This storyline got me into Batman comics. You kinda need some context: The Beast has killed SO MANY PEOPLE at this point, just absolutely mowed down tons and tons and tons of innocent people. Batman has nearly killed himself multiple times trying to apprehend the Beast, including once nearly falling to his death when he snares the Beast by one hand, only to have the Beast sever his own hand with a fire axe to escape. The Beast is incredibly dangerous, absolutely unstoppable, and unlike the Joker, who at least plays by his own twisted rules, is just a straight line of murder directly to his next target. So yeah, I think Batman’s doing the smart thing here. He’s exhausted and beat to hell. He’s not killing the Beast. He’s just letting the consequences of the Beast’s actions catch up with him.
I never liked how, after his portrayal as an intelligent, formidable threat here, the Beast has been reduced to a dimwitted Boris Badenov stooge in his subsequent appearances.
If you’ve never read this story arc, I think it’s a minor masterpiece — one gripping set piece after another in a relentless ticking-clock story structure.
Ah yes Starlin's Batman who was quiet a bit less bothered by criminals dying cause of their own actions/his inaction. The arc where Jason may have killed a Rapist featured a scene where Batman intentionally dodged two machien gun wielding mooks in a way that let them take each out fatally.
Though even for Starlin's Batman the above was a bit more directly him taking action to get someone killed but IIRC in story it was framed as KGBeast was just that dangerous and later writes used this in various ways..
When Tim Drake was introduced Wolfman used this incident as one of the examples of Batman spiraling and needing a kid sidekick.
I also want to say a later Batman never kills even later said Batman's plan was to go back and get him once he was too weak to fight back but when he got back for him KGBeast was gone.
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I'm more surprised that in the DCU, someone who is effectively Batman's equal would be easily overcome by a pair of 2x4s.
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I never liked how, after his portrayal as an intelligent, formidable threat here, the Beast has been reduced to a dimwitted Boris Badenov stooge in his subsequent appearances.
If you’ve never read this story arc, I think it’s a minor masterpiece — one gripping set piece after another in a relentless ticking-clock story structure.
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Though even for Starlin's Batman the above was a bit more directly him taking action to get someone killed but IIRC in story it was framed as KGBeast was just that dangerous and later writes used this in various ways..
When Tim Drake was introduced Wolfman used this incident as one of the examples of Batman spiraling and needing a kid sidekick.
I also want to say a later Batman never kills even later said Batman's plan was to go back and get him once he was too weak to fight back but when he got back for him KGBeast was gone.
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(NGL, I'd be very interested to see what the actual Miller scripting over Aparo art would look like, but an imitation's an imitation.)
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Good thing all those planks were there just ready to go in case someone needed a door propped shut, I guess?
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