Tuesday, 6 December 2022

Batman: Urban Legends #20 [Part Two] - DC Comics

BATMAN: URBAN LEGENDS No. 20, December 2022
Essentially comprising of a story-long argument between Bruce Wayne and Talia al Ghul, Nadia Shammas’ distinctly feisty “My Son” certainly maintains this anthology book’s atmosphere of adrenalin-fuelled action. But whilst there’s nothing wrong with witnessing an unmasked Dark Knight patiently fend off his angry former lover with a series of feints and parries, the entire tale, strangely set at the bottom of the stairs leading up to an unconscious Damian’s sickbed in Wayne Manor, is debatably fairly frustratingly contrived.

True, the female master assassin is the daughter of the super villainous Demon's Head, so perhaps it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise to this publication’s readers that she can enter the billionaire’s home by simply tunnelling straight through a brick wall with some sort of acidic smoke device. However, some bibliophiles may find the ease with which proficient penciller Jahnoy Lindsay illustrates her rather dramatically penetrating the mansion a bit disconcerting considering its state-of-art security measures. In addition, the entire fracas is apparently due to Nightwing failing to check his explosive equipment before conducting a routine evening patrol – something which seems rather incredulous considering the fastidiousness of Dick Grayson’s long-time mentor and the former Teen Titan’s usual attention to such details.

Arguably much more intriguing is “The Murder Club” by Joey Esposito, which rather neatly dangles the audience along with its suggestion of a mysterious cult murdering Gotham City’s super-rich in a terrifyingly gruesome way; “Gradual rotting of the flesh, then sudden violent psychosis until the body gives out.” Indeed, Batman’s investigation into the fifth such killing “in as many months” has all the hallmarks of being a classic crime thriller involving the World’s Greatest Detective, especially as this four-parter’s opening instalment features the Caped Crusader confronting his arch-nemesis the Penguin. Unnervingly however, the author then completely wrong-foots everybody by revealing the shock identities of a couple who initially appear destined to be the contagion’s next victims, with a genuine, jaw-dropping cliff-hanger.

Also adding some palpable edge to this twenty-one-page plot is Vasco Georgiev, whose ability to capture all the grotesque physicality of Oswald Chesterfield Cobblepot alone makes this adventure well worth perusing. Coupled with Alex Guimaraes' colours, the Swiss provides some incredibly atmospheric layouts to this fable, not least of which is its appropriately dark, heavily shadowed opening inside the Gotham City Medical Examiner's Office.

Writers: Nadia Shammas and Joey Esposito, and Artists: Jahnoy Lindsay and Vasco Georgiev

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