Batman: Beyond the White Knight

The thing about this page is that it’s never used. We’ve had this site for nine years, and I have written here five times, not since 2017… where I apparently advocated for the first six episodes of Netflix’s Iron Fist. Ouch. And the thing about me is that I want to write. I want to write and never make time. I want to write and can’t get out of my head when I try to commit. I want to write but refuse to practice… ridiculous. So I’m going to write here about things I like, and I might even try other formats elsewhere. Short stories sound fun. Maybe a novel. I felt like if I verbalized my desire to write to enough people, I might not be able to back out. It hasn’t worked yet and I’ve been doing it for years now, but there’s a chance I’m finally reaching a critical mass where my only recourse is action.

Anyway, one of those five measly previous posts was about Tokyo Ghost, a series by Sean Murphy and Rick Remender and Matt Hollingsworth; I wrote the post before the series was released because the art previews had me pumped for the story. I found Murphy’s art for the first time in The Wake, a Vertigo series he created with Scott Snyder, and it was more than enough to get me to follow him from Chrononauts to Tokyo Ghost, and then there was his Batman. When Batman: White Knight came out, written and drawn by Murphy, it lived up to everything I wanted: a fresh story with costumes and vehicles and action that were all uniquely styled. And then his Batman universe expanded into continuing storylines, what Wikipedia (and I’m guessing many other people) call the Murphyverse.

In July of 2019, I picked up the first issue of Batman: Curse of the White Knight. It had Azrael, a character with an awesome costume that I hadn’t seen since I was a kid following the breaking of the bat storyline, and he was wielding a sword on fire. Obviously, I was in. But then, a week later, I deployed to Iraq and I just never made it back to the Murphyverse. At least, not until Beyond the White Knight started coming out in March of this year. I like this book a lot, for all the reasons I liked White Knight and then some. There are a lot of familiar Batman characters in unfamiliar roles, but my favorite by far is the Joker (or Jack, if his preference is observed). The corporeal Joker of the Murphysverse is dead, but the character in Beyond is a version of his personality that has been artificially distilled onto a microchip in Bruce Wayne’s head. The banter between Bruce and Jack is some of the funnier stuff I’ve seen in a Batman comic. There are three issues of this series out now, and the fourth of eight should be out this week. There’s so much going on in these books, I haven’t even mentioned the titular Terry McGinnis/Batman Beyond storyline. I’m looking forward to catching up on all things White Knight and would recommend it to anyone who is interested.

Marvel Studios' Superior Spider-Man?

Marvel Studios' Superior Spider-Man?

The final trailer for Captain America: Civil War was released this week, and it had what a lot of us were waiting for: our first glimpse of a Spider-Man from a movie studio that can't seem to screw anything up. Wait... that might be an overstatement. To be more accurate, when you compare the track record of Marvel Studios to other production companies like Fox or Sony (another Fantastic Four movie, anyone?), even some of their more suspect movies start to shine a little brighter. The trailer is about two and a half minutes long and they save Spider-Man for the last five seconds, but what a glorious and thrilling five seconds. 

Tokyo Ghost

Tokyo Ghost

The first issue of Tokyo Ghost, created by Rick Remender and Sean Murphy, was released by Image Comics last Wednesday. I have been looking forward to this book for months and have probably mentioned it several times on the podcast: I like what I've read from Remender and I'm not shy about proclaiming my love for all things drawn by Sean Murphy, even when the opinion is unsolicited (which is always). 

Revisiting Scott Pilgrim because...

Revisiting Scott Pilgrim because...

I finally did it.  It took almost a full twelve months, but I finally finished all six volumes of Bryan Lee O'Malley's Scott Pilgrim.  First, I should make clear that it's not like Scott Pilgrim is the new Iliad: yes, the books are lengthy, but they're also super easy to read.  It's just that I'm easily distracted. Also, I already knew the basic storyline from many, many viewings of the 2010 movie, so the prolonged duration of my reading is kind of justified.  Secondly, the books are great. For real. But they really just made me want to return to the movie and soak it in again. Yes, the same movie that was met with critical apathy and general disdain from the viewing public.