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Batman Incorporated, Vol. 1

de Grant Morrison, Chris Burnham (Ilustrador), Scott Clark (Ilustrador), Yanick Paquette (Ilustrador), Cameron Stewart (Ilustrador)

Outros autores: Dave Beatty (Colorist), Patrick Brosseau (Letterer), Sal Cipriano (Letterer), Nathan Fairbairn (Colorist, Variant Cover Colorist), John J. Hill (Letterer)1 mais, Dave Sharpe (Letterer)

Séries: Batman, Incorporated (Vol. 1 #1-8), Batman, Incorporated [2011] (Volume 1), Batman by Grant Morrison (Volume 10)

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Grant Morrison continues his Earth-shattering run on the Batman titles with this exciting series illustrated by hot artist Yanick Paquette that features the next stage of evolution of the Dark Knight. Bruce Wayne publicly announces that he is the financial backer of Batman and establishes a worldwide franchise of Batmen that will protect the entire globe. This is the beginning of a stunning direction for the world's greatest detective that will team him with Catwoman, Batwoman and Batman, Inc. representatives on international crime fighting missions against Lord Death Man in Japan, South America and Argentina.… (mais)
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Batman has come back from the dead and decided that it's not just Gotham that's broke, but the whole world is in need of it's own Batman.

Bruce therefore funds the setup of Batman Inc, where each city/region gets it's own Batman. Often it's the case of a local anti-crime crusader who agrees to take on the Batman frachise.

This is a collection of the first 8 Batman Inc stories, that shows Wayne with several local Batmans in the fight against Levithan, a new powerful enemy. The whole Bat family are included, as well as some of the usual supporting characters (e.g. catwoman), and some new ones.

Not everyone trusts Wayne, sometimes because of his money, sometimes because of previous history on an personal level - Batman is the father of the young current Robin, whose mother is (apparently) dead and beloved by other people in the Inc.

Some of the graphics are stand out, especially the chapter spent in the computer with the avatars. The multi batman army is menacing. It's good to see the inclusion of "local" crime fighters (e.g. the South Americans, the Japanese and the Africans) - hopefully this will give the non-North American characters some wider exposure. There is some indication in the supporting text that these characters were chosen because they have already been established in their native market sometime in the past, so were given a new lease of life. ( )
  nordie | Oct 14, 2023 |
1555 ( )
  freixas | Mar 31, 2023 |
3.5⭐️ ( )
  deannachapman | Sep 15, 2021 |
I wrestled with what I was going to write about this one for a while. This is the beginning of the final act of the saga Morrison kicked off in "Batman and Son", and it's sort of a mixed bag in a lot of ways. The premise that's promised is great (Batman forms up a Justice League which consists only of Batmen), but the execution is debatable in a lot of ways.

The first two issues, "Mr. Unknown Is Dead" and "Resurrector!" are definitely a fun start to the collection. Batman and Catwoman take off to Japan to recruit the Japanese Batman, Mr. Unknown, only to discover he's been killed by the disturbing-yet-hilarious Lord Death Man (who apparently shouts every single sentence he says, and at one point, punctuates a sentence just by shouting "LORD DEATH MAN!" It's something you have to read to believe.) I really dig that Morrison brings in the breathless "Same Bat-time" ending narration from the Adam West Batman. ("LORD DEATH MAN LIVES TO TAKE LIFE, AND HE'S ONLY JUST BEGUN!")

The next two issues, "Scorpion Tango" and "The Kane Affair" are Morrison setting up dominoes - we get the reintroduction of Kathy Kane, the 1950's Batwoman, as well as the introduction of 60s supervillain Otto Netz/Doctor Dedalus. "Scorpion Tango" suffers from some slightly muddled plotting, but "The Kane Affair" is a cool "flashback issue", with appropriately altered art.

"Masterspy" is where my frustration with the book starts. The book is clearly intended to sort of dovetail with the Club of Heroes stuff from the Black Glove/RIP, but Batman takes off to England and we get a totally different "British Batman", The Hood, who's more of a James Bond-ish character. (The Knight from Black Glove/RIP is nowhere to be found, and this is never addressed -- which I found frustrating, since we clearly see him in a flashback sequence with other British superheroes). The writing around Doctor Dedalus and his grand plan isn't really that clear - while I understand that craziness and a lack of clarity is totally Morrison's jam, it doesn't improve over time (see below).

"Nyktomorph", luckily, is a really great issue to resolve any frustrations to date. The frame story is cool (a bunch of villains hire "the private eye of the underworld", Nykto Nero, to figure out what Batman's up to), and we get a look at a bunch of different aspects of Batman, Incorporated. I especially want to call this issue out for continuing to pay off long-running background character Ellie, who I think has been showing up from time to time in the Morrison Batman books since Batman and Son, which just makes me happy.

"Medicine Soldiers" is another great issue, focusing on the "Native American" Batman and Robin, Man-of-Bats and Raven Red. I don't want to say a lot about this one since the premise is so good. This might be my favorite issue of the bunch, and I'd kill for an ongoing Man-of-Bats/Raven Red title.

"Nightmares in Numberland" is another point where, like "Masterspy", I think Morrison really failed to deliver on a great premise. It's definitely a cool idea (Oracle is the Batman of Wayne Industries' new virtual reality system), but it's a muddled mess that uses the same type of terrible CG graphics that showed up in "The Clown at Midnight" in Batman and Son.

"The School of Night" and "Leviathan Strikes!" round out the collection. I really enjoyed "The School of Night", which has Stephanie Brown/Batgirl undercover at an all-girls' school being run by Leviathan. Stephanie has got much more character to her than the other POV characters so far, and this starts to tie together a lot of the threads seen in previous issues. I'm still really weirded out by the fact that three of the teachers appear to be Katy Perry, Rihanna, and Lady Gaga, and I'm not sure that I buy the argument that they're supposed to be Dragonfly/Tiger Moth/Silken Spider (as there's never any reference made to this in the book itself).

"Leviathan Strikes" is an issue that I'm a little frustrated with, as it's supposed to be the big climax, and it has some truly incredible art, but the high Morrisonian weirdness level in this story seems keeps it from greatness a little bit for me. I'm also really turned off by the ending - was it really, really necessary for us to have a character's severed head graphically depicted? Really? Bleh.

Overall, I enjoyed this collection. My big meta-complaint is that Morrison's promised idea (Batman recruits other Batmen all over the world) doesn't really get delivered on. Most of the characters that we meet either have their own ongoing titles, or are characters Morrison reuses from The Black Glove. The art is incredible (except for the computer-generated stuff in "Nightmares in Numberland", which really needs to get banned from comics altogether), and Morrison's crazy Batman saga continues to entertain, but I have some big reservations about it that keep me from giving it the full five stars. ( )
  skolastic | Feb 2, 2021 |
I thought this was okay, but I think that some of the other Batmen could have been used more. In particular, considering all the contraversy that Nightrunner sparked, he was ultimately just a throwaway character, and I think he could have been used more. ( )
  Count_Zero | Jul 7, 2020 |
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Nome do autorFunçãoTipo de autorObra?Status
Morrison, GrantAutorautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Burnham, ChrisIlustradorautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Clark, ScottIlustradorautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Paquette, YanickIlustradorautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Stewart, CameronIlustradorautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Beatty, DaveColoristautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Brosseau, PatrickLettererautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Cipriano, SalLettererautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Fairbairn, NathanColorist, Variant Cover Coloristautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Hill, John J.Lettererautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Sharpe, DaveLettererautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
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Grant Morrison continues his Earth-shattering run on the Batman titles with this exciting series illustrated by hot artist Yanick Paquette that features the next stage of evolution of the Dark Knight. Bruce Wayne publicly announces that he is the financial backer of Batman and establishes a worldwide franchise of Batmen that will protect the entire globe. This is the beginning of a stunning direction for the world's greatest detective that will team him with Catwoman, Batwoman and Batman, Inc. representatives on international crime fighting missions against Lord Death Man in Japan, South America and Argentina.

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