Grant Morrison's Batman arcs all come to a brilliant, intense finale in the Batman R.I.P. Temporarily incapacitated, Nightwing is unable to save Bermingham from her killer: Two-Face himself. The The truth of the matter is that I ultimately don't know what to make of this. 1401220908 I had some conflicting feelings there were some really cool ideas, and twists, some awesome psychological stuff Batman was basically a beast, but a lot of the story line was choppy (which I believe the writer is known for) and rather hard to keep up with, sometimes I had absolutely no idea what was going on and had to spend some time trying to understand. The art is fantastic, the story bored me and wandered around too muchThe black and white version of this is so pretty.
Batman: Time and the Batman is a posthumous epilogue to RIP, Final Crisis, and Return of Bruce Wayne. I heard that his work is confusing, bad story telling bla bla, but, you know what, it is, in fact, brilliant. Tony S. Daniel nails it. -- Commissioner Gordon Batman: Damned?More like Damn, Yet Another Disappointing Batman Story!And that's a shame, as I loved reading the superior Batman: White Knight (also from DC's 'Black Label') early in 2019. I just couldn't get into this story, I guess. Start by marking “Batman: The Black Glove” as Want to Read: ... (Batman and Son, Black Glove, and RIP) but I'm not 100% set on Grant Morrison as a whole. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. It might not be the best Batman storyline but it I've had mixed dealings with Grant Morrison but the one thing he never gives his fans is an easy story. He tries to leave the place, but ends up disappearing from the cave after an almost lethal accident.
Many of these are controversial, Scottish comic book author Grant Morrison is known for culture-jamming and the constant reinvention of his work. that batman goes through. This book, however, tries too hard for the dark and gritty angle, and ends up being ugly and annoying. Even though Alfred Pennyworth died a few months ago, Batman and his allies are still dealing with the fallout of his demise. Welcome back.
storyline is the aftermath of "The Black Glove" storyline told in the following comics: To truly devour this monster of a volume and savour its every little moment, you have to go through Morrison's previous runs (The Black Casebook, Batman And Son, The Black Glove). The fact that the Black Glove is playing the game six moves ahead, but it takes everyone but the Joker that long to realize that Batman is already reasoning his end game. He soon loses touch and falls victim to mental illness, abandoning his Batman identity for a life on the streets. I can tell you this much—this is the first story I had planned when Peter Tomasi, the editor at the time, asked me to do Batman, which must have been two years ago now…or longer. Batman may be continuing his global war on crime, but villainess Talia is the true Demon Star of this exciting adventure! "The Devil! The violence, insanity, and preparation of Batman and Son, The Black Glove, & Batman: The Resurrection of Ra's Al Ghul all come together in Batman's most harrowing tale to conquer his fears and mind and take out The Black Glove. It might not be the best Batman storyline but it is from boring, think an indie director taking on a studio film.Morrison continues to alienate by exploring the most obscure aspects of Batman history in "Batman: R.I.P." Batman RIP (#676-681). Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. I like the artwork and the dialogues a lot, the story is quite okay too, I enjoy reading Batman's struggle very step of the way (Sorry!