Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Batman Illustrated By Neal Adams Volume Two!


Batman Illustrated by Neal Adams Volume Two features some of the stuff Adams did on the character, and the centerpiece is Man-Bat who debuts in the four hundredth issue of Detective Comics and is featured in three stories in this collection. But also on hand are some of the most iconic covers Adams ever created for the Batman. 


Bob Haney joins up with Neal Adams to give us "You Can't Hide from a Deadman" in The Brave and the Bold #85. The story picks up where we left it in Strange Adventures when Deadman is compelled to try and kill Batman by order of the Society of Assassins and the Sensei. Batman and Deadman then requisition the body of Cleveland Brand (in a manner of speaking) and return to Nanda Parabat where they confront the Society again. This tale reminded me little bit of The Matix as Deadman is using body after body to try and fulfill his deadly mission against the Batman. 




"The Secret of the Waiting Graves" in Detective Comics #395 takes Bruce Wayne to Mexico where he's the guest of a wealthy, bizarre couple named Muertos who appear young and vibrant. As the Batman he works overtime to protect a government agent who has been sent to investigate the couple. Their secret of their vitality is a grisly one indeed as imagined by Denny O'Neil and Adams. This is the beginning of the Adams and O'Neil partnership which will transform the Batman into the truly scary Dark Knight we still enjoy today. 



"The Silent Night of Christmas" in Batman #219 has the Batman convinced to take some time off from his lifelong mission to protect Gotham and trust that the spirit of Christmas will take hold to protect the innocents for one night. This is a little tale for the holidays. Mike Friedrich wrote this charming seasonal tale. 




"Paint a Picture of Peril" pits the Batman against a wealthy recluse named Orson Payne who is stealing art which reminds him of his lost love Caterina. He drove her away when he was a young man with his possessiveness, and seeks her again through art. His madness finally overcomes him. Denny O'Neil wrote this homage to Citizen Kane







To celebrate the four hundredth issue of Detective Comics, Frank Robbins builds a story from an idea by Neal Adam which introduces the Man-Bat. Kirk Langstrom takes his formula for the very fist time and just in time to assist the Batman in rounding up the "Blackout Gang" who use high-tech to see in the darkness so they can rob and steal. It's as wild anniversary story and it's not over for this duo by a longshot. 





Frank Robbins and Neal Adams continue the saga of the Man-Bat in "Man or Bat", a story which sees Kirk Langstrom desperate to find a cure for his transformation. That search puts him in conflict with Batman again, who is trying to cure the unfortunate man himself. But Langstrom's transformation continues as he mutates into a true Man-Bat, with wings and all. The art by Adams and Dick Giordano is really maturing at a fantastic rate as the two consummate pros blend their styles to wonderful effect. 




When a film crew tries to tell the story of Enemy Ace, the company suffers strange and deadly accidents and even worse. Bruce Wayne is funding the film and that brings Batman into conflict with the villains who are working to stop the production. "Ghost Killer of the Skies" from Detective Comics #404 is a doozy as the Batman finds himself in a dogfight with a man who looks just like the Hammer of Hell. Does the true Baron Hans Von Hammer appear in this story? That's left a bit open in Denny O'Neil's yarn. The story is dedicated to Robert Kanigher and Joe Kubert and Adams and inker Dick Giordano even evoke Kurbert's unique style in some panels. 







Robbins and Adams bring their Man-Bat trilogy to a close in "The Bride of the Man-Bat!" in Detective Comics #407. Kirk Langstrom and his lover Francie are about to tie the knot when Batman steps in. There are some really good surprises in this yarn which has you wondering at times if Batman is doing the right thing. The Man-Bat uses masks of his old face to pass in society as best he can, and that reminds of Marvel's The Beast who used chemicals to effect a monstrous change in himself at about this same time. The rise of horror in comics is reaching its peak, as is evidenced by the next story. 


Denny O'Neil and Adams team up to give the world a very strange team-up in the pages of The Brave and the Bold #93. Batman enters The House of Mystery...sort of. What really happens is Batman is exhausted and he heads to Ireland for a break. He saves a young boy from drowning and that's just beginning as he ends up on a remote island where strange and even murderous things are about. Many inexplicable and possibly supernatural events assist the Batman in uncovering a deadly plot and saving the day. "Red Water, Crimson Death" is narrated by Cain the caretaker of the House of Mystery and only he seems to know what really happens. 




The creepiness continues in Detective Comics #408 where we get to share a grisly nightmare Batman suffers where he sees his partner Robin dies and even his own funeral. This is much more hoodoo is brought to the reader by Adams and writers Len Wein and Marv Wolfman. 


A pernicious villain from the Batman's checkered past shows up to take credit for all this peculiar activity. 





"A Vow from the Grave" by O'Neil, Adams and Giordano wraps up the story portion of his collection and we get another tale inspired by classic horror, this time Freaks by Tod Browning. Batman chases a murderer into a remote area and meets a group of folks from the Carnival sideshow who have been abandoned. The strongman Goliath, the human skeleton Charlie Bones, the fat lady Maud and the seal boy Flippy all part of a deadly murder scheme. Detective Comics #410 is one of the first Neal Adams Batman stories I bought off the racks myself. 




There is a clear effort in these stories to pull Batman out of his comfortable Silver Age environment and cast him among some decidedly deadly shadows. His intellect is challenged by outright supernatural doings. He's no longer the cuddly hero from TV, that's for sure. The last cover in this second collection is for the story by Denny O'Neil and Bob Brown that introduces the world to the alluring Talia and her deadly father Ras Al Ghul. A wee bit more on them coming up. 

Tomorrow, more of the Batman by Neal Adams! 

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Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Batman Illustrated By Neal Adams Volume One!


The late great Neal Adams was without question the most influential comic book artist of his generation and a few more besides. There have been great artists such Alex Toth, John Buscema, and Jim Steranko who have informed the way comic stories are told, but it's almost unique in the case of Adams. There is comic art before he arrived on the scene and after it, and the twain shall not meet. He brought a muscular realism to the comic page which had been lacking before. The dynamics of his pages are palpably different. 


I was fortunate in many ways to arrive on the comic book scene at about the same moment that Adams began to have his impact. The collections Batman Illustrated by Neal Adams document his evolutionary impact on that character and that influence begins with some of the very first comic books I ever came into contact with. The three volumes present all of his Batman work, the covers and the stories from the pages of The Brave and the Bold, World's Finest, Detective Comics, Batman and a few others. I want to savor these stories and glory in the covers all over again. All the covers are included in chronological order with snapshot reviews of the stories. We'll begin with volume one which begins itself in the year 1967. 







After handling the Batman on several covers for Detective Comics, The Brave and the Bold, World's Finest Comics and Batman, Neal Adams was at long last commissioned to do his first Bat-story. It would appear in the pages of World's Finest #175. 


World's Finest #175 sports an outstanding cover. It does its work magnificently because who could resist buying this book to find out about these lurid versions of the world-famous heroes. I never saw this one on the stands, but I did see ads for it and craved reading it for many years before I was able to do so. It's a wild and crazy tale about these two outlandish groups concocting an outlandish scheme to blow up both Batman and Superman. It's so complicated I imagine even the bad guys got confused by the story's end. But that wasn't the fault of Neal Adams who brought a strange reality to this bizarre tale. 



I actually got hold of a copy of World's Finest #176. DC was promoting Batgirl like crazy at the time and in this wacky story she and Supergirl team up with the World's Finest team, but that team is feuding over a couple of aliens who tell different stories about their origins. Getting to the truth is the point of this one. Like many DC tales of the time, there are a lot of things that happen that make little sense but are given very thin excuses. The art looks great though. I know that in some reprint collections Neal Adams made refinements to his work, and a panel or two in this story seem to have had that treatment, but I can't swear to it. 


Adams slips over to The Brave and the Bold and brings Deadman with him in issue #79. The ghost guest-stars alongside Batman as he tries to coax the Dark Knight Detective to take on his murder case. This was one of my earliest B&B issues and made a huge impact on my budding tastes. Batman is busy chasing a mob kingpin dubbed "The King" but eventually finds that he and the late Boston Brand have some goals in common. Bob Haney becomes the fourth writer to tackle Deadman in his brief post-mortem career. 





The Brave and the Bold #80 gives the world the Hellgrammite is one of the weirdest villains I've ever seen. A giant grasshopper and man hybrid this critter hops across Gotham gathering up gang bosses for a mysterious purpose. The Creeper has dropped into town to warn of the threat but has to dodge both Batman and the police who want to jail him as much as the other guy. This Bob Haney and Neal Adams production was meant to boost the sales of Steve Ditko's character but like the same kind of guest-starring role in The Justice League of America it failed. 


The Brave and the Bold #81 gives us one of the all-time great titles - "But Bork Can Hurt You!" Batman joins forces with the Flash to try and stop a muscle-bound chap named Bork who is taking over the dock workers and is poised to go further. He is somehow invulnerable to injury and while Batman fights to stall his aims in Gotham, it is up to the Flash to get to the bottom of how Bork got so powerful. Haney wrote it and Adams drew it. 




The Brave and the Bold #82 teams up Batman with Aquaman. At the time of this story Aquaman is searching for his lost wife Mera and already upset falls under the spell of his brother Orm, the Ocean Master who is working a swindle in Gotham. Aquaman is being used as muscle. A beautiful dame is involved of course, and Bruce Wayne seems more than a bit smitten this time. I have to admit I found Bob Haney's story a little confusing in places. The cover is by Adams and Dick Giordano. 



(This over by Irv Novick is not included in this collection.)

The cover to The Brave and the Bold #83 is not included because Irv Novick drew it instead of Adams. But Haney and Adams did do the story titled "Punish Not My Evil Son". This story teams up Batman with the Teen Titans who at this time were made up of Robin, Speedy, Wonder Girl, and Kid Flash. When a wayward orphan suddenly shows up on Bruce Wayne's doorstep, Bruce tries to do the right thing, but the young delinquent has other ideas, especially when uncovers the identity of both Batman and Robin. 



We dive deep into the "Haneyverse" with this one. DC continuity was a new thing overall and not very well developed, but even the stories of Bob Haney in The Brave and the Bold fell outside it. This story titled "The Angel, the Rock, and the Cowl" has Bruce Wayne of the modern day reflecting on his work during WWII which brought him into contact with Sgt. Rock and Easy Company. They are preparing the way for the greatest invasion in human history, but run into a deadly scheme to steal gold and use toxic gas. The work of Neal Adams really kicks it up a notch in this one, a story filled with mood and atmosphere. 




"The Senator's Been Shot!" by Haney and Adams for The Brave and the Bold #85 is one of the most important comics in DC history. This one blew me away when I was a kid, with a story that was breathtaking and tied into the turbulent news of the day. We encounter the new Green Arrow for the first, with is signature mustache and goatee. Both Bruce Wayne and Oliver Queen are contemplating quitting as masked crimefighters as they work together to foil a villain named Minotaur. 



And that wraps up volume one of these great vintage Neal Adams stories and covers. Seeing them again is like traveling back in time when these images fired my imagination as never before. I take on volume two tomorrow. 

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