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Five months after the smash hit release of the Tim Burton film, a new Batman comic strip ran in newspapers from 1989 to 1991. Following the film in spirit but set in an entirely new continuity, the first storyline was written by Max Allan Collins (Road to Perdition, creator of Post-Crisis Jason Todd) and illustrated by the late, great Marshall Rogers (Batman: Strange Apparitions, which still looks stellar today).
I've fallen head over heels in love with this comic strip. Naturally, my love doesn't really kick in until Harvey Dent becomes a major supporting character in the next storyline, which may be one of the most original and interesting takes on the character I've seen anywhere, in any medium. I actually suspect that it influenced the creators of Batman: The Animated Series.
But even from the start, I love how Collins (and his successor, William Messner-Loebs) didn't try to simply regurgitate the old stories for newspapers, but came up with distinctly different characterizations, origins, and plots, while the stories themselves feel completely divorced from comics of any era. They're fun, suspenseful, moving, and occasionally, even a bit on the cracky side.

Note: These scans are from Comics Revue magazine, issues #41-43, published in 1990. It's the only time these strips have been reprinted anywhere. As they're incredibly rare, I've posted the entire story, and plan to post every other strip as they appeared in CR, as these wonderful stories deserve attention and preservation.
Mods, if this is a problem, please let me know. I wrote to you guys about this, but received no reply, so I went ahead and posted it all anyway. This strip is pretty much a continuous story, so I have no real way of knowing how--or even if--I should edit it down.
By sheer ridiculous luck, I managed to find a reprint of these strips signed by Marshall Rogers himself (who, strangely, seems to be given sole credit for Max Allan Collins' story), as you'll see in the very first image below. Mainly for the sake of his own detailed artwork, I've scanned a couple of these Sunday strips a bit larger than the rest.
Even still, the scan quality varies. I'd love to see a high-quality collection in proper print as they deserve. I wonder why that's never happened? Or, for that matter, why hasn't any of Stan Lee's Spider-Man seen a single collection? Are there rights issues with the distributor or something?
All right, all right, enough ado. On with the comic!






Harvey Dent: stuffy, lawsuit-fearing bureaucrat. He's not exactly the same crime-smashing hotshot we usually know. In the next storyline, new writer Bill Messner-Loebs greatly steps up the stakes for Dent when it comes to Batman. I have to wonder if Max Allan Collins and Messner-Loebs entirely controlled their own stories, or if there was a series bible they were following from someone else?





I think this is the first time we'd ever seen Catwoman as a vigilante from the start, almost Huntress-like in her ruthlessness but still more like Selina in spirit. The closest equivalent to this Catwoman that comes to mind is the Burton/Waters one from Batman Returns, which I've noticed is still the favorite for many.















So, is Selina acting out of self-interest for her new life, redemption for her past, vengeance against the people who dragged her into gang life as a youth, and/or is she trying to prevent more kids from ending up like she almost did? What I find most interesting is that she doesn't contradict or defend Panther's point that she's stealing the gang money to fund her shop and artwork. Is that greed, or is she at least somewhat justified?




And as a bonus, I found this cropped, low-res version of what the actual Sunday strip looked like in color, to give you some idea:

Huh. Vicki's brunette. And in black and white, I--for some reason--though the middle strip on Selina's mask would be green.
It's a rather abrupt ending, and right before the complete change in creative team. According to Mr. Collins himself, who so graciously offered up his insights when I posted this story to my Two-Face fanblog about_faces, he was actually strong-armed out of the gig by an editor who didn't think that Collins should be writing both Batman AND Dick Tracy. Collins wrote an entire series bible from the ground up, which was really followed by the next creative team. I would've loved to have read that saga which never was.
Coming up next, the new creative team of Messner-Loebs, Infantino, and Nyberg bring us the Penguin, Batman's mysterious new British sidekick, and a refreshingly different take on Harvey Dent, D.A. (how do you like THOSE credentials, Rex Morgan?).
I've fallen head over heels in love with this comic strip. Naturally, my love doesn't really kick in until Harvey Dent becomes a major supporting character in the next storyline, which may be one of the most original and interesting takes on the character I've seen anywhere, in any medium. I actually suspect that it influenced the creators of Batman: The Animated Series.
But even from the start, I love how Collins (and his successor, William Messner-Loebs) didn't try to simply regurgitate the old stories for newspapers, but came up with distinctly different characterizations, origins, and plots, while the stories themselves feel completely divorced from comics of any era. They're fun, suspenseful, moving, and occasionally, even a bit on the cracky side.

Note: These scans are from Comics Revue magazine, issues #41-43, published in 1990. It's the only time these strips have been reprinted anywhere. As they're incredibly rare, I've posted the entire story, and plan to post every other strip as they appeared in CR, as these wonderful stories deserve attention and preservation.
Mods, if this is a problem, please let me know. I wrote to you guys about this, but received no reply, so I went ahead and posted it all anyway. This strip is pretty much a continuous story, so I have no real way of knowing how--or even if--I should edit it down.
By sheer ridiculous luck, I managed to find a reprint of these strips signed by Marshall Rogers himself (who, strangely, seems to be given sole credit for Max Allan Collins' story), as you'll see in the very first image below. Mainly for the sake of his own detailed artwork, I've scanned a couple of these Sunday strips a bit larger than the rest.
Even still, the scan quality varies. I'd love to see a high-quality collection in proper print as they deserve. I wonder why that's never happened? Or, for that matter, why hasn't any of Stan Lee's Spider-Man seen a single collection? Are there rights issues with the distributor or something?
All right, all right, enough ado. On with the comic!






Harvey Dent: stuffy, lawsuit-fearing bureaucrat. He's not exactly the same crime-smashing hotshot we usually know. In the next storyline, new writer Bill Messner-Loebs greatly steps up the stakes for Dent when it comes to Batman. I have to wonder if Max Allan Collins and Messner-Loebs entirely controlled their own stories, or if there was a series bible they were following from someone else?





I think this is the first time we'd ever seen Catwoman as a vigilante from the start, almost Huntress-like in her ruthlessness but still more like Selina in spirit. The closest equivalent to this Catwoman that comes to mind is the Burton/Waters one from Batman Returns, which I've noticed is still the favorite for many.















So, is Selina acting out of self-interest for her new life, redemption for her past, vengeance against the people who dragged her into gang life as a youth, and/or is she trying to prevent more kids from ending up like she almost did? What I find most interesting is that she doesn't contradict or defend Panther's point that she's stealing the gang money to fund her shop and artwork. Is that greed, or is she at least somewhat justified?




And as a bonus, I found this cropped, low-res version of what the actual Sunday strip looked like in color, to give you some idea:

Huh. Vicki's brunette. And in black and white, I--for some reason--though the middle strip on Selina's mask would be green.
It's a rather abrupt ending, and right before the complete change in creative team. According to Mr. Collins himself, who so graciously offered up his insights when I posted this story to my Two-Face fanblog about_faces, he was actually strong-armed out of the gig by an editor who didn't think that Collins should be writing both Batman AND Dick Tracy. Collins wrote an entire series bible from the ground up, which was really followed by the next creative team. I would've loved to have read that saga which never was.
Coming up next, the new creative team of Messner-Loebs, Infantino, and Nyberg bring us the Penguin, Batman's mysterious new British sidekick, and a refreshingly different take on Harvey Dent, D.A. (how do you like THOSE credentials, Rex Morgan?).
no subject
Date: 2011-02-12 11:36 am (UTC)And I think he totally killed that one guy. Looking at the bullet's trajectory, I don't think it would've hit him at all!
no subject
Date: 2011-02-13 04:52 am (UTC)As for the trajectory of the bullet, that'd be difficult to prove. The angles change around quite a bit during the sequence, and we never really get a feeling as to just where Panther IS - or at least, I don't.