Justice League: A New Beginning

Justice League: A New Beginning

By Keith Giffen, J.M. DeMatteis, Kevin Maguire, Al Gordon & various (DC Comics)
ISBN: 0-930289-40-4

When the continuity altering shenanigans of Crisis on Infinite Earths produced such spectacular commercial success, DC felt more than justified in revamping a number of their hoariest icons for their next fifty years of publishing. As well as Superman, Flash, and Wonder Woman, the Justice League of America was earmarked for a radical revision.

Editor Andy Helfer assembled plotter Keith Giffen, dialoguer (?) J.M. DeMatteis and neophyte penciller Kevin Maguire to produce an utterly new approach to the superhero monolith: they played them for laughs.

Combining a roster of relative second-stringers Black Canary, Blue Beetle, Captain Marvel, Dr, Fate, Guy Gardner/Green Lantern, and Mr. Miracle with heavyweights Batman and Martian Manhunter – as nominal straight-men – and later supplemented by Captain Atom, Booster Gold, Dr. Light, and Rocket Red, they mixed high-speed action with quick-fire humour for a truly revolutionary – and popular – delight.

Introducing the charismatic and manipulative Maxwell Lord, who used his wealth and influence to recreate the super-team, the creators unfolded a mystery that took fully a year to play out. The team passed the time fighting terrorist bombers (#1, ‘Born Again’ inked by Terry Austin), displaced Alien heroes determined to abolish Nuclear weapons (#2-3 ‘Make War No More’ and ‘Meltdown’) and good old fashioned super-creeps like the Royal Flush Gang (#4 ‘Winning Hand’).

‘Gray Life, Gray Dreams’ and ‘Massacre in Gray,’ guest-starring the Creeper, was a supernatural threat dealt with in issues #5-6, and Lord’s scheme bears fruit in #7’s ‘Justice League… International’ as the team achieves the status of a UN agency, with rights privileges and embassies in every corner of the World.

These are wonderfully light yarns full of sharp badinage and genuinely gleeful situations, perfect for the Ghostbusters generation. That the art is still great is no surprise, and the action still engrossing is welcome, but to find that the jokes are still funny is a glorious relief. Track this down and discover even after twenty years why fans still greet each other with the secret mantra “Bwah-Hah- Hah!”

© 1987, 1989 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Gatcha Gacha, Vol 1

Gatcha Gatcha, Vol 1

By Yutaka Tachibana (Tokyopop)
ISBN: 1-59816-153-9

This barbed high-school rom-com expands on the traditional romantic triangle by adding a fourth to the mix. Yuri Muroi is a cute young girl but has a chequered past. She’s sweet but a bit of a slut, and most of her previous boyfriends have been pretty bad boys.

Then she is noticed by the beautiful, but dangerously wild, Motoko Kagurazaka. She is the terror of the school and lives to shock and make trouble. Frightened and flattered, Yuri becomes as much a toy as a friend to Motoko.

Takahiro Yabe is the baddest boy in school and Yuri really wants him. He also seems to like her, but he seems to think of her a kid. This thug in waiting apparently only has eyes for Motoko, who is happy to keep everybody guessing.

By contrast Hirao is the perfect student, good-looking (of course), studious, responsible, and president of the Student Council. He is respected by all and has a spotless reputation. So why is he drawn to the “damaged goods” troublemaker Yuri?

Departing from many Shojo manga norms this compulsive modern romance is funny and sharp; a delight for the reader in search of a more mature story of young love. The early chapters, however, might be a little confusing until one gets comfortable with the major characters as well as the innumerable second stringers that populate the school.

This series is compelling reading, humorous but tinged with pathos, and harbouring a genuine potential for tragedy as well as the traditionally expected “happy ever after”.

© 2001 Yutaka Tachibana. English script © 2006 TokyoPop Inc.

The Erotic Art of Reed Waller

The Erotic Art of Reed Waller

By Reed Waller (Fantagraphics Books)
ISBN: 1-56097-191-6

Although the paperback collections featuring the stories of Omaha the Cat-Dancer are currently available, this truly remarkable art-book featuring the beautiful, erotic, but never salacious, creative doodlings of adult cartooning pioneer Reed Waller has seemingly slipped out of print.

Although that isn’t uncommon for art books in general, I’ve been labouring under the apparent misapprehension that sex sells and so just assumed that thoughtful, dedicated and passionate work, drawn – and indeed painted – by someone of Waller’s undoubted ability and technical proficiency would be able to maintain some kind of presence on the bookshelves – even more so when so many people want to learn the secrets of drawing comics.

And it’s full of astonishingly well drawn naked folk (admittedly largely furry or feathered folk) “doing it”!

Seriously though, this volume shows Waller’s development as an artist, features his thoughts on the process of creating narrative art, and reproduces some extremely well drawn visuals that explain the necessities and attraction of anthropomorphic illustration. It is quite explicit though, so not for the young or unadventurous.

No cats, dogs or chickens were harmed, abused, distressed or disagreeably surprised in the making of this art book.

©1987-1996 Reed Waller & Fantagraphics Books. All Rights Reserved

Essential Iron Man, Vol 1

Essential Iron Man, Vol 1

By Stan Lee, Don Heck, Jack Kirby, & various (Marvel)
ISBN 0-7851-0759-2

There are a number of ways to interpret the creation and early years of Tony Stark, glamorous millionaire industrialist and inventor – not to mention his armoured alter-ego, Iron Man.

Created in the aftermath of the Cuban Missile Crisis and at a time when “Red-baiting” and “Commie-bashing” were American national obsessions, the emergence of a brilliant new Thomas Edison, using Yankee ingenuity and invention to safeguard and better the World seemed inevitable. Combine the then-common belief that technology could solve any problem with the universal imagery of noble knights battling evil and the proposition almost becomes a certainty. Of course it might simply be that us kids thought it both great fun and very, very cool…

This fabulous black and white compendium of the Golden Avenger’s early days reprints all his adventures, feature pages and pin-ups from Tales of Suspense #39 (cover-dated March 1962) through #72 (December 1965), from the dawn of Marvel’s renaissance up to their first commercial successes. This period would see them start to topple DC Comics from a position of dominance, but not quite become the darlings of the student counter-culture. In these tales Tony Stark is still very much the patriotic armaments manufacturer, and not the enlightened capitalist dissenter he would become.

TOS #39, with a script by Larry Lieber (over brother Stan Lee’s plot) and art by the criminally unappreciated Don Heck features ‘Iron Man is Born’, wherein electronics genius Tony Stark is field testing his latest inventions in Viet Nam when he is wounded by a landmine. Captured by the Viet Cong commander Wong-Chu, Stark is told that if he creates weapons for the Reds he will be operated on to remove the metal shrapnel in his chest that will kill him within seven days.

Knowing that Commies can’t be trusted, Stark and aged Professor Yinsen – another captive scientist – build a mobile iron lung to keep his heart beating. They also equip this suit of armour with all the weapons that their ingenuity can secretly build whilst being observed by their captors. Naturally they succeed and defeat Wong-Chu, but not without tragic sacrifice.

From the next issue Iron Man’s superhero career is taken as a given, and he has already achieved fame for largely off-camera exploits. Lee continues to plot but Robert Bernstein replaces Lieber as scripter for issues #40-46 and Jack Kirby shares the pencilling chores with Heck. ‘Iron Man versus Gargantus’ follows the young Marvel pattern by pitting the hero against aliens – albeit via their robotic giant caveman intermediary, in delightfully simple romp pencilled by Kirby and inked by Heck.

‘The Stronghold of Doctor Strange’ (art by Kirby and Dick Ayers) features a glorious battle with a wizard of Science (not the Lee/Ditko Sorcerer), and Heck returns to full art for the espionage thriller ‘Trapped by the Red Barbarian’. Kirby and Heck team again for the science-fantasy adventure ‘Kala, Queen of the Netherworld!’, but Heck goes it alone when Iron Man time-travels to ancient Egypt to help Cleopatra against ‘The Mad Pharaoh!’, has to withstand ‘The Icy Fingers of Jack Frost!’ and face his Soviet counterpart ‘The Crimson Dynamo’.

Tales of Suspense #47 presaged big changes. Stan Lee wrote ‘Iron Man Battles the Melter!‘, and Heck inked over the unique pencils of Steve Ditko, but the big event came with the next issue’s ‘The Mysterious Mr. Doll!’ as Lee, Ditko and Ayers scrapped the old cool-but-clunky boiler-plate suit for a sleek, gleaming, form-fitting, red-and-gold upgrade, that would – with minor variations – become the symbol and trademark of the character for decades.

Paul Reinman inked Ditko on Lee’s crossover/sales pitch for the new X-Men comic when ‘Iron Man Meets the Angel!’, but the series only really takes hold with Tales of Suspense #50. Don Heck returns as regular penciller and occasional inker and Lee invents the Armoured Avenger’s first major menace in ‘The Hands of the Mandarin’, a modern Fu Manchu derivative who terrifies the Red Chinese so much that they manipulate him into attacking America, with the hope that one threat will fatally wound the other. The Mandarin would become Iron Man’s greatest foe.

Our hero made short work of criminal contortionist ‘The Sinister Scarecrow’, and the red spy who stole that Russian armour-suit when ‘The Crimson Dynamo Strikes Again!’ (scripted, as was the next issue, by the mysterious “N. Kurok”), but the latter issue did introduce a much more dangerous threat in the slinky shape of the Soviet Femme Fatale the Black Widow. With TOS #53, she was back when ‘The Black Widow Strikes Again!’ ‘The Mandarin’s Revenge!’ followed; a two-part tale that concluded with #55’s ‘No One Escapes the Mandarin!’, but ‘The Uncanny Unicorn!’ promptly attacked after Iron Man did, only to fare no better in the end.

The Black Widow resurfaced to beguile budding superhero ‘Hawkeye, The Markman!’ into attacking the Golden Avenger in #57, before another landmark occurred in the next issue. Until now Iron Man had monopolised Tales of Suspense, but ‘In Mortal Combat With Captain America’ (inked by Dick Ayers) depicted an all-out battle between the two heroes resulting from a clever impersonation by evil impressionist The Chameleon. It was a primer for the next issue when Cap would begin his own solo adventures, splitting the monthly comic into an anthology featuring Marvel’s top two patriotic heroes.

Iron Man’s initial outing in TOS #59 was against the technological paladin ‘The Black Knight!’, and as a result Stark was unable to remove the armour without triggering a heart attack, a situation that hadn’t occurred since the initial injury. Up until this time he had led a relatively normal life by simply wearing the life-sustaining breast-plate under his clothes. The introduction of soap-opera sub-plots were a necessity of the shorter page counts, as were continued stories, but this seeming disadvantage worked to improve both the writing and the sales.

With Stark’s “disappearance,” Iron Man was ‘Suspected of Murder!’, a tale that featured the return of Hawkeye and Black Widow, and led directly into ‘The Death of Tony Stark!’ and ‘The Origin of the Mandarin!’. After that extended epic, a change of pace occurred as short complete exploits returned. The first was #63’s sabotage thriller ‘Somewhere Lurks the Phantom!’, followed by the self-explanatory ‘Hawkeye and the New Black Widow Strike Again!’ (inked by Chic Stone), and ‘When Titans Clash!’ where a thief steals the new armour and Stark must defeat his greatest invention with his old suit (by new regular inker Mike Esposito under the pseudonym Mickey Demeo).

Sub-sea villain Attuma is the threat in ‘If I Fail a World is Lost’ and crime boss Count Nefaria uses dreams as a weapon in ‘Where Walk the Villains!’, returning in the next issue to attack Stark with hallucinations in ‘If a Man be Mad!’, a rather weak tale that introduces Stark’s ne’er-do-well cousin Morgan, written by Al Hartley.

Issues #69-71 form another continued saga, and one of the best of this early run. ‘If I Must Die, Let It Be With Honor!’ (inked by Vince Colletta) sees Iron Man forced to duel a new Russian opponent called the Titanium Man in a globally televised contest that both super-powers see as an vital propaganda coup, oblivious of the cost to the participants and their friends. ‘Fight On! For a World is Watching!’ (inked by Demeo) piles on the intrigue and tension as the Soviets, caught cheating, pile on the pressure to at least kill the American champion if they can’t score a publicity win, and the final part ‘What Price Victory?’ is a rousing, emotional conclusion of triumph and tragedy made magnificent by the super-glossy inking of troubled artistic genius Wally Wood.

This would have been the ideal place to end the volume but there’s one more episode included. TOS #72 by Lee, Heck and Demeo deals with the aftermath of victory. Whilst the fickle public fete Iron Man, his best friend lies dying, and a spiteful ex-lover hires the Mad Thinker to destroy Stark and his company forever. ‘Hoorah for the Conquering Hero!’ closes the book on a pensive down-note, but the quality of the entire package is undeniable. From broad comedy and simple action to dark cynicism and relentless battle, Marvel Comics grew up with this deeply contemporary series.

Iron Man developed amidst the growing political awareness of the Viet Nam Generation who were the comic’s maturing readership. Wedded as it was to the American Industrial-Military Complex, with a hero – originally the government’s wide-eyed golden boy – gradually becoming attuned to his country’s growing divisions, it was, as much as Spider-Man, a bellwether of the times. That it remains such a thrilling uncomplicated romp of classic super-hero fun is a lasting tribute to the talents of all those superb creators that worked it.

© 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 2000, 2007 Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Johnny Ryan’s XXX Scumbag Party

Volume II of the collected Angry Youth Comix

 Johnny Ryan's XXX Scumbag Party

By Johnny Ryan (Fantagraphics Books)
ISBN: 978-1-56097-867-1

Graphic narrative and cartooning, despite our sometimes protestations of comprising a comparatively small pond, cover a vast range of genres, formats, disciplines and tastes. From Tintin or Raymond Brigg’s Snowman through the various escapist mainstreams to the edgy, unpredictable and even the downright shocking.

Johnny Ryan is a comedian who uses comics as his medium of expression. Whether in his own ‘Angry Youth Comix’, or the many commissions for such varied clients as Nickelodeon, Hustler, Vice, Arthur, National Geographic Kids and elsewhere, his job and mission is to make laughter. Depending on your point of view he is either a filth-obsessed pervert smut-monger or a social iconoclast using the same tactics as Lenny Bruce or Bill Hicks to assault the worst aspects of our society.

His wild, loose cartoon drawing style is deceptively engrossing, and his seeming pictorial Tourette’s Syndrome of strips and gags involving such grotesque signature characters as Boobs Pooter (world’s most disgusting stand-up comedian), Blecky Yuckerella, Loady McGee and Sinus O’Gynus will, frankly, appal many readers, but as with most questions of censorship in a Free Society, they are completely at liberty neither to buy nor read the stuff.

Gross, vulgar, shocking strips and panel gags about sex, defecation, farting, bodily functions, feminine hygiene, and even the ultimate modern taboos of religion, politics, race and child-abuse are the sole content of this volume collecting Angry Youth #6-10, plus material from Hotwire Comix & Capers Vol.1 and VICE Magazine. If you’re prudish, sensitive or concerned about moral standards – don’t buy and don’t read it.

If you aren’t any of those things and could stand a good, hearty laugh that might also make you think, then this is the dirty cartoon joke-book for you.

© 2007 Johnny Ryan. All Rights Reserved.

Death: At Death’s Door

Death

By Jill Thompson (Vertigo/Titan Books)
ISBN: 1-84023-695-7

Jill Thompson crafts a canny alternative look to the overwhelmingly successful Sandman by giving him the manga treatment in this reinterpretation of some pivotal events from the landmark fantasy series.

During Sandman: Season of Mists (ISBN: 978-1-85286-447-7) Morpheus tries to liberate his old lover from Hell, whence he banished her ten thousand years previously. His confrontation with Lucifer takes an unexpected turn when the Lord of the Damned abdicates, and shuts Hell. Freeing all the demons and souls in bondage, Lucifer gives the place and the responsibility to the Sandman.

The repercussions of these events resounded for years through the Vertigo corner of the DC Universe, and Thompson’s sharp, light tale details background events that happened “off-camera” during those tumultuous times. As Morpheus entertains embassies from gods and devils all eager to obtain the supernatural lebensraum of the Underworld, his sister Death has a couple of problems of her own.

Primarily, deprived of an abode, the damned dead souls from Hell are all turning up on her doorstep, but almost as troubling is the fact that her untrustworthy sisters Desire and Delirium have decided to turn the whole mess into an excuse for the wildest party in the Universe.

Cutesy comedy hi-jinks coupled with chilling suspense and fantasy make for an uncomfortable mix but Thompson makes it work, although the end result might not be to every fan’s taste.

© 2003 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Hellblazer: Good Intentions

Hellblazer: Good Intentions

By Brian Azzarello & Marcelo Frusin (Vertigo)
ISBN 1-84023-433-4

In this volume Brian Azzarello continues to explore human monstrosity, dredging the darkest depths of life. Freed from prison (see Hellblazer: Hard Time -ISBN: 1-84023-255-2 for the grim details) the magical, morally ambivalent Trickster-Magician has headed deep into America’s rural Southlands. Constantine has a half-baked idea of explaining the true circumstances of his incarceration to the family of the man he’s supposed to have murdered. It doesn’t help that the bereaved wife is actually one of his old girlfriends, from the days when he was a punk rock singer, and a mere dabbler in the dark world of the supernatural.

Doglick, West Virginia is a sleazy, broken hole in the ground. Dirt-poor, with no jobs for anybody the dumb, redneck yokels that abide there are every hillbilly hick cliché you could imagine. Constantine and the Fermin boys go back a ways, and his old girl friend married Richard. They used to call him ‘Lucky’, but that was before he killed himself and framed Constantine for the murder.

Inured to the horrors of the Outer Dark and the vile lust for power that infects human and Unhuman alike, the Magician is totally unprepared for the different kind of horrors that infests the poverty-stricken hell-hole he finds himself trapped in.

Azzarello & Marcelo Frusin have challenged John Constantine with a truly different kind of horror. Cloying, oppressive and inexorable, this visceral and truly disturbing wilderness tale is a powerful testament to the versatility of the character. Constantine has been many things: Con-man, hero, villain, thief and even monster. Here he is also pitifully human…

Compelling storytelling – even if only for those who can handle it.

© 2000, 2001 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Death’s Head, Vol 2

UK EDITION

Death's Head, Vol 2

By Simon Furman & various (Panini Publishing UK)
ISBN 1-905239-69-6

This collection completes the gathering of material featuring the robotic Freelance Peacekeeping Agent (never, ever call him a bounty hunter!) who rampaged through the British corners of the Marvel Universe – and indeed the Americas, as this volume riotously reveals – before he was upgraded into a multiple-personalitied super-killer in the Death’s Head II miniseries.

‘Time Bomb’ (originally printed in Death’s Head #8) is written and inked by Steve Parkhouse and illustrated by Art Wetherell. Our far-future protagonist is hired to “Remove” the Doctor (that would be Doctor Who to the uninitiated) before he can thwart the plans of Josiah W. Dogbolter – who sees Time as a precious commodity, and therefore wants to corner the market in it.

Utilising the “Dogbolter Temporal Rocket” Death’s Head is dispatched through the Chronal Ether to eliminate the Time Lord (the Sylvester McCoy version, if you’re keeping count) only to discover that he’s been set up by the scurrilous plutocrat. He also finds that the Doctor has left him on top of the Fantastic Four’s headquarters…

Simon Furman and Geoff Senior return for the next tale. ‘Clobberin’ Time’ is a good old fashioned fist-fest as the Fantastic Four first fight, then befriend, the robotic Fixer. Unfortunately, their attempts to return him to his own era go awry and he lands in the corporate dystopia of 2020AD, geting into a big bust-up with the Iron Man of that time. Bryan Hitch illustrates Furman’s ‘The Cast Iron Contract’, which ended the 10 issue run of Death’s Head. But the Freelance Peacekeeper was too popular to stay in limbo for long…

Furman and Senior returned to the character in ‘The Body in Question’, a lavish original graphic novel that explored his origin as well as tying up some loose ends with the villain Big Shot who had been built up over a number of stories only to lose his chance when the comic book was cancelled.

From there Death’s Head became a guest-star in other comics – the traditional route to regaining a comic series of one’s own. Furman and Hitch, plus inker John Beatty created ‘Priceless’ in She-Hulk #24, and Walt Simonson included him in his extended time-travel saga during his run as writer/artist on Fantastic Four (‘Kangs for the Memories’ in FF #338). He also had a solo adventure, ‘The Deadliest Game,‘ in the fortnightly anthology Marvel Comics Presents (#76 by Furman and Hitch again).

He returned to his roots in Doctor Who Monthly #173, as Writer Gary Russell, and artists Mike Collins and Steve Pini invited him to a TV fans delight in the cameo-crazy bash entitled ‘Party Animals’.

Post-Death’s Head II, Furman and Senior got one last crack at the big guy in a rather good alternative history tale from volume 2, #54 of What If…? Death’s Head II is a super-android called Minion which killed and absorbed the abilities and personalities of more than 100 of the universe’s most powerful beings, including our robotic star. In this tit-for-tat switch we see what might have happened to the Marvel Universe in ‘What If Minion had not Killed Death’s Head?’

Fast-paced and fantastic, brimming with action and guest-stars, and reeking of the cynical irreverence and black humour that typifies British comics, this is a rare gem of high quality from a generally poor period in Marvel’s history. So if you like sardonic asides with your science fiction and can see the funny side of excessive violence, this book (and its predecessor Death’s Head Vol. 1 ISBN 1-905239-34-3) is for you.

© 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 2007 Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

A Wish For Wings That Work

A Wish For Wings That Work

By Berkeley Breathed (Little, Brown & Co.)
ISBN: 0-316-10758-1

For most of the 1980s and early 1990s Berké Breathed dominated the American newspaper comic strip scene with his astoundingly funny surreal political fantasy strip Bloom County and latterly Outland (mercifully still available – so don’t wait for my reviews, just order them now!). At the top of his game he retired from strip cartooning and began to create a series of lavish children’s picture books that rank among the best America has ever produced.

A Wish for Wings That Work is a Christmas parable featuring Breathed’s signature character, and his most charmingly human. Opus is a talking penguin, educated but emotionally vulnerable, insecure yet unfalteringly optimistic. His most fervent dream is that one day he might fly like a “real” bird.

As Christmas approaches his desperation and desolation grow, but he remains dolorously earthbound. But then on Christmas Eve Santa Claus has an accident…

Breathed’s first children’s book is still in many ways his most poignant and joyous. It’s an old fashioned Christmas miracle tale, beautifully painted, stuffed with wit and belly-laughs that will melt the hardest heart and it belongs on the bookshelf of every parent. When the family have almost ruined the holiday, this is what you want to restore your spirits. Kids might like it too…

© 1991 Berkeley Breathed. All Rights Reserved.

Batman: The Greatest Stories Ever Told

Batman: The Greatest Stories Ever Told

By Various (DC Comics)
ISBN: 1-84576-038-7

If you buy into the myth, then there are actually many, many great Batman stories. Over the decades lots of very talented creators excelled themselves with the various toys and icons of Gotham City. That’s not to say that there haven’t been some real turkeys along the way, but on the whole people seem to extend themselves for Batman. Often the real problem is one of context, since many stories worry reprint editors in terms of “Sell-By Date”; as if nearly eight decades of creativity can avoid looking dated to some modern consumers.

Guys, who cares? These are the ones who want to colourise Citizen Kane and Arsenic and Old Lace, add cell-phones to Shakespeare and never read any book written before 1989. If they can’t get Wuthering Heights unless Angelina’s in it, their money’s no good anyway.

At least this selection contains a few general rarities from the canon, although the origin from Detective Comics #33 (1939) has been seen so often that most fans can draw it from memory – and many parody artists have. ‘The Case of the Honest Crook’ comes from Batman #5 (1941) and ‘The Secret Life of the Catwoman’ is from #62 (1951). ‘Robin Dies at Dawn’ (Batman #156, 1963) is one of the last classic-look tales before Julie Schwartz, John Broome and Gardner Fox projected Batman into the Silver Age of Comics with their “New Look”, a period strangely unrepresented here.

‘The Batman Nobody Knows’ comes from Batman #250, an attempt by Frank Robbins and Dick Giordano to rationalize the then newly-restored aura of mystery to the character, whilst ‘The Joker’s Five-Way Revenge’ (Batman #251, 1973) is a genuine classic from Denny O’Neil and Neal Adams that totally redefined the Joker for our age. For many people this is The Definitive Batman/Joker story.

Steve Englehart is fondly remembered for his collaboration with Marshall Rogers, but ‘Night of the Stalker’ (Detective #439, 1974), illustrated by Vin and Sal Amendola, with Giordano inks is one of his most powerful and emotive successes, but Rogers’s accompanying illustrations for O’Neil’s lacklustre prose vignette ‘Death Comes at Midnight and Three’ displays little of his design skill. It originally ran in DC Special Series #15 (1978). Number 21 of that magazine (1980) gave us Frank Miller’s first Bat story when he illustrated O’Neil’s ‘Wanted: Santa Claus – Dead or Alive’.

In 1987 legendary and beloved artist Dick Sprang was coaxed out of retirement to produce a double page spread for Detective #572, which here precedes the introspective ‘…My Beginning… and My Probable End’ (Detective #574), by Mike W Barr, Alan Davis and Paul Neary. Bringing us out of the nineties is ‘Favourite Things’ by Mark Millar and Steve Yeowell (Legends of the Dark Knight #79, 1996) and the twenty-first century is represented by ’24/7′ by Devin Grayson and Roger Robinson from Gotham Knights #32 (2002).

In an industry that’s constantly seeking to reinvent and revitalize itself, it’s oddly reassuring to see that entertainment can have a timeless quality, even in a supposedly “throw-away” medium like the comic strip.

© 2005 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.