Detective Comics




Comic Summary: Written by Paul Dini Art by Dustin Nguyen & Derek Fridolfs Cover by Nguyen Fan favorite artist Dustin Nguyen (SUPERMAN/BATMAN) joins Paul Dini on DETECTIVE COMICS as new regular penciler! Still haunted by the specter of Ra's Al Ghul, Batman returns to Gotham to face a new threat in the form of The Globe, a map-obsessed mastermind who charts his crimes with deadly accuracy. On sale January 2
Codes: 76194120019484011 NOV070188
- Price:
$2.99$2.39- Author:
- Paul Dini
- Artist:
- Derek Fridolfs
- Artist:
- Dustin Nguyen
- Cover Artist:
- Dustin Nguyen
- Release Date:
- January 2, 2008
- In Stock?
- Not currently available
- Genre:
- Superhero
- Colouring:
- FC
- Lists:
- Not on any lists. Start your own!
Customer Reviews
Detective Comics #840 presents an interesting conundrum, and I can’t tell if I’m being Crabby Fanboy by even mentioning it, but whatever: Would Batman really think it was cool to kick Ra’s Al Ghul out the window of a skyscraper? Granted, I’m not totally up on every chapter in the decades-long Batman vs. Ra’s saga, but I do seem to recall Batman’s whole “I don’t kill” thing, and given that the Joker racks up body counts in the hundreds within twenty-two pages of story, and Batman has no problem carting him to Arkham without a second thought, this same Batman effectively killing Ra’s with the aforementioned skyscraper window kick rings…false? Stupid? Ill-conceived?
It’s weird, because there’s something sorta dumb about the whole issue, but I was willing to cut Dini some breaks, since it’s got Ra’s and Bats playing a wacky round of supergenius oneupsmanship. It appealed to the necessary sense of absurd inherent in superhero comics, something that’s become a bit of a theme for Dini’s run on the title.
Then the kicking, and the news that Batman’s sneaking into Arkham to inject Ra’s with some kind of crazy debilitating drug, and it’s like…really? Seriously? Would Batman really do this? Should Batman really do this? And at the end of the day, did Ra’s get brought back to life just so that one issue later Batman could effectively trap him indefinitely in Arkham? Wouldn’t the point of bringing a dead villain back to life be to then use that dead villain in stories?
Ugh. A great run piddled away by piss-poor writing.






