Saint
Avenger
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As I said earlier, I'm not sure what's confusing after the last issue. That made everything clear enough.I can say that in my experience, whenever this comes up, someone inevitably asks me what happens, and all I can say is, "well...so far Bruce Wayne has been dosed with weaponized meth and heroin, and then he was dumped on the streets, where he talks to a Bat-Mite that probably isn't there, and beats the holy hell out of people in a multi-colored, pieced together Batsuit. The guy out to get him may or may not be Thomas Wayne, and Alfred may or may not be Bruce's real father." Needless to say, once all of that is out in the open, most people just say, "Eh..I sure did like The Dark Knight," and the discussion moves on.
I find the stunt to be a bit ridiculous, and terribly confusing.
That "Crisis stuff" was twenty-two years ago. The more recent Crisis seemed mostly to be about reintroducing select silver age elements.I thought that the point of all of this Crisis stuff, as far as Batman is concerned, was to move alot of the silly Silver Age stuff out of continuity...
For the record, you can find both of the stories Morrison has referenced in his run (Zurr-En-Arrh and the isolation chamber story) in The Greatest Batman Stories Ever Told.and it gets awfully confusing when Grant Morrison keeps on bringing it back into continuity, and then you've got to go on the damn internet and track down all of the obscure Batman titles. (I'm sure that someone else has already lamented that fact in this thread, but that doesn't make it any less of an issue.)
I loved that issue to death. Great stuff.I felt that the Joker Prose story was garbage
and I find it terribly confusing when The Joker only shows up in that form when Grant Morrison is writing him, but then when Dini writes him, all of this super psycho garbage is nowhere to be found, and he's not dressed like Marilyn Manson.[/quote]
Again, what's terribly confusing? The other writers just haven't reflected (yet) what Morrison has done. He can hardly be blamed for that.
Generally speaking, the number of people who go into comic book stores after seeing movies like Iron Man or The Dark Knight is negligible. More importantly, they will always be confused by the differences between the film and the comic.I can appreciate the fact that Morrison has got this all planned out, and I bet that it will work wonderfully as a Batman story when it's all said and done, but it is just crazy to present it to audiences as a monthly title. Especially when Batman is back in the public light again...but hey...who cares about new readers anyway?
Knowing Morrison's take on Batman, I've been waiting the entire run for something like that to happen, haha.that's pretty cool, I must admit.
I don't believe that for a second.because a Batman without Bruce Wayne is not going to sell...even if you put Dick Grayson under the cowl, it's still going to be Nightwing dressed up as Batman.
