|
While technically not a 'Rebirth' title, Detective Comics #934 is filled with its branding and with a reversion back to its original numbering and new statement of identity, you could say Detective Comics has been rebirthed. In the New 52, Detective Comics struggled for an identity beyond existing as a B-Side Batman book. Prior to the New 52, the book was something of an anthology title with leads changing arc to arc, often serving as a testing ground for characters like Batwoman Kate Kane. Now under the authorship James Tynion IV and the art team of Eddy Barrows, Eber Ferreira, and Adriano Lucas, Detective Comics gains a new identity as the Bat-Family team book.
Numerically it isn't the first issue but #934 marks the start of "Rise of the Batmen" and that brings with it a lot of foundation laying. This isn't the emotional foundation laid in Green Arrow: Rebirth but a plot one as Batman recruits Batwoman, Red Robin Tim Drake, Spoiler Stephanie Brown, Orphan Cassandra Cain, and Clayface Basil Karlo. Talking about plot is boring but there is a very functional economy to these introductions and recruitments. All but Batwoman's lasts just 2 pages. It's like any good recruitment montage from Seven Samurai or Ocean's Eleven(2001), a characters team functionality and emotional dynamics are quickly established and it's on to the next one.
The art team dose a fantastic job giving these pages' real flow, from Batwoman's splash page introduction to the final page on the roof. A common design element is to have an overriding large cell that establishes the environment with smaller cells for emotive character responses. Best seen in the recruitment of Basil Karlo, the most surprising member of the team. The art team works to render Clayface different than the rest of the team. He's colored softer and kind of opaque, lacking not the strong lines that give a firmly corporeal feel to the Bat people. The midtown theater establishes the tragedy of C
|