How would you rate the arc overall now that #681 has come out? What are the good and bad parts, in your opinion?
Jezebel Jet would have been a mark against it, had it not turned out the way it did. I think the story--like all of Morrison's run--reads better as a whole than in installments. Morrison includes a lot of little details that are easy to forget in the months between issues. For example, until I re-read the entire run recently, I had completely forgotten about Mongrove Pierce and the Black Glove film.
The biggest problem with RIP was the way it was promoted. It was promoted as the end of Batman, when it reads as something
dedicated to Batman. An homage. The last hurrah before the curtain call.
In terms of quality, my only real problem was Tony Daniel's layouts. I like his rendering for the most part, but his storytelling can become confusing, which is
very bad in a Grant Morrison piece. Things that should not have been confusing were muddied by Daniel's art.
All things considered, though, I think RIP was great. Like I said, this seemed to be the ultimate homage to Batman: an entire arc dedicated to showing just how insurmountable he is. I'm one of those who has enjoyed Morrison's ideas about bringing Pre-Crisis stories back into continuity in different ways, so I enjoyed the inclusion of Bat-Mite, Zurr-En-Arrh, and Robin Dies at Dawn. Another virtue is that Morrison succeeded where Hush failed: he introduced a villain with ties to Batman's past and a mystery about him, but where Hush was a colossal failure (until Dini came along), Hurt is genuinely intriguing. I mean, the idea that he could even be the devil? Great stuff.
Coherence is usually a concern with Morrison, and if you asked me a few days ago I would have said coherence was a problem. After reading through the entire run, though, everything has become clear--except those things Morrison has left us in the dark about. The true identity of Hurt, of course. The other curiosity is the little green monster-thing that was always latched to Bat-mite's backside. What the hell was that?
Anyways, as a story and as a run, it's excellent. The real question is whether or not it properly serves to "end" Batman's career. A lot of complaints cite that this isn't a good "ending" for Batman. Of course, anyone who is honest can see that this is just a part of the story. What's really important is yet to come--and that is, where is Batman going and
why isn't he going to be Batman any longer. RIP doesn't answer those questions, but I imagine it will be a part of those answers, which it appears we'll be getting next month.
Hurt said that the next time Batman put on the cowl, it would be his last. I'm betting on that being much more than an empty threat.