Not sure how their individual runs will rank, but this is probably strongest Batman/Detective combo we had in more than 10 years.
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Not sure how their individual runs will rank, but this is probably strongest Batman/Detective combo we had in more than 10 years.
[QUOTE=HsssH;6148212]Ram is saying that the first issue sold out and is going to second printing: [url]https://twitter.com/therightram/status/1555005195041619969[/url][/QUOTE]
That's good to hear :).
[QUOTE=HsssH;6148249]Not sure how their individual runs will rank, but this is probably strongest Batman/Detective combo we had in more than 10 years.[/QUOTE]
I think when people think of the best Batman/Detective combo, they usually think of Morrison/Dini's post-IC runs.
Although there are probably some nostalgic for the Rebirth King/Tynion era.
[QUOTE=HsssH;6148212]Ram is saying that the first issue sold out and is going to second printing: [url]https://twitter.com/therightram/status/1555005195041619969[/url][/QUOTE]
Cover for the second printing: [url]https://mobile.twitter.com/TotinoTedesco/status/1555216751511719937[/url]
[QUOTE=Frontier;6148780]That's good to hear :).
I think when people think of the best Batman/Detective combo, they usually think of Morrison/Dini's post-IC runs.
Although there are probably some nostalgic for the Rebirth King/Tynion era.[/QUOTE]
I am odd, in that I do love KingBats and TynionBats, but not while they were running at the same time. I liked KingBats best after the Wedding, and Tynion ended his run before that, and I definitely didn't think Hill or Robinson or Tomasi during the second part King's run were stellar quality.
I personally really liked the combo of James Tynion and Mariko Tamaki, though.
[QUOTE=millernumber1;6148910]I am odd, in that I do love KingBats and TynionBats, but not while they were running at the same time. I liked KingBats best after the Wedding, and Tynion ended his run before that, and I definitely didn't think Hill or Robinson or Tomasi during the second part King's run were stellar quality.
I personally really liked the combo of James Tynion and Mariko Tamaki, though.[/QUOTE]
KingBats definitely fell off for me around the wedding, though I never felt like their runs gelled as well together or there was quite the chemistry there could've been there, but that's just me. Obviously everyone else was just fill-in's but I guess Tomasi was there for back-to-basics Bat stuff.
[QUOTE=Frontier;6148780] . . . [B]Although there are probably some nostalgic for the Rebirth King/Tynion era.[/B][/QUOTE][SIZE=1]Not me . . . I actually wasn't buying either title after the [B][I]Detective Comics[/I][/B] issue with the first issue of the miserable "Night of the Monster Men" crossover.[/SIZE]
[QUOTE=MajorHoy;6149143][SIZE=1]Not me . . . I actually wasn't buying either title after the [B][I]Detective Comics[/I][/B] issue with the first issue of the miserable "Night of the Monster Men" crossover.[/SIZE][/QUOTE]
Night of the Monster Men was not something I enjoyed. But I think the rest of Tynion's run is really good.
My impression was that Night of the Monster Men was mostly done by Orlando?
Correct. King, Tynion, and Seeley are credited on the books, but I don't think they did most of the writing.
[QUOTE=millernumber1;6150272]Correct. King, Tynion, and Seeley are credited on the books, but I don't think they did most of the writing.[/QUOTE]Didn't matter to me . . . the Tynion run on [B][I]Detective Comics[/I][/B] just prior to "[I][FONT=Comic Sans MS]Night of the Monster Men[/FONT][/I]" was still miserable, with Tynion pushing Tim as the brightest, the smartest, the bestest crimefighter in all of Gotham City . . . it was as if Tynion wanted to father Tim's children!
[QUOTE=MajorHoy;6150341]Didn't matter to me . . . the Tynion run on [B][I]Detective Comics[/I][/B] just prior to "[I][FONT=Comic Sans MS]Night of the Monster Men[/FONT][/I]" was still miserable, with Tynion pushing Tim as the brightest, the smartest, the bestest crimefighter in all of Gotham City . . . it was as if Tynion wanted to father Tim's children![/QUOTE]
Tim's great, though! And it was because he knew he wouldn't be able to use Tim for a year or more after that.
I always appreciated Tynion's enthusiasm for Tim if not the execution.
I liked Tynion’s Tec run myself, first Tynion Bat series I enjoyed.
Ram V is off to a good start, it’s funny how both V and Zdarsky are bringing back Morrison concepts in a big way.
[QUOTE=Vordan;6154696]it’s funny how both V and Zdarsky are bringing back Morrison concepts in a big way.[/QUOTE]
I will always have mixed feelings on this. I am a huge Morrison fan, and while I can appreciate some when writers honor him or whatever by using some character or group or element from his run, I also note that often the bigger more fundamental aspects of Morrison's Batman (the ones I suspect he wished more writers noticed or appreciated) are left out (though I'm not yet indicting Chip or Ram regarding this point). Like Morrison writing a more zen or spiritually holistic Batman....as Morrison put it in 2009: "I popularized the idea of the healthy, Zen-warrior Batman as an alternative to the slightly-hysterical, obsessed and violent portrayal of the character that had gained ground."
[QUOTE=JBatmanFan05;6155961]I will always have a mixed feelings on this. I am a huge Morrison fan, and while I can appreciate some when writers honor him or whatever by using some character or group or element from his run, I also note that often the bigger more fundamental aspects of Morrison's Batman (the ones I suspect he wished more writers noticed or appreciated) are left out (though I'm not yet indicting Chip or Ram regarding this point). Like Morrison writing a more zen or spiritually holistic Batman....as Morrison put it in 2009: "I popularized the idea of the healthy, Zen-warrior Batman as an alternative to the slightly-hysterical, obsessed and violent portrayal of the character that had gained ground."[/QUOTE]
That is a very good point. I will admit, I'm not a big fan of Morrison's writing, partly because despite the attempt to make Batman a "Zen Master" as Morrison called him, ultimately Morrison's run left Batman looking like a complete failure. Which I think was meta commentary on coporate comics, etc etc, but I didn't enjoy it at all. The Zen Master Who Does Lots Of Drugs And Realizes Things About Reality thing is part of my current Unifying Theory of Batman Writers, which is that every writer who handles Bruce for a significant period of time (longer than two years, mostly) ultimately highlights something about their own personality and experience that they find connects to the Batman story. Morison was the Zen Master fighting the Lost Mother (and failing), Snyder was the terrified parent fighting terrorism (and losing), King was the aged warrior/spy looking for love (and failing...mostly), Tynion was the man who loves his city and his family more than anything in the world. I don't have the strongest grasp on what Tamaki wanted to say about Bruce, partly because her run wasn't quite long enough, partly because she deliberately focused on other Batfamily characters, particularly Huntress (perhaps significant? Can't say, but I did really like her run).
Anyway. I am very interested to see what Ram V and Chip Zdarsky have to reveal about themselves in Bruce Wayne.