Greg Capullo

Batman: Death of the Family

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by Scott Snyder & Greg Capullo
collects Batman #13-17

CHRIST THAT IS THE CREEPIEST COVER I HAVE EVER POSTED ON THIS BLOG

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whew.

The third arc of Snyder and Capullo’s run on Batman continues as the Dark Knight faces his greatest opponent after Joker went missing for one year. While the core of Death of a Family occurred within these pages of Batman, Joker’s return was felt throughout the Bat-family’s other issues (and even other characters such as Harley Quinn and Catwoman), so I would recommend an omnibus if you want to read them all (this review is just regarding the Batman issues)

If you’re a fan of The Killing Joke you will absolutely love this story, because this is Joker at his most bone chilling and grotesque, and gets at the core of Batman and Joker’s relationship. For reasons not particularly explained in the issue, Joker had his face taken off and…he found it and…reattached it… and it’s completely terrifying, as you would expect. During his first appearance at Gotham’s Police HQ, kills police officers in the dark while telling a joke to Gordon; he then kidnaps Alfred, the weakest but most beloved link of the Wayne family. For the next plot of his terrible scheme, Joker tells Batman he knows his identity and those of his family and threatens to kill them all — and even though Batman is adamant that the Joker doesn’t know he’s Bruce, plants the seeds of doubt so those in his family (the Robins (sans Stephanie) and Batgirl) begin to doubt him. Batman Death of a Family 2 This was a story I read in one sitting, as the tension quickly built as Bruce’s most trusted family ties unravel before him and Joker’s seeming absence over the past year has only made him stronger and more dangerous. Snyder does Joker’s legacy proud; horrific, unpredictable and disturbing is as the Joker should be; like any good Joker story, it returns to his origins as well as the bond between the caped crusader and the madman: why Joker keeps coming back and torturing Batman and why Batman can never quite bring himself to kill him. Bringing in the rest of the Bat-family as both Batman’s distraction and his greatest asset only adds to the texture of this most recent Bat story, though I would have liked to see each of their personalities more distinctly in these pages (but I suppose some would argue this was not meant to be a standalone, and that’s what the other surrounding issues are for.)

SPOILERS. For all that though it doesn’t feel like much is new in this story. We come to expect that grotesqueness not only from Joker, but from Snyder himself; and for it to end with only a few scrapes and bruises, and Joker falling off a cliff, perhaps the most cliche non-death in the book–just as Batman finally reaches his breaking point and is willing to end it, once and for all–felt immensely dissatisfying. I would much rather have seen Bruce face this dark demon of needing to kill his worst enemy, doing it, and living with those consequences. While we’re in the spoilers paragraph, I was very surprised that each member of the so-called “family” decided to have some alone time rather than come to Alfred’s bedside; Alfred Pennyworth who stitched them up on how many occasions? Perhaps this was the “death of the family” the title was actually describing (but more on the other reason later), but it seemed rather harsh.

As you may have read in my earlier posts, I have a love-hate relationship with Greg Capullo’s art. Spoiler alert, today it’s mostly hate! Capullo is very consistent and not at all over-exaggerated (no muscles upon muscles here), and the way he draws Joker is super haunting. But as in other issues, it seems that he draws “stock” faces with bland expressions even when they are at the height of emotional turmoil. Dick, Tim, Barbara and the others are in the Batcave are angrily challenging Bruce if Joker actually knows their identity–at least, according to the dialogue–but they seem incapable of talking without smiling. What??!?!

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Bruce, Dick, Tim and Damian all look EXACTLY THE SAME. Is Capullo incapable of drawing White Man Face any differently? (Oh, I see, unless it’s Jason Todd who doesn’t show his face. Gotcha.) Plus Barbara wonders if Joker appearing at her door (in Killing Joke) wasn’t an accident, if he knew all along she was Batgirl – but she looks like she’s nervous about a date.

Batman Death of a Family


WHAT THE ACTUAL CRAP CAPULLO. Is this what Tim would REALLY look like when showing footage of Joker assaulting, torturing and kidnapping Alfred, essentially his grandfather? Really? HE IS GRINNING. Is Robin actually the Joker and we’ve been living in a Batman Beyond movie the entire time??! JESUS.

Spoilers again, but only if you’ve been living under a rock for the last year or so.
I will admit that, as I am catching up on Batman’s latest arcs, I have not yet read the issue in which Damian dies. I was surprised, considering the title of this story (as a parallel to “Death of the Family” in which Jason Todd meets his end, also by Joker’s hands), that it doesn’t happen here. Either the “death” of the family was meant to be the death of trust and unquestionable faith in Bruce, which was not very emotionally conveyed, or it is the impetus for Damian’s death, which you have to buy something else to read. Not that surprising.

I cannot promise that this shouts “instant classic”; to be fair, Killing Joke was one of my least favorite stories for a long time (as a resolute Barbara Gordon fan, she was treated horribly). But if you are looking for a good Joker story or catching up on Scott Snyder’s Batman run, I recommend it.

Batman 29

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creators: Scott Snyder, Danny Miki, Greg Capullo
released: March 2014
publisher: DC Comics

*spoilers ahead*

The official site says that the “Dark City” chapter of Zero Year reaches its conclusion in this issue….but I don’t quite see a conclusion here. I see an already very long story arc–one that’s been interrupted not once, with a zero issue, but twice, with an unnecessary preview for a forthcoming trade.

I have a pretty good memory, but we’ve gotten to the point that certain intricacies of the plot are reaching back four or five issues. And while yes, I’ll eventually want to go back and reread this entire arc, when I’m reading one chapter a month, it’s becoming more stressful and less enjoyable. The tension has certainly heightened–with Batman’s apparent failure, the death of, erm, Doctor Death, and Nygma plunging Gotham into a watery demise, not to mention “Riddle #2,” whatever that might mean–but it is far from over. Nygma is still at large; so in my mind, the conclusion is still out of reach.

We got up close and personal with Doctor Death in this issue. While Miki and Capullo do a fantastic job making the Doctor both creepy and terrifying (also something we’ve come to expect from Snyder’s stories), but not so grotesque that we are unable to keep reading. Unfortunately, there was something about Batman’s final encounter with Doctor Death that felt….quite corny, to be honest. Batman, to quote The Incredibles, got Doctor Death monologuing–the drawn out explanation of how he became a villain. The banter between the two felt very predictable, particularly Doctor Death’s final “don’t forget me” line. While his backstory is crucial to the layered stories of intersecting webs of responsibilities and choices that have far reaching consequences….the manner in which it was done felt tried and true, and therefore tired. Perhaps we are so taken with Snyder’s new direction that glimmers of this familiarity comes off as ‘too easy.’

Capullo’s artwork is very precise to me; everything is incredibly proportional (except Doc Death, of course) and looks finely tuned, but sometimes each face seems to be making the same expression regardless of the emotional context – Bruce has a blandly happy expression when having a heart to heart with his parents in the movie theater, and then later, the policeman has a similar smiling face when he’s shocked to find something in the sewer. Perhaps lightly sketched faces were mistakenly penned in before they could be better calibrated to the writing, but I would like some more looseness in more emotional situations.

Ever since I started my pull list, Batman seemed to be an ‘untouchable’ series–that is, I never even entertained the thought of removing it. But that being said, with each passing issue, the more I am convinced that this story is meant to be read all at once, and not chapter by chapter.