I’m so tired of writers doing ‘Bruce has to learn what to do as a father’ with Damian
Regardless of how you classify his relationship with Dick, he got Dick as a child and did all the day to day stuff required to get him to adult hood.
He raised Jason for a couple of years pre death.
When will DC stop pretending that Damian is the first time Bruce Wayne has ever been exposed to and responsible for a child.
Like sure, Damian has different expectations than Dick or Jason did and you can lean into that. But come on man, give him SOMETHING.
I refuse to believe Mr. Preparation took in an 8 or 10 or 12 year old way back when and didn’t pick up a SINGLE book called ‘raising a child for dummies’ or something.
I have some thoughts about Damian's death (the first one) today.
Because I don't know how to feel about the fact that Damian's death doesn't "leave a mark" in comics, because on one hand his death is rooted in grant Morrison's bad writing and underlying racism, and yes he did get revived in the few next issues, thanks to Tomasi and Gleason.
On the other hand it's the death of a 10 year old? And I feel like we should have seen more of Bruce's fear rooted from that whenever Damian's life is on the line (like whenever Jason is in danger Bruce thinks back to his death and it makes ABSOLUTE sense but also Damian??? Also?? Died?? But we don't really get to see much flashbacks or whatever)
(NOT blaming Jason or anyone this is just sth I've seen through my own reading experience. NOT BLAMING JASON OK.)
HOWEVER, I would say Damian's death is something that should be left to fans for the most part. From most material I've seen of people talking or writing about Damian's death they seem to do it with grace and awareness of the unfairness of the situation. I don't trust DC enough to put faith in their ability to talk about Damian's death and the events that led to it. I do wish we got more of Bruce's "Not again" moments towards Damian tho, like how he is with Jason.
(a flashback panel art here would fit, sth like this)
While I have always been a Batman fan, I’ve recently become interested in learning more about his second Robin (a.k.a Jason Todd) that eventually comes to be known as the Red Hood. Hence, why I wished to start with the comic that gives an outline to his story as Red Hood.
Upon reading this, I was shocked to learn that this Robin was disliked by some fans at the time of this series to the point that they chose (based on a vote poll that was conducted by DC at the time) to kill him off—and in a gruesome way for the time (yes, I’ve heard/seen some of the ways the Joker torment Jason in Batman: Arkham Knight and Batman: Under the Red Hood). All because he wasn’t like Dick Grayson/Nightwing.
Like children, Dick and Jason aren’t supposed to be the same person because they are two different people. Was Jason a bit more rebellious than Dick? Yes, there’s no denying that. But the reader (especially those reading this comic as it came out) should be aware that this rebellious nature is coming from an orphaned kid who lived on the rough side of the neighborhood (and in Gotham at that). Bruce was aware of that and never really seemed to fault Jason for it as he was quite familiar with the situation—to the point that he was willing to help Jason in his quests to find his father’s killer and eventually his birth mother.
While some might say that Jason Todd was Batman/Bruce Wayne’s greatest failure… I can’t say that it’s for him being negligent/neglectful towards him as he was trying to be respectful of his teenage ward’s life and in the choices he made. Yes, Bruce says that he brought on Jason Todd due to Batman needing a Robin. Though, I think Bruce also brought on Jason because he saw himself in him and because things went well with Dick Grayson that he wanted to experience that again.
Despite a few inconsistencies and repetitiveness, this comic was a great read to introduce readers like myself to Jason Todd (who I wish had been in more media—like Batman: The Animated Series—to show the gap between Dick Grayson and Tim Drake (guess Jason was hated so much that they didn’t want to risk it) as it gives a great foundation on his character as Robin (and eventually his origin story to Red Hood). Looking forward to reading more about the complexities and characterization of Jason Todd.
Links to book:
Kindle:
Amazon.com
Paperback:
Amazon.com: Batman: A Death in the Family The Deluxe Edition: 9781779509178: Starlin, Jim, Aparo, Jim: Books
Was Sam's 2025 solo advertised as a mini series? I don't read comics news so I was pretty annoyed to find out it's over after just five issues
The final one was good actually. Fun energy, and some good in character one liners. But kinda soured by the whole "mini series to promote the film and not a real sam solo" thing
I think the political themes were strongest in the opener, then kinda petered out, aside from the one crack at peter thiel. I did like the animal experiments because of the wacky energy. Good bird power energy. Avian hijinks.
And yeah he's the focus of the current arc in Avengers but that's what like 2 issues? And mckay is bad about the bird thing and with the self esteem thing. Hmm..
So... hes back in limbo again then? Is that what they're going to do?
Why do I ever let myself think marvel might get their shit together with this character?
I watched the documentary dear Mr Watterson last night while I did crafts, baking and priming sculpey paint palettes that my young nephews made, and by the end I was crying about Calvin and Hobbes. how are comics so good? how is that a thing? what an incredible medium. maybe I need to be making comics a little bit more intentionally. or maybe, I need to be making comics more regularly but maybe less intentionally?
Ya know what these self-indulgent Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow posts need? Self-indulgent banner art, that’s what.
Spoilers for issue #4!
Let’s start this off right with CREATOR CREDITS. Issue 4 of Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow is titled “Restraint, Endurance, and Passion.” Written by Tom King, Art by Bilquis Evely, Colors by Matheus Lopes, Letters by Clayton Cowles, and Edited by Brittany Holzherr. (w/ Assist. Editor: Bixie Mathieu & Senior Editor Mike Cotton)
THE STORY:
Right, so this? This issue? Best one yet.
Also the bleakest of the bunch thus far; even though we don’t always see the brutality of the space pirates that Kara and Ruthye are following, there’s...the suggestion of it. The aftermath. And how Kara responds to it.
Okay, getting a little ahead of myself. BASIC PLOT SUMMARY: Ruthye and Kara continue their pursuit of Krem, who has taken up with Barbond’s Brigands.
The Brigands basically just. Murder and terrorize people, for profit.
Each planet they visit brings new horrors, as well as people who need Supergirl’s help.
And help she does.
KARA-CTERIZATION:
I yell a lot about the art on this book, and have, in fact, openly admitted that I’m primarily here for Evely and Lopes.
Well, that wily son-of-a-gun King went and wrote some of the best ‘Super’ stuff I’ve ever read and dang it, dang it, now I gotta yell about the words too. XD
Specifically, I wanna yell (in a good way!) about some words that occur towards the very end of the book.
Kara and Ruthye have Seen Some Things; things like genocide and mass grave sites and horrible violence, and upon reaching a planet where peaceful monks were slaughtered, Kara’s had enough, and needs to leave because if she screams, she’ll destroy what little is left of the monks’ monastery.
Here’s the text in full, because my gosh. It’s so good:
“What I write next I write based on my observations in those long-ago days at the side of the greatest warrior in the history of this august reality we all call home. It is important to note that my assertions do not rely on anything Supergirl said. It was not a subject we ever discussed or even approached, but nonetheless I believe it to be as true as the turning of worlds. You see, what is not well understood about the daughter of Krypton is that her power was not one of action but one of restraint, endurance, and passion. She did not choose to fire a beam from her eyes, or have breath of ice, or run faster than a speeding bullet. Or any of her other well-documented miracles. No, she held back her heat vision to look you in the face. She warmed her breath to converse with you. She slowed herself to walk by your side. Ever moment of every day, she suppressed the forces churning inside of her. All of the energy of a dead world that strained against her many barriers, eternally demanded to be released. I believe this effort hurt her. I believe she lived her life in pain. But I reiterate again, for I think it important enough to repeat--These beliefs are based on my time at her side, watching her as she moved through strife and sorrow. If you were to have asked her, I have little doubt she would have claimed that such as assertion was absurd. She would say she felt fine and well and then she’d as you if you needed any help.”
A long chunk of words, I know (this comic is DENSE!) but like. This is it. This is one of the defining attributes of the Supers--all that raw power at their disposal and they choose to help people, to be kind, to suppress that power for the benefit and safety of others.
HNNNNNNNG.
Hope, Help, and Compassion for All.
Whole lotta folks claimed at the outset of this book that King did not understand Kara, that he was a bad fit. And that may be so, I suppose--there’s a whole other discussion about like. The violence and swearing and ‘does that belong in a Supergirl book?’ But the characterization? Getting that Kara and Clark are just good people?
King gets it. He got it in Superman: Up in the Sky and he gets it here, in Woman of Tomorrow.
Other things King gets! Kara is stubborn! Kara is passionate! Kara is going to fix things, even if the effort of doing so hurts her, physically, emotionally, and mentally!
(Fuuuuuuun fact for the crowd saying that Woman of Tomorrow is vastly superior to the CW show: TV Kara is ALSO all of those things! King isn’t pulling this stuff out of thin air. It’s almost like...gosh. I don’t know! Both the show and Tom King are pulling from the character’s comic history, or something!!!! HOW NOVEL.)
Like, seriously. There’s a lot of overlap. Stop pitting Karas against each other!
Anyways!
I promised art, so here is art!
Oh, right, forgot to mention, Kara literally THROWS HERSELF INTO THE SUN to express her grief and anger, so as to not cause that unnecessary destruction. She gives new meaning to the phrase: Set yourself on fire to keep someone else warm.
More art yelling: GOTTDAMN, the way Evely draws Kara just colliding with the surface of the sun and then the way Kara’s hair like...becomes the flames...
I am FEELING FEELINGS. HOW DARE.
Also, props to King and Cowles; King for deciding to have that initial scream, Cowles for the way the letters burst forth from the point of impact on the sun, and then back to King who decided that it would just be...devastating silent screaming from Kara, for the remainder of the scene.
Back to the characterization, I just wanted to highlight something I mentioned...earlier on, I think? In these posts? But haven’t brought up recently, and that is how this book has not once brought up Zor-El, and I think Superman only got a quick mention in issue 2.
Honestly, I think that’s gotta be some kind of record.
It’s so refreshing. Not because I think there should never be mentions of Clark, or anything--I love that boy--but because so much of modern Supergirl comic drama is mined from the same like, angsting over her place compared to Clark, or her crazy sometimes-a-supervillain dad.
There is no Clark and Kara drama here, no manufactured friction, because it’s just. A cool Supergirl story!
Gonna keep going, but let’s do it with some more...
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRTTTTTTTTT!!!!
Once again, Mat Lopes is all over the dang place with his palettes, it’s marvelous.
Each new planet gives Evely the opportunity to go hog wild on the worldbuilding and design, and similarly! Each new locale is an opportunity for Lopes to set the tone with colors. Like, here, towards the beginning of the book, we’ve got a planet bathed in this warm, pale yellow/orange light.
(Quick note: “Sure, yeah, I get it. We all have our duties. And it’s mine as a neighbor to do what I can to help you with yours. Please.” A+ Kara content. We love to see it. And then locating the remains of the alien’s daughter, so that they can go visit the grave site and have some emotional closure???? It’s just. So. Touching.)
Anyways, back to colors.
Like!!!! LOOK AT THAT JUMP. From the soft, almost pastoral feel of the delicate oranges and yellows to HARD GREEN, PINK, AND PURPLE. (Difficult colors to pull off in print, I might add.)
(This is also an interesting scene, character-wise, because I think it helps re-contextualize some earlier stuff with Kara. Like, I’m mostly thinking that incident on the bus, where she was swearing at the passengers as the space dragon was about to destroy them. Here, we see Kara kind of...goad this alien woman into releasing her pent up emotions by yelling at her/getting her to fight, and you can clearly see at the end of it that Kara did not mean the things she said, because check this out:
She goes and gives her a hug once the woman is able to finally cry.
It’s not ‘Kara is being mean, Kara is swearing at her’, it’s, ‘Kara has an unorthodox solution to a problem, and she’s gonna FIX that problem, NO MATTER WHAT.’
Circling back to the bus thing--again, that could be an instance of ‘unorthodox approach to a weird situation that Kara is going to handle because lives are at stake.’)
But also, DIG THAT KIRBY KRACKLE, BAY-BEEEEE!
And a little Strange Adventures easter egg! The Pykkts!
(I think those guys are unique to the Black Label series, rather than deep Adam Strange lore, but don’t quote me on that.)
Moving on to YET ANOTHER PALETTE, one I’ve dubbed, ‘Treasure Planet Purple/Grey’
Love Ruthye’s snoozing against the door, waiting for Kara.
Also, just as striking as the colors of the environment, are the colors used on Kara.
If you compare this page with the previous one, Kara’s eyes are a paler shade of blue, and the red-rimmed look on her eyes here is not as intense as the red-rimmed look we saw back in issue one, when she was confronting Krem.
All of which to say! There’s a pale, haunted quality to both the linework and the colors. Like. We know Kara has Seen Some Things. But she’s shoving all that stuff down to protect Ruthye, to save Krypto, and to stop these monsters, and you get all of that WITH COLORS AND LINES ON A PAGE.
I love it, I love it so much.
OTHER BOOKS WISH THEY HAD THIS LEVEL OF CHARACTER ACTING, I TELL YA! THEY WISH THEY HAD THIS BEAUTIFUL ALCHEMY OF INKER, COLORIST, AND WRITER WORKING IN SUCH TIGHT TANDEM!
Ahem. XD
Alright, last bit of art, lest I just. Post the whole issue in here. (Which I’m honestly always tempted to do but Strong Feelings about Piracy hold me back.)
JUST HECKIN’ LOOK AT THAT BLUE, MAN. JUST LOOK AT IT. S’BEAUTIFUL.
And more stunning character acting from Evely. Like. Bottom middle panel. The expression, the tilt of her head and the shadows on her eyes...
I’m never right about these things, so I’m glad the one time I’ve correctly read a thing is when it involves Krypto not, ya know. Being dead. XD
Also absolutely love that Kara’s instinct is to send Ruthye home to protect her--once more leaning into that whole, ‘I’m going to protect you, even at great cost to myself’, though of course we know that she can’t send her home, not here, not now, just halfway through our journey.
ERRRRRRGH, so mad we’re not getting twelve issues of this! CURSE YOU, POOR SUPERGIRL TRADE SALES! CURSE YOOOOOOU!
That said, King’s pacing? Has been phenomenal. I feel like Strange Adventures and even Mr. Miracle kinda...I’m not gonna say dragged, that’s not quite right. But it is more build up, I guess. Takes a while to get to the payoff.
Here, I think King is pushing things steadily along as he doesn’t have the benefit of an additional four issues, so he has to get to the point, so to speak. Keeps everything moving.
SOME FINAL, MISC. STUFF:
I’ve sort of glossed over the darker stuff from this issue, and I just wanna note that like. This is a book that features a bad guy getting stoned (in the death sentence way, not the drug way) on panel. Like. I can’t recommend this to children.
I can’t even really recommend it to some other Supergirl fans, because I know that the King elements will be too off-putting.
It never feels like the book is going too far, though. At least in like an...exploitative way? If that makes sense?
The violence is handled with discretion, I guess is what I’m trying to convey. This could very easily tip over into like, gross shock factor territory, if not handled well, but I think the creative team pulls it off.
...Still wouldn’t hand this book to kids, though. XD
As mentioned, we’re halfway through this series! Can’t wait to see where it goes--every time I think I have this book figured out, it surprises me. So, like. Bring on the Dinosaur planet! With no sunlight! I wanna see how Lopes handles THAT. XD
(But Oh, OooooOOooh, we gotta wait until NOVEMBER.)
(Hhhnnnnng!)
(Then again, maybe that’s good; we’ve got the TV show in the meantime, and then once it ends we can pick right up with new Supergirl content just a few weeks later.)
(...Aw. Made myself a little sad, thinking about the TV show coming to an end.)
:C
So as not to end on that sad note, here once again is tiny, smushed Kara:
Sometimes being a Batman fan feels like being fond of an invasive species sometimes. I like him in his natural habitat (Gotham, the Watchtower) where he is a natural part of the ecosystem! But irresponsible people (DC Writers, fandom) keep causing infestations in other habitats (putting him in other heroes stories and tags).
Get him OUT of there!!
He is a mint plant, and people keep planting him in garden beds and not isolated pots, causing roots to spread into other flower beds.