Ratings60
Average rating4
Following his groundbreaking, critically acclaimed run on Detective Comics, Snyder begins a new era of The Dark Knight alongside artist Capullo when a series of brutal murders rocks Gotham City and Batman to the core.
Reviews with the most likes.
The concept is just getting so much better. This series just goes to show the kind of understanding that writers have of the Bat and his past. The links between each of the franchises is also immaculate with even some common scenes occurring across different POV's. This series takes collaboration to the next level and sets a very high benchmark for the other to follow. Can't wait to wrap this one up hopefully without the expected low that usually happens with such high quality writing.
Although I must admit I was not as much a fan of this graphic novel as I was Batman, Vol. 1: The Court of Owls, this one still drew me in and kept me hooked. I have come to be a fan of Scott Snyder's writing. He has kept it up throughout this arc as well as into the Zero Year arc.
My favorite chapter of this particular graphic novel was the one that centered on Alred's father. It was very nice to see a step away from the main story that simultaneously supported the main story and provided insight on Alfred, one of the most under-used characters in the Batman ethos. I also admired Snyder's skilled inclusion of Court of Owls mythology in so many of the Batman stories that we have heard before. So many keys that made Bruce Wayne into the Batman have their roots in the Court of Owls? Well done.
Whereas Batman, Vol. 1: The Court of Owls read more like a piece of fiction versus a true comic, The City of Owls moved the story back into the comic realm. This shift was not a detriment, but it provided a different feel for the arc. Gone were the explorations of many themes; in was the non-stop action element. With the exception of the notion that Lincoln March was in fact Bruce Wayne's brother, gone was the thought-provoking social commentary.
Long-time Batman fans should enjoy this arc as would those new to the Batman story. Kudos to Scott Snyder for a clever re-imagining of a well-known tale.
Who knew owls could be so dang creepy. Well, I guess a lot of people, but I never really thought of owls that way until this book.
Scott Snyder writes a great story. Bringing us into Bruce's past to pull the story tighter and making everything suspenseful and creepy. Revelations abound and no one is quite safe in their knowledge. He writes a slightly arrogant Batman, but then isn't that what he is. No one can do the job better than he can and he knows it. He needs no help from anyone, or at least that's what he tells himself. Yet without Alfred and the others he probably wouldn't still be alive. Speaking of Alfred, I really enjoyed the stuff with Jarvis and the letter he wrote to Alfred.
The art is clean and detailed. I'm not a huge fan of the shadowy panels that you see in a lot of comics. I want to see the details and be able to get more of the story from the art alone.
Monster Batman is the way too amazing. Thanks for that Mr. Capullo.
Series
4 primary books5 released booksBatman is a 285-book series with 4 primary works first released in 1593 with contributions by Peter David, Sam Kieth, and 163 others.
Series
9 primary books10 released booksBatman (2011) is a 15-book series with 10 primary works first released in 2011 with contributions by Scott Snyder, James Tynion IV, and 5 others.