Adam Graham's Blog: Christians and Superheroes - Posts Tagged "tim-drake"

Book Review: Robin/Batgirl: Fresh Blood

Robin/Batgirl: Fresh Blood Robin/Batgirl: Fresh Blood by Bill Willingham

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


Fresh Blood is a crossover Batgirl, collecting Issue 132 and 133 of Robin and 58 and 59 of Batgirl. tween Tim Drake's Roin and Cassandra Cain's Batgirl. It comes from before the current practice where every comic book series and storyline gets a trade, and having read it, I wonder why anyone thought this was worth collecting, and even better why it was worth doing.

The story opens with the once-cheery optimistic Robin in a very dark place as he's had to bury his father and girlfriend within 24 hours. takes over crimefighting in Bludhaven after Nightwing left and acts in a very brutal way until he attracts the attention until he's overpowered by the assassin Shrike. At that time, Batgirl enters the story. We find that Batman thought she was almost ready for a city of her own and to fill Bludhaven, but that he also saw that she and Tim could help each other and be a well-balanced team. And throughout the second part of the story, we do indeed see how a Cain-Drake team could work and how they would make very strong crimefighting partners.

The next two issues totally blows the potential of that team in a dull and idiotic story that has one of Batman's most famous rogues acting like a total idiot and the team ending for stupid reasons. On top of that, the art is wonky.

This isn't completely horrible but it plays a nasty trick by really making something look promising and then pulling the rug out from under the read by executing in the stupidest way imaginable.



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Published on January 27, 2019 23:13 Tags: batgirl, cassandra-cain, robin, tim-drake

Book Review: Robin, The Boy Wonder: A Celebration of 75 Years

Robin, The Boy Wonder: A Celebration of 75 Years Robin, The Boy Wonder: A Celebration of 75 Years by Bill Finger

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This book celebrates the 75th Anniversary of Robin in 2015 by dedicating a section to each Robin. My thoughts on each section below:

1) Dick Grayson:

This section leans heavily into using Robin stories that have been repinted over and over again. Including his origin, the time that Bruce Wayne lost costudy of him to scheming relatives, and that type he behaved like a jerk to a girl who wanted to be a crimefighter, and the bicentenial issue where he teamed up with Batgirl to fight a demonically powered Benedict Arnold. These aren't bad, but I've read them all before. There are two exceptions. The Golden Age Robin Solo story, "The Barton Brothers" is a nice little story where he rounds up three criminal brothers with different hooks and gimmicks. Then there's the "Robin" chapter from Nightwing Year One which is actually kind of dreadful.

2) Jason Todd:

Wa get a look at the start of Jason's post-crisis origin and we get the second half of the comic that ended with a 900 number people would call to vote whether he would die. In between, there's a story where Batman and Robin are dealing with a diplomat's son who has a nasty way of treating women and we're left question how far this Robin might go. It's a bit light and incomplete, but Todd's era was short.

3) Tim Drake:
We get the issue where Drake first put on the costume of Robin, a downbeat Robin story by Chuck Dixon, and a team up between Robin and Nighwing that allows the characters to interact.Then there's a Superboy/Robin team up in the pages of Superman/Batman that's high on action, low on character development. These arent bad, but I think you start to see the challenge of putting modern comics with a book like this. The one-shot is rear and comics are written "for the trade." So of the four stories, we have one issue plucked out of multi-part story, and two other one-shots that aren't particularly remarkable and also written by people who didn't write Tim Drake.

4) Damian Wayne:
We get the issue where Damian comes to the Batcave and thinks he's going to claim his inheritance. He's surly and insufferable, but then again, that's Damian Wayne for you, particularly in the early days. We have an issue from Superman/Batman where there's a team-up with Supergirl, which works quite well. And then we have Batman and Robin Annual #1 from 2013 by Peter Tomasi in which Damian gets Batman to take a vacation in Europe and lays out a trail of clues leading him to reconnect with his family heritage while Damian dons the cowl in Bruce's absence and tries to hide it. I actually love this story the most. It does a great job showing how Damian's developed and the complicated relationship between father and son. It's great work anda reminder that I really need to check out Batman and Robin by Peter Tomasi.

5) Other Robins:
This is a big fault I have with this book. To most people, Robin is either Dick Grayson, Tim Drake, or Damian Wayne. Throwing in some alternate Earth versions is kind of silly and I think it would have been better to feature more stories with these characters.

"The Super-Crisis that Struck Earth-Two" barely features the pre-Crisis Earth 2 Robin and is actually the first of a two part story no tincluded in the book.

"The Dark Knight Triumphant" is a classic dark piece of comic writing from Batman: The Dark Knight by Frank Miller, but the alternate Robin barely features amongst people talking on cable news.

"Head Games" is a throwaway story about some future robot "Robin the Toy Wonder" from the DC One Million Event.

"A Life More Ordinary" is the most defensible story for inclusion in the book as its about Stephanie Brown becoming Robin for a brief time. Even here, I think it doesn't make as much sense or carry as much weith without the context.

Overall, if you've not read a whole lot about Robin, this isn't a bad collection to check out, and there are some good stories in here, but there are also a few stories that are thrown in and some of this that just feels like its being too cute by half with its selction critera.




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Published on July 21, 2020 23:04 Tags: damian-wayne, dick-grayson, jason-todd, robin, tim-drake

Christians and Superheroes

Adam Graham
I'm a Christian who writes superhero fiction (some parody and some serious.)

On this blog, we'll take a look at:

1) Superhero stories
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