Following the massacre at the amusement park, the police arrive to arrest the Joker and Batman. Robin gets away by hanging onto a helicopter, while Batman, who is badly injured, sets off some explosives and is lifted to safety with Robin's help. When the Joker's corpse is found, Batman is charged with murder.
In Gotham City, a vigilante group calling themselves the Sons of the Batman begin to get very tough on crime. Meanwhile, the Mutants are kept behind bars, where they watch the news unfold on TV: Russia has sent a massive nuclear bomb to hit an island after their troops were forced to withdraw. Superman intercepts the missile and redirects its course toward the desert, but when it explodes it disrupts electrical systems in the USA.
Barely out of the operating room at Wayne Manor, Batman puts his costume back on and he and Robin head downtown on horseback, just as a plane, its electrical system lost, crashes into a building. Chaos envelops the city streets, the mutants break out of prison, and Batman faces off against the Sons of Batman at the city dump and enlists their aid in calming the citizens of Gotham. Out in space, Superman is near death from his encounter with the giant bomb, but a close encounter with the sun returns his vigor and good looks. With the aid of the Mutants and the Sons of Batman, the Dynamic Duo restore order to Gotham City.
A week later, darkness reigns as a nuclear winter has descended. An aged Oliver Queen visits Bruce Wayne and together they hatch a plan for Batman to face off against Superman, who has been ordered by the president to bring in the Dark Knight. Batman puts on a high-tech suit and meets Superman for a final battle. In the end, "The Dark Knight Falls," brought down by a heart attack. In the days that follow, it's reported that Batman was Bruce Wayne and that the billionaire's fortune has disappeared. Wayne Manor was blown up by Alfred, who dies from a stroke. Clark Kent attends Bruce's funeral and, as everyone leaves, he detects a faint heartbeat below the ground with his super hearing. It seems Oliver Queen had a hand in faking Batman's death! Clark winks at Robin and, later on, Bruce Wayne is back in what's left of the Batcave, instructing the next generation of crime fighters.
Peter: Of the four chapters, this is easily the weakest, due to Miller's clipped dialogue, the frenetic pace, and the intermingling of perspectives. It's all way too confusing for this little brain, and that's from someone who absolutely loved the first three installments. I'm sure there are those out there who will say that Frank Miller maintained quality all through the series and put the perfect bow on the package, but it was a mighty big disappointment for me.
Jack: Like you, I found this confusing on first reading it, but when I went back through it to write the summary, it made more sense. I haven't been a fan of this series, but I have to admit that Miller succeeded in doing something new, even if I didn't really want to see it. The art is exciting, though I don't care for Miller's technique of drawing Batman and Superman as giant, lumbering monsters. I also don't care for the "adult" aspects of the story, including the language and the violence. Still, we have to reckon with this series and all that's come after it, so it certainly qualifies as a landmark.
THE BEST (AND WORST) OF 1986
PETER
Best Script: Frank Miller, "Hunt the Dark Knight" (The Dark Knight Returns #3)Best Art: Frank Miller & Klaus Janson, "Hunt the Dark Knight"
Best All-Around Story: "Hunt the Dark Knight"
Worst Script: Harlan Ellison, "The Night of Thanks, But No Thanks," (Detective Comics #567)
Worst Art: Tom Mandrake, "Strike Two" (Batman #399)
Best Cover: Bill Sienkiewicz, Batman #400 >
The Five Best Stories
1- "Hunt the Dark Knight"
2- "Catch as Catscan" (Detective Comics #569)
3- "The Dark Knight Returns" (The Dark Knight Returns #1)
4- "The Dark Knight Triumphant" (The Dark Knight Returns #2)
5- "A Bird in the Hand..." (Batman #401)
JACK
Best Script: Frank Miller, "The Dark Knight Returns"
Best Art: Alan Davis & Paul Neary, "Catch as Catscan,"
Best All-Around Story: "The Dark Knight Returns"
Worst Script: Harlan Ellison, "The Night of Thanks, But No Thanks,"
Worst Art: Tom Mandrake, "Binary Brains," (Batman #397)
Best Cover: Marshall Rogers, (Shadow of the Batman #2)
The Five Best Stories
1-"The Dark Knight Returns"
2-"Double Crosses," Detective Comics #564
3-"Catch as Catscan"
4-"The Dark Rider," Batman #393
5-"Free Faces," Detective Comics #563
2 comments:
I like Jim Starlin and i like Max Allan Collins, but for some reason BATMAN 402 has flown completely below my radar until today. I’ll have to see if I can find a cheap copy on eBay….
I do own a copy of BATMAN 401. Trevor’s art here isn’t quite in the same league as on BATMAN ANNUAL 8, but still pretty nice. He did a couple really cool issues of WORLD’S FINEST around this same time too. Magpie never became one of the more popular Batman villains, but she did show up in a particularly good episode of the CG animated BEWARE THE BATMAN series a few years ago.
The Barr / Davis run on DETECTIVE is a lot of fun. I tend to agree with Jack about Davis’ Joker looking a little too skinny and ‘pretty’ but yes, his Catwoman is dynamite.
b.t.
Thanks, b.t.! I'm really enjoying this run of Detective.
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