid has turned their friend into a weapon to destroy Earth if the Dark Knight ever reaches his home time…

Superman meets and almost stops him at Vanishing Point, but Wayne has already slipped back into the time-stream, having instituted his own ingenious survival plan…

Tragically the paranoia of 16th century Gotham and Mordecai’s waning influence won’t spare Annie, especially as the time-monster Batman initially drove off is still haunting the woods around the settlement and chief inquisitor Nathaniel Wayne is sworn to eradicate all vestiges of the unholy.

The pious Puritan earns Annie’s dying curse for his entire line as he hangs her, but his roving descendent cannot hear. He has fallen centuries ahead and – more memories eradicated – landed at the feet of legendary reiver Blackbeard Thatch…

‘The Bones of Bristol Bay’ (art by Yanick Paquette & Michel Lacombe) finds the amnesiac mistaken for heroic third-generation buccaneer the Black Pirate and forced to lead the murdering corsair Thatch through the winding, yet strangely familiar cave system beneath Gotham County.

In search of buried gold the murderers encounter instead the deadly traps of the unspeakably ancient Miagani: troglodytic native tribesmen known as the Bat-People…

In the 21st century, the Justice League hold a war council, heatedly debating how to stop their indomitable comrade from returning and setting off Darkseid’s ultimate booby trap. Tim Drake has searched old records and interpreted 40,000 years of myths and legends following his mentor’s trail through history, but Red Robin is only there as an advisor and cannot make the adults listen to him…

With Blackbeard beaten, the memory-challenged wanderer examines the sacred relics of the Bat People – a battered cape, trinkets, a fragile yellow belt of many pockets – and something stirs in his clouded mind…

Georges Jeanty & Walden Wong then illustrate a violent stopover in 1870s Gotham as ‘Dark Knight, Dark Rider’ initially shifts focus to the hereditary guardians of the records and artefacts left by grateful folk who have encountered the Bat over unceasing centuries.

One such family is slaughtered by outlaws working for undying but cancer-ridden Monsieur Sauvage, and their surviving daughter taken to explain the secret of the box with a bat-shaped lock…

Katie‘s abductors have been remorselessly stalked by a bat-garbed stranger who doesn’t carry a gun. The silent avenger has tracked them back to boomtown Gotham, mercilessly depleting their numbers, but the immortal Frenchman is confidant that his tame medicine man Midnight Horse and debased Barbatos-worshipping doctor Thomas Wayne can make the girl talk before the hunter finds them.

Even if he does, his newly hired gunfighter Jonah Hex should even the odds…

The stranger rescues the girl and foils the villains but not before the bounty hunter gut shoots him…

He wakes in a Gotham of recent vintage, a place of glitz and glamour but one morally broken and irredeemably corrupt.  ‘Masquerade’ – with art by Ryan Sook, Pere Perez & Mick Gray – sees the memory-wiped hero hired from a hospital bed by Martha Wayne‘s best friend to prove that the tragic socialite was murdered by her husband Thomas, who faked his own death and abandoned their young son Bruce…

Illustrated by Lee Garbett, Perez, Alejandro Sicat & Wong, the intricate machinations of Darkseid grow closer to fruition as the hero, stripped of everything but innate deductive instinct, uncovers a sinister, bloodthirsty plot by new criminal organisation the Black Hand. His instinctive struggle against the schemers won, the time-nomad makes the final short hop to the now where his arrival will instantly trigger ‘The All-Over’ …

Batman, of course, is the most brilliant escape artist of all time and even whilst being struck down by the New God of Evil had devised an impossibly complex and grandly far-reaching scheme to beat the devil and save the world…

With a covers-&-variants gallery by Adam Kubert, Sprouse, Irving, Paquette, Cameron Stewart, Sook, Garbett & Bill Sienkiewicz, this grandiose, gripping and astonishingly complex epic odyssey is a devious delight that will delight modern fans and casual visitors alike and this sterling compilation also includes the revelatory 15-page art feature ‘Back in Time: The Return of Bruce Wayne Sketchbook’ by Morrison, Kubert, Sprouse, Irving, Paquette & Sook.
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