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Loading... Batman: The Resurrection of Ra's Al Ghulby Grant Morrison, Paul Dini, Peter Milligan
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I will say that I was a bit skeptical at first. I read Morrison's Batman and Son, and I was not very pleased with the convoluted mess of a plot it had. And yet, I find the character of Ra's intriguing enough to pick this up. This book is definitely an improvement. The storyline seems a bit tighter for one. There are still some small meanderings, which make me wonder if Morrison and company just have short attention spans, kind of like, "ooh, shiny sidetrack idea" kind of feeling. However, this was definitely a pleasant and entertaining read. As I said, a tighter plot for one. It was expansive, with good art to match. Good action for the fans of action in their comics. This is one I would be willing to reread, and that can serve as a good recommendation. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesBatman by Grant Morrison (Interlude) Batman Vol. 1 (1940-2011) (collections) (670-671) ContainsHas the (non-series) sequel
Batman's immortal foe, Ra's al Ghul, should be dead at last - so how has he returned to haunt The Dark Knight? And what does his return have to do with Batman's teenage son, Damian - whose mother is Ra's al Ghul's daughter, Talia? It will take the combined skills of Batman, Robin, and Nightwing to get to the bottom of these mysteries and stop Ra's al Ghul's insidious plans! Written by superstars GRANT MORRISON (BATMAN), Paul Dini (DETECTIVE COMICS) and Peter MIlligan (ROBIN), BATMAN: THE RESURRECTION OF RA'S AL GHUL is filled with shocking twists and stunning revelations! Collects Batman #670-671, ROBIN #168-169, DETECTIVE COMICS #838-839, NIGHTWING #138-139, BATMAN ANNUAL #26 and ROBIN ANNUAL #7. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)741.5973Arts & recreation Design & related arts Drawing and drawings Comic books, graphic novels, fotonovelas, cartoons, caricatures, comic strips History, geographic treatment, biography North American United States (General)LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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That being said while enjoying the story to extent following was reaaaally annoying:
- Continuity issue - this is not standalone book but excerpt (or plugin?) work that fills the pages of other books (in case you ever wondered while reading them - oh, man what was X/Y/Z doing at this time.....reading a book, going to night club? hmmmmm, I wonder). Because of this you will end up with switches between stories that do converge to a degree (sometimes take a loooong time to converge) but as soon as they do kablam new arc starts (continues?) and you have to wonder what? Again I understand these are comics and stuff but this seems to be just like a filler release without any attempt to link the dots for us petty fools that are not up to date with Bat-Family issues. Not to mention the enemies here - Sensei, Sensei's Men of Death (they recover faster than anyone I ever saw, Batman kicks them in a seconds and then few pages back they are not just alive but making life miserable for all our heroes), those three weird women masked heroes who look more like characters from Kick-Ass then from DC whose sole purpose is to come in, make idiots of themselves and fade out in the closing pages of the arc....... as I said due to nature of the work it is not possible to connect all the dots.
- Bat Family ..... somewhere in the middle this started to read like Santa Barbara for caped crusaders. You have Nightwing and Robin duking it out because they are true sons of Batman. In the middle of this daddy issue conflict enter Damian, actual biological son of Batman (who is simply a spoiled brat trained as an assassin and unable to make one logical and sound action in the entire book) who scorns above mentioned two (grown ups? I dont think so) and makes such an idiot of himself that I hope Talia beat some sense into him after she run away with him.It is nice to have a junior with spunk and attitude but some brains would be good too. I understand need for internal conflict and emotional aspect of the story but do we truly need to have it presented in the way that would embarrass most soap opera writers? Not to mention that half the issues these three are talking about are unknown [to anyone outside of the loop] so it all looks rather very silly (again due to the continuity issues, see above).
- Art is a mixed bag here. For obvious continuity reasons and story spanning what I expect to be dozens of books so artists are changed ever so often. In some issues art is very good but in others it looks so .... weird, like 3D animations gone bad way that it is disconcerting.
All in all interesting read. If you are knowledgeable of the background (or parallel stories to this story) I think you will enjoy it more. For me it was an interesting book but with issues (art and internal relations that were presented in such a dramatic way I was feeling embarrassed for all the heroes involved). ( )