THE BATMAN AND SCOOBY-DOO MYSTERIES No. 6, August 2024 |
Debatably this narrative’s biggest annoyance though can be found in Velma Dinkley’s holier than thou haughtiness, and the young girl’s obsessive compulsion to solve a riddle - even when it’s abundantly clear to the audience that the knee-high sock-wearing sleuth is being set-up. Such a fixation also requires the “New York Times bestselling comic book writer” to pen many a contrivance so as to let the young girl reach her goal, with the most notable being when the team are allowed to just walk past a national bank’s security unit straight to its central vault, and crack its lock so they can peruse its numerous safety deposit boxes.
Of course, many a bibliophile will need to be mindful that this issue’s more ludicrous sequences were probably written with humour in mind, such as Shaggy Rogers replacing Scooby-Doo at a dog grooming salon whilst the others explore the shop for evidence. But it’s hard to ignore the likes of Fred Jones fortuitously finding a stethoscope in a flower pot right beside the strong room just after he had successfully completed “an online safecracking course this summer while I was bored.”
Disappointingly adding to this overriding feeling of lethargy are Dario Bruizuela’s layouts, which apart from an initial flurry at the start when Daphne Blake is sketched running for her life from a ghost inside Huntingstun Library, generally struggle to add any adrenalin to the periodical’s proceedings. In addition, many of the panels appear disconcertingly empty apart from the figures of the central cast, with the scenes set inside the bank’s safe looking particularly plain and uninteresting.
Written by: Amanda Deibert, Drawn by: Dario Brizuela, and Coloured by: Franco Riesco |
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