Book: Batman:
Knightfall, Volume One
Author: Doug
Moench, Chuck Dixon, and Alan Grant
Number of pages: 635
What I’m watching: TV: Spoils of Babylon, Bones, 30 Rock, Community, Portlandia,
The League
Movies: Constantine,
Inception, The Perfect Host, Full Metal Jacket, Batman Begins, Pocahontas,
Company (2011 Stage Recording)
What I’m playing: Bulletstorm, Oblivion, Rainbow Six Vegas, Iron Brigade,
Flowerz, Journey, Skyrim
I
think I first heard about Knightfall
from some Top 10 Batman graphic novel list on the internet. But it’s freaking
Batman so it’s probably going to be awesome no matter what.
So, I already knew that this was the
original “Bane breaks Batman’s back” story arc.1 What’s lame is that
the back cover references The Dark Knight
Rises. You know what, not everything Batman is awesome. I’ll say it: I
didn’t like that movie. Why the hell doesn’t Bane blow up Gotham once he’s got
the bomb? Why does he sit with his thumb up his ass for months driving the bomb
around Gotham? It made absolutely no sense. I’d have more to complain about but
I haven’t seen it since theaters so I forget. Oh wait: Robin Drake?! Whatever…what
I didn’t already know is that Knightfall
(1993) is the introduction of Bane. That means Bane is younger than I am and
that all the Bane episodes of Batman: TAS were some of the first Bane stories.
Being
the first story of Bane explains why Knightfall
opens with a 50-page story of Bane’s whole pre-Gotham life. Born and hardened
in a prison with a life sentence, Bane envisioned and strived toward a mentally
and physically perfect self. So, originally, Bane was both a genius and a
strongman. So often, I feel, the former gets forgotten.
In prison, he overcomes his fear, which
is coincidentally represented by a bat. Bane hears about Batman from another
inmate and is immediately obsessed with the need to take down Batman. I mean, I
get how fighting Batman represents overcoming his fear, but I think having
Bane’s fear be a bat is too easy.
Well,
it’s page 47 and I finally see Batman, and he looks awesome.
Sometimes artists get a little weird
with their character depictions. Really, everyone looks great. Bane and The
Bat’s first confrontation blew my mind, occipital style.2
Sometimes, the artwork is funny, too.
And yet, as much as I love the
character Det. Bullock, what the hell is he wearing?
He looks like the lovechild of Dick
Tracy and a clown. And speaking of clowns, Batman takes down some thugs named
the Manklin Brothers. Are their first names Larry, Curly, and Moe?
Anyway,
Bane’s plan to defeat Batman is to loose all the Arkham villains out into the
city. Batman then has to essentially run a gauntlet of rogues, wearing himself
and his spirit down, allowing Bane to step in at the right moment and crush
Batman. A smart plan? Yes, but kinda cowardly in my opinion, especially since
Batman was already ill at the start of the story.3
So,
the physical book itself is a story arc built from several Batman comic series.
Unfortunately, that means I’m picking up in the middle and I’m a little out of
the loop on some things. Like who’s Jean Paul, and why is he hanging out with
Robin? It sounds like I
missed Bane beating up Killer Croc and Riddler getting pumped up on Venom while
fighting Batman. It’s not too much that I can’t follow, but they’re things I
would’ve liked to see. At one point Batman mentions Vicki Vale like she died,
but I looked into it online, and I guess he just dumped her. There are a
handful of other characters that come and go who I don’t recognize: Film Freak,
Cornelius Stirk, Lt. Kitch, Leopold, and this person who pops up:
I thought maybe she’s Batgirl. Turns
out the thugs she’s beating up don’t recognize her either, so I don’t feel so
bad about it. I wasn’t sure how far along the Batman storyline was in the early
90s. Was Barbara Gordon still Batgirl? Nope. She shows up later in Knightfall as Oracle, which makes sense because
there were a few references to The
Killing Joke which I picked up on. Speaking of being chronologically
confused: with all the tension and headbutting between Batman and Robin, I was
certain that Robin was Dick Grayson. Nope again. It’s Tim Drake. Dick shows up
later as Nightwing. Going to back to the girl in purple and blue for a moment:
looking at her makes The Hawkeye Initiative come to mind.4
Anarky
pops up for an issue or two, looking like the Spanish Inquisition.
Bane sounds a little like Ivan Drago.
What’s more, near the end of Knightfall, Bullock references Rocky.
In
a nutshell, Bane’s gauntlet works and he defeats Batman by breaking his back
but decides to let Batman live. That Jean Paul guy turns out to be Azrael, some
kind of trained assassin from a religious order. Jean Paul takes on the Batman
mantle to keep Gotham in order, but seems to be reckless and takes things too
far. He builds some kind of super-suit to battle Bane. Meanwhile, at stately
Wayne Manor, Bruce Wayne is recovering until he discovers that a close doctor
friend and Tim’s father have both been kidnapped. He leaves the country on a
search for them with Alfred. In a final confrontation, Jean Paul almost kills
Bane, but leaves him for GCPD.
Knightfall provides a lot of action, a
great showcase of the rogues gallery and the Batman family, awesome art, and
great stories. Zero sharks, though.
Verdict (Is the book staying or going?): Staying.
Notes
1. The cover’s kind of a giveaway,
anyway.
2. Maybe it helps that blue is my
favorite color.
3. It is kinda lame seeing Batman so
weak right off the bat.
4. Look it up.
Works
Cited
Moench, Doug, Chuck Dixon, and Alan
Grant. Batman: Knightfall, Volume One.
New York: DC Comics, 2012. Print.
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