Mega fan of: Helena Bertinelli (pre-52), Batwoman, Birds of Prey, Guardians of the Galaxy, Secret Six
Fan of: Batman, Cassandra Cain, Wonder Woman, Silk, Stephanie Brown, Captain America, Hellcat, Renee Montoya, Gotham Central, King Shark
Quasi-Fan of: Aquaman, Midnighter, Superman, Catwoman, Nightwing, Green Arrow, Squadron Supreme, Red Hood
Other likes: Low, Hush, Arkham Asylum: ASHoSE, Watchmen, A-Force, Bombshells, Grayson, Unfollow
Team Cap (both Rogers and Danvers)
This entire issue was great from beginning to end.
Is this a one shot or a series?
This is quite possibly the greatest DC comic ever created. Tom King has managed to turn a dumb crossover into legit one of the greatest single issues of Batman ever
I honestly thought it was pretty dreadful. Just one joke form beginning to end. Ah well, different strokes for different folks
I'm not on the "it's the greatest thing ever" bandwagon by any means, but this issue was a great read. I really enjoyed the way King took the Looney Tunes characters and gave them a serious, but not too serious slant, and Lee Weeks' art was perfect. LOVED the 'Year One' style suit.
"The more 'realistic' superheroes become the less believable they are." - David Mazzucchelli
Man I love when King does one off stories, this is definitely up their with his Green Lantern Darksied War issue and the Grayson Futures End issue.
This is definitely a classic of some kind.... I mean it makes the best use of its characters and setting by far.... Though to be honest I kind of thought there was a bit of a cop out at end... it didn't have the courage to go darker for this kind of story.... Film Noir narratives often have fatal consequences.
My God, I'd never pegged Tom King for a Looney Tunes fan but with all the references and the way he handled them in this I can't believe he isn't.
And the Robins showing up in the backup like that was hilarious. Bruce, you're terrible .
Silver St. Cloud, a notable love interest of Bruce Wayne.
By the end of this issue, I just wanted more of her, which I think was the point .
King's regular Batman was quite good, but this was a very weird experiment. A lot of the credit for the success has to go for Lee Weeks, who reimagined the Looney Tunes in Gotham's world.
Sincerely,
Thomas Mets
I thought it was great. An interesting take on the Looney Tunes characters in the main story, which really felt like an episode of B:TAS to me, and Lee Weeks is just amazing. Batman in the Looney Tunes world was great fun.
Such a great noir style story! It was an interesting take on classic Looney Tunes characters, reminded me of The Wolf among Us And it was funny! And Weeks' art was simply fantastic. Like him much more on Batman than Superman. Oh and the second story was a classic LT episode, so good. Great stuff!
Bought and read this today.
The story is called pway for me.
Genuis
"My name is Elmer Fudd. And I'm hunting pwayboys"
Wonderful
Bugs The Bunny
Fantastic
This really is a wonderful comic. It needs to be a series or something with Fudd and Batman because they were fantastic together. The way they made the WB characters grounded was genius tbh and having Elmer's dialog in all its glory made it all the better.
Plus, there's a backup comic in it too that is just as great. With the actual Bugs Bunny/Elmer and of course Batman.
Can't recommend it highly enough. It's inspired.
Tom King is being wasted on Batman writing average Batman stories. Let's get him on another book.
I don't know what it is -- editorial interference, King being too nervous writing the icon, or maybe he's just a bad regular Batman writer -- but his run has been so average. Let him work on other project he's more suited to.