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THEY’RE BAAAACCCCCCKKKKK! As a part of DC Comics Villain Month in September, the Court of Owls return to plague the Dark Knight Detective, official solicitation below: 

BATMAN AND ROBIN #23.2: THE COURT OF OWLS
Written by JAMES TYNION IV
Art by JORGE LUCAS
3-D motion cover by PATRICK GLEASON and MICK GRAY
On sale SEPTEMBER 11 • 32 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED T
The Court of Owls takes stock of the new world order created in the wake of Forever Evil! What horrors will they unleash in order to maintain control!

THEY’RE BAAAACCCCCCKKKKK! As a part of DC Comics Villain Month in September, the Court of Owls return to plague the Dark Knight Detective, official solicitation below: 

BATMAN AND ROBIN #23.2: THE COURT OF OWLS

Written by JAMES TYNION IV

Art by JORGE LUCAS

3-D motion cover by PATRICK GLEASON and MICK GRAY

On sale SEPTEMBER 11 • 32 pg, FC, $3.99 US • RATED T

The Court of Owls takes stock of the new world order created in the wake of Forever Evil! What horrors will they unleash in order to maintain control!

11:48 am: adburrows4 notes

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eaglemossdc:

DC Chess Collection- Set 2: Justice League

Issue 40: Batman

https://www.facebook.com/DCChess

10:22 pm: adburrows9 notes

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From DC Comic’s July solicitations (via Newsarama.com)

BATMAN: THE COURT OF OWLS BOOK AND MASK SETWritten by SCOTT SNYDERArt by GREG CAPULLO andJONATHAN GLAPIONCover by GREG CAPULLOADVANCE SOLICIT • On sale OCTOBER 2 • 160 pg, FC, 8.5” x 11.75” x 5.5”, $24.99 USThe best-selling epic that introduced Gotham City’s dread Court of Owls is back in this amazing book and mask set! Along with a trade paperback copy of THE COURT OF OWLS, collecting BATMAN #1-7, this set includes the PVC Owl mask with white elastic band that created a sensation at comics conventions in 2012!
 
I was lucky enough to score 2 owl masks signed by Scott Snyder & Greg Cappulo from NYCC ‘12, definitely pick this up!

From DC Comic’s July solicitations (via Newsarama.com)

BATMAN: THE COURT OF OWLS BOOK AND MASK SET
Written by SCOTT SNYDER
Art by GREG CAPULLO and
JONATHAN GLAPION
Cover by GREG CAPULLO
ADVANCE SOLICIT • On sale OCTOBER 2 • 160 pg, FC, 8.5” x 11.75” x 5.5”, $24.99 US
The best-selling epic that introduced Gotham City’s dread Court of Owls is back in this amazing book and mask set! Along with a trade paperback copy of THE COURT OF OWLS, collecting BATMAN #1-7, this set includes the PVC Owl mask with white elastic band that created a sensation at comics conventions in 2012!

 

I was lucky enough to score 2 owl masks signed by Scott Snyder & Greg Cappulo from NYCC ‘12, definitely pick this up!

07:37 pm: adburrows4 notes

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via Bleeding Cool
WonderCon: Batman Zero Year, Superman Unchained, And Drawing Lex Luthor To Look Like Grant Morrison
The Batman Zero Year panel just concluded at WonderCon with Scott Snyder, James Tynion IV, and DC’s John Cunningham on hand to talk about Zero Year and other upcoming projects. We’ve got BC’ers on hand writing up the details, but for now, here’s a few highlights:
Greg Capullo and Snyder have plans for Batman that may possibly run through Batman #48 or #49.
Snyder on Zero Year: “There’s nothing in this book that you’ve seen before. I’m not going to redo Year One.”  Further — Year One could not have happened in the continuity of the New 52 due to several underlying events and details changing. For Zero Year, important key concepts will remain, but the book will still be something very  different than we’ve seen before.
Superman and Batman: Superman is going to be in the Batman comic upcoming, and Batman is going to be in Superman Unchained early on as well.
Superman Unchained’s Really Big Page:  As mentioned in the DC All Access panel, there’s a 4-page double sided fold out in Superman Unchained which is an important part of the book.
Jim Lee has told Snyder that he’s drawing Lex Luthor to look like Grant Morrison.

via Bleeding Cool

WonderCon: Batman Zero Year, Superman Unchained, And Drawing Lex Luthor To Look Like Grant Morrison

The Batman Zero Year panel just concluded at WonderCon with Scott Snyder, James Tynion IV, and DC’s John Cunningham on hand to talk about Zero Year and other upcoming projects. We’ve got BC’ers on hand writing up the details, but for now, here’s a few highlights:

  • Greg Capullo and Snyder have plans for Batman that may possibly run through Batman #48 or #49.
  • Snyder on Zero Year: “There’s nothing in this book that you’ve seen before. I’m not going to redo Year One.”  Further — Year One could not have happened in the continuity of the New 52 due to several underlying events and details changing. For Zero Year, important key concepts will remain, but the book will still be something very  different than we’ve seen before.
  • Superman and Batman: Superman is going to be in the Batman comic upcoming, and Batman is going to be in Superman Unchained early on as well.
  • Superman Unchained’s Really Big Page:  As mentioned in the DC All Access panel, there’s a 4-page double sided fold out in Superman Unchained which is an important part of the book.
  • Jim Lee has told Snyder that he’s drawing Lex Luthor to look like Grant Morrison.
02:33 am: adburrows6 notes

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Batman #22 cover by Greg Capaullo.  

Batman #22 cover by Greg Capaullo.  

02:24 am: adburrows191 notes

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Batman’s mythology getting new boost from DC

via AP News.

MATT MOORE
Published: Today

Batman’s transformative years are getting a few new twists.

DC Entertainment is going back into Bruce Wayne’s past to see how he began his transformation from wealthy socialite to the scourge of Gotham’s criminal underworld.

Key elements of the character’s history are staying the same - the murder of Wayne’s parents, for example - says Scott Snyder, the writer of “Batman” since its relaunch debuted in 2011.

“It’s not ‘let’s redo the origin,’” he said Monday. “It’s time for a new story showing how Batman became who he is in the New 52.”

Snyder said the decision grew out of the success of the first year-and-a-half of DC’s New 52, a sweeping reorganization of the publisher’s characters that saw many given new origins and costumes that blended those from their first appearances decades ago with contemporary changes.

Snyder said readers will see how the crime fighter found his calling and what challenges he faced when first donning the costume of the Dark Knight.

The augmented origin begins June in the pages of “Batman” in an 11-issue story called “The Year Zero” that is illustrated by Greg Capullo.

“We tried to preserve as much of Batman’s history as we could and keep what we could of this history intact,” Snyder said of the change. “It’s ‘The Zero Year,’ the one that no one has told the story of before. We see how Bruce became the Batman, built the cave, faced off with his first super villain.”

It’s not so much an origin story as it is a view into Batman’s formative years.

“We’re not going to take apart ‘Year One,’” Snyder said, referring to the Frank Miller-David Mazzucchelli four-issue arc that recounted how Wayne began to fight crime after years away.

Instead Snyder, an Eagle Award-winning writer whose other efforts for DC include “Swamp Thing” and “American Vampire,” said the “Zero Year” story will give readers new glimpses into the Bob Kane-created character who made his first appearance in the pages of “Detective Comics” No. 27 in May 1939.

“It’s time for a new story showing how Batman became who he is in the New 52,” said Snyder. “It builds up the mythology.”

10:17 am: adburrows5 notes

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Batman 655/Batman Inc 8
1st & last appearance of Damian Wayne #dccomics #RobinRIP #batmanandson #batmanandrobin #dynamicduo #batmanincorporated #batman #robin #damianwayne #grantmorrison #comics #art #dcreader #instapic #instawow #instagram #iphonography  #iphone5

Batman 655/Batman Inc 8
1st & last appearance of Damian Wayne #dccomics #RobinRIP #batmanandson #batmanandrobin #dynamicduo #batmanincorporated #batman #robin #damianwayne #grantmorrison #comics #art #dcreader #instapic #instawow #instagram #iphonography #iphone5

09:02 pm: adburrows1 note

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Requiem for Damian Wayne #newdcday #dccomics #RobinRIP #detectivecomics #worldsfinest #batman #robin #damianwayne @dccomics  (at Collectors Kingdom)

Requiem for Damian Wayne #newdcday #dccomics #RobinRIP #detectivecomics #worldsfinest #batman #robin #damianwayne @dccomics (at Collectors Kingdom)

08:46 pm: adburrows

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A Requiem for Damian Wayne
Appearing in DC Comics titles tomorrow, Requiem, in memory of Damian Wayne. Detective Comics and World’s Finest are expected to be the first two specific titles affected, but as we’ve reported*, this will spill out into a number of Batman books, and those closely related. I’m also told tomorrow’s Channel 52 newspiece will still be affected.
via Bleeding Cool
*Detective Comics & Worlds Finest

A Requiem for Damian Wayne

Appearing in DC Comics titles tomorrow, Requiem, in memory of Damian Wayne. Detective Comics and World’s Finest are expected to be the first two specific titles affected, but as we’ve reported*, this will spill out into a number of Batman books, and those closely related. I’m also told tomorrow’s Channel 52 newspiece will still be affected.

via Bleeding Cool

*Detective Comics & Worlds Finest

10:58 pm: adburrows15 notes

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via DC Comics: The Source

Grant Morrison on his Legendary BATMAN Run


“Little did I suspect when I accepted the BATMAN writing assignment back in 2006 that I’d wind up spending the next six years writing the longest continued comic story I’ve ever attempted. I thought I’d said most of what I had to say about the character with Arkham Asylum, Gothic, and Batman’s appearances in JLA. Clearly, I was wrong.  

The original pitch was for 15 issues winding up with BATMAN R.I.P. but something happened along the way and, as I was researching his rich history, I became fascinated by the idea that every Batman story was in some way true and biographical - from the savage, young, pulp-flavored “weird figure of the dark” of his early years, through the smiling, paternal figure of the 1940s and the proto-psychedelic crusader of the ‘50s, the superhero detective of the ‘60s, the hairy-chested globetrotting adventurer of the ‘70s, to the brutally physical vigilante of the ‘80s and snarling, paranoid soldier of the ‘90s.

By taking his entire publishing history as the story of his life, I was able to approach Batman from a different angle and the multifaceted character that was revealed became the subject of my story.

What would such a man be like, realistically? This was a man who had saved countless lives, faced innumerable perils, and even prevented the destruction of the world itself. This was a master of martial arts, meditation, deduction, yoga and big business. This was a man who had tamed and mastered his demons and turned personal tragedy into a relentless humanitarian crusade. 

Taking that man seriously meant I had to throw out a few of the accepted ideas about Batman as a semi-unhinged, essentially humorless loner struggling with rage and guilt. The totality of his history and accomplishments made that portrayal seem limited and unconvincing, so instead, my Batman was a true superhero at the height of his powers and the peak of his abilities, surrounded by a network of friends and associates, all of whom had been inspired by his lead. 

I chose to build my story around the basic trauma, the murder of his parents, that lies at the heart of Batman’s genesis. It seemed to me there would be a part of Bruce Wayne that resented his parents for leaving him and especially resented his father for not being Batman that night, so the principal villains were an archetypal bad father figure in the form of Dr. Hurt and a dark mother in the form of Talia, our villain for the concluding chapters of the story. 

This master theme of damaged and ruined families was nowhere more in evidence than in the creation of Damian, the first “Son of Batman” to be acknowledged in the canon. In many ways this has been Damian’s story as much as it has been the story of Bruce Wayne and it’s a story that had its end planned a long time ago - for what son could ever hope to replace a father like Batman, who never dies?

And so, via Batman, Batman and Robin, Return of Bruce Wayne and Batman Inc. this epic tale has finally reached its finale.

Thanks to all the artists who helped realise the story – Andy Kubert, JH Williams, John Van Fleet, Tony Daniel, Ryan Benjamin, Lee Garbett, Frank Quitely, Philip Tan, Cameron Stewart, Andy Clarke, Frazer Irving, Scott Kolins, Chris Sprouse, Ryan Sook, Yanick Paquette, Georges Jeanty, David Finch, Scott Clark and of course, Chris Burnham. 

Thanks to the inkers, colorists and letters and to my indefatigable editors.

Thanks to the readers who joined in the fun and contributed to the thought-provoking debates and analyses online. 

The conclusion is finally here, with only four more issues to go. Four issues which take Batman to dark places he has never had to visit before. Four issues and I’m done, while Batman himself continues into as yet unimagined future adventures. He’ll still be here long after I’m dead and forgotten; long after all of us have come and gone, there will be Batman. It’s been a joy and a privilege to spend so much time in the company of pop culture’s greatest character but it’s going to feel weird waking up and not having Bruce Wayne’s calm, commanding, ever-so-slightly cynical voice in my head. 

Batman forever…

- Grant 

Scotland, December 2012”

via DC Comics: The Source

Grant Morrison on his Legendary BATMAN Run


“Little did I suspect when I accepted the BATMAN writing assignment back in 2006 that I’d wind up spending the next six years writing the longest continued comic story I’ve ever attempted. I thought I’d said most of what I had to say about the character with Arkham Asylum, Gothic, and Batman’s appearances in JLA. Clearly, I was wrong.

The original pitch was for 15 issues winding up with BATMAN R.I.P. but something happened along the way and, as I was researching his rich history, I became fascinated by the idea that every Batman story was in some way true and biographical - from the savage, young, pulp-flavored “weird figure of the dark” of his early years, through the smiling, paternal figure of the 1940s and the proto-psychedelic crusader of the ‘50s, the superhero detective of the ‘60s, the hairy-chested globetrotting adventurer of the ‘70s, to the brutally physical vigilante of the ‘80s and snarling, paranoid soldier of the ‘90s.

By taking his entire publishing history as the story of his life, I was able to approach Batman from a different angle and the multifaceted character that was revealed became the subject of my story.

What would such a man be like, realistically? This was a man who had saved countless lives, faced innumerable perils, and even prevented the destruction of the world itself. This was a master of martial arts, meditation, deduction, yoga and big business. This was a man who had tamed and mastered his demons and turned personal tragedy into a relentless humanitarian crusade.

Taking that man seriously meant I had to throw out a few of the accepted ideas about Batman as a semi-unhinged, essentially humorless loner struggling with rage and guilt. The totality of his history and accomplishments made that portrayal seem limited and unconvincing, so instead, my Batman was a true superhero at the height of his powers and the peak of his abilities, surrounded by a network of friends and associates, all of whom had been inspired by his lead.

I chose to build my story around the basic trauma, the murder of his parents, that lies at the heart of Batman’s genesis. It seemed to me there would be a part of Bruce Wayne that resented his parents for leaving him and especially resented his father for not being Batman that night, so the principal villains were an archetypal bad father figure in the form of Dr. Hurt and a dark mother in the form of Talia, our villain for the concluding chapters of the story.

This master theme of damaged and ruined families was nowhere more in evidence than in the creation of Damian, the first “Son of Batman” to be acknowledged in the canon. In many ways this has been Damian’s story as much as it has been the story of Bruce Wayne and it’s a story that had its end planned a long time ago - for what son could ever hope to replace a father like Batman, who never dies?

And so, via Batman, Batman and Robin, Return of Bruce Wayne and Batman Inc. this epic tale has finally reached its finale.

Thanks to all the artists who helped realise the story – Andy Kubert, JH Williams, John Van Fleet, Tony Daniel, Ryan Benjamin, Lee Garbett, Frank Quitely, Philip Tan, Cameron Stewart, Andy Clarke, Frazer Irving, Scott Kolins, Chris Sprouse, Ryan Sook, Yanick Paquette, Georges Jeanty, David Finch, Scott Clark and of course, Chris Burnham.

Thanks to the inkers, colorists and letters and to my indefatigable editors.

Thanks to the readers who joined in the fun and contributed to the thought-provoking debates and analyses online.

The conclusion is finally here, with only four more issues to go. Four issues which take Batman to dark places he has never had to visit before. Four issues and I’m done, while Batman himself continues into as yet unimagined future adventures. He’ll still be here long after I’m dead and forgotten; long after all of us have come and gone, there will be Batman. It’s been a joy and a privilege to spend so much time in the company of pop culture’s greatest character but it’s going to feel weird waking up and not having Bruce Wayne’s calm, commanding, ever-so-slightly cynical voice in my head.

Batman forever…

- Grant

Scotland, December 2012”

05:36 pm: adburrows15 notes