Imagine if all your favorite comic, film and TV characters got invited to a spiffy old fashioned potluck BBQ and ice cream social. Quaint little hand-written invitations arrived to their mailboxes looking like they’re straight from Pleasantville in envelopes with gingham interiors. Absolutely charming Dorothy Gale chic, no question. How sweet is this! We have to go this, it would be like kicking the sweetest most precious child in the face and actually knocking out teeth if we didn’t go! type of party. One caveat; everyone has to bring dessert. Despite there being no indication of an actual host, which suggests Agatha Christie may indeed have orchestrated the entire event from the grave via a possessed Martha Stewart with Jessica Fletcher waiting in the wings, your characters all show up, vaguely wondering why they’re even there and who is that obnoxious person across from them at their picnic table. This is a sampling of their best dishes. Welcome to yet another #FictionalFeasts!
It’s been about two years (count em, two years folks) since DC Comics decided to reboot their universe, causing a wave of changes to their superhero families and their status quo. The Batfamily was hit rather strongly with change. Perhaps (not surprisingly) the female members were changed the most and or dispatched of; Barbara Gordon is cured from her lower body paralysis and is Batgirl again, both Stephanie Brown and Cassandra Cain were wiped away from canon along with Charlie, otherwise known as the heroine Misfit as well as Helena Bertinelli who whilst she was a real person, is now dead and was (most likely) never Huntress. Tim Drake’s personal history was rebuilt from the ground up with rather disastrous results. Dick Grayson has returned back to the Nightwing mantle after a stint as a second Batman. Damian kept his mantle as Robin, that is until this past February when Grant Morrison, his creator, seemingly killed the (chronologically in former main canon) young 5th Robin in the pages of Batman Incorporated.
A lot of fans, well…they’re not liking this entire situation and the route DC has taken their favorites characters in the Batfamily. Even nearly two years later. And the whole “If you don’t like it, why don’t you do it yourself?” reaction from those who don’t mind the new changes and status quo in response to said naysayers? Well, people who are unsatisfied are doing just that and taking some of the closing lines from Stephanie Brown’s Batgirl run; ” It’s only the end if you want it to be” to heart. Whether out of frustration or just pure love for the characters fans are teaming up with their friends and other artists and are taking writing and presenting these characters into their own hands. And it’s not just fanart. Full fancomics and fan series.
I should know, I’m one of those fans doing just that.
I myself write (when not writing for you readers among other secret writerly things ) an ongoing AU fancomic series Batgirl Incorporated with artist Yu Lyn Chen. It stands as a stand-alone universe centered around the female members of the Batfamily presented through an actiony Saturday morning cartoon and retro-anime lens with a sci-fi bent that is intended to be more fun and somewhat more adolescent appropriate and kid-friendly as opposed to the new Batman line (barring the digital Li’l Gotham) which is rather dark and grim, in particular the quite somber Batgirl title.
My own comic launched officially last December and we are currently wrapping up the last leg of Chapter I, posting about a page or two a week. Our site also features a concept art open submission requests to help foster aspiring artists skills and to help build their portfolios. We also feature guest comic strips, including my own collaboration with Mexican comic artist Vicente Rico, whose work everyone should keep an eye on. Our collaboration,” It’s only the end IF you want it to be” are our one-shots starring Stephanie Brown Batgirl set in the pre-reboot world. Our second strip in the series, specifically for summer is currently being done.
Enough of my own stuff, as there are even more impressive work out there and the thing I wanted to feature the most is JunioR a second Bat-themed comic that centers around a still living Damian Wayne, his friends and family (especially him and animals) that is an absolute must read and my top recommendation for everyone this week even if you are not a fancomic fan you should check this one out; it’s good stuff. Sensitive, well balanced and artful these are little comics worth sharing and easy to catch up on.
A comic all about Damian? Really too good to be true. Another plus? Oh god the comic is gorgeous. With art rivaling if not better than what DC has on their own titles, this little comic is a treat to look at each month, which they have impressively delivered a full short comic each month since their launch in March, reaching a lot of attention on tumblr. Speaking of which, the next issue features Stephanie Brown!
The comic takes place in a pre-reboot DC canon. Stephanie Brown is still Batgirl. Nightwing is still in blue. But the stories are softer. More kid friendly. Short monthly touching, funny little stories that are really easy to catch up on. From the words of the creators Vivien Gallasch, Pamela Lovas, Wave & Megan Butler ;
[JunioR is] dedicated to the character of Damian Wayne and his numerous family members, friends, and pets. It’s quite a simple concept. Every month we will publish a short comic with focus on Damian and one other character. The current release schedule is the first Saturday of every month.
We do this because we feel like there are many more stories about Damian to tell, and because there should be a place for lighter and gentler stories. We want to tell these stories and want to share them with the fans.
I am noticing a trend; people who are wanting to do their own series and comics seem to want softer or at the least more fun or balanced stories featuring their favorite superheroes. They want things perhaps younger people can read (god forbid a kid can read about the same character that’s on their shoes or bedsheets). This plays into what I’ve been saying about children’s media the past few weeks as well; comics in particular are unsyncronized with their own merchandise and demographics. Don’t you think that’s a bit crazy? Should we be paying more attention to that?
I know of a third Batfamily series also in development, this one featuring their take on a team featuring Jason Todd and Cassandra Cain as Blackbat and I can’t wait to see that develop and launch.
Do you read JunioR or Batgirl Inc? I personally would love to know what you think of people taking the Batfamily into their own hands both as a reporter, and as a writer of one of said series.
https://www.facebook.com/Juniorthecomic
https://www.facebook.com/BatgirlIncorporatedTheSeries
Max Eber
Staff Writer/The Doctor
max@ihogeek.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
For my friends who know me in person, they know I am a big horticulture enthusiast. A plant and garden nerd so to speak. Yes. That’s actually a thing. It’s a really long story. Luckily gardening and sustainability and munching on farm fresh food is catching on with my fellow twenty-somethings so these days I no longer feel like the only one under sixty getting in a tizzy over evergreen shrubs and heirloom melons. But, this week I wanted to divulge a secret about the horticulture world you may not actually know. Gardeners, are nerds. Completely. Utterly. And not just in the sense of being a fanatic; horticulturists are trolls. Giant. Trolls. How? For those who think gardening means plants with very serious and frou-frou names, well you’re only partially right. The truth is, a lot of plant breeders and nurseries that introduce them just don’t give a fuck. Trolls. For every rose named ‘Madame Victor Verdier’ you have a rose named ‘Tipsy Imperial Concubine’.
Tipsy.
Imperial.
Concubine.
I am not joking.
And that is only a vintage example from the 1800s.
Since then we’ve have had horticulturists and breeders introduce into the world plant cultivar with names like ‘Hamburger Phoenix’ , ‘Cheddar Supreme’, and’ Crotchless Panties’. Serious!
In fact, there are particular flower breeders that are the most troll-tastic; daylilies, rose, iris and hosta breeders really could care less. They give absolutely no fucks. Zero. None. Nothing at the bottom of the barrel. You could dig for ages, you just won’t find one. Nope. Nothing there. Deer-munched, gone. Farewell. Goodbye.
This is not highbrow stuff. Case in point, to show just a sliver of the extent that gardeners and breeders are trolls, behold a list of fabulous plants you could grow in your garden:
‘Brazen Hussy’, ‘Salamander Crossing’, ’ How Audacious’, ‘Aggressively Forward’, ’ Pink Octopus’, ‘Sassy Kooma’ , ‘Judy Judy Judy’ ‘Nymph’s Thigh, ‘Roaring Jelly’, ‘Galadriel’, ‘Hebe’s Lip, ‘Spineless Virgin’, ‘That’s My Baby’, ‘Banish Misfortune’, ‘Fried Green Tomatoes’, ‘Comic Strip’ , ‘Shall We Dance’, ‘Fuldaglut’, ‘Attack Lizard, ‘Miss Manners’, ‘Religious Radish’, ‘Komodo Dragon’, ‘Inky Fingers’, ‘Teeny-Weeny Bikini’, ‘Black Negligee’, ‘Fishnet Stockings’ (a particular favorite), ‘Fancy Knickers’, ‘Shebang’, ‘Pistachio Nightmare’, ‘Pardon Me’, ‘Hot Legs’, ‘Crepe Suzette’, ‘Alley Cat’, ‘Tiny Monster’, ‘Strip Tease’, ‘Flaming Potluck’, ‘Amethyst Squid’, ‘Ugly As Sin’, ‘Zounds’ ‘Knickknack’, ‘Shebang’, ‘I’ll Be Damned’, ‘Vertigo’, ‘Swing Shift’, ‘Tora Tora’, ‘Cheesecake’, ’ Ally Oops’, ‘Wench’, ’ Hooked Again’, ‘Hot Sketch’, ‘Humors of Whiskey’, ’ Tall Dark and Handsome’, ’ Guacamole’, ’ Alligator Shoes’, ’Banana Muffins’, ’ Big Daddy’, ’ Hanky Panky’, ‘Sexy Rexy’, ’ XXX’, ‘Pineapple Upsidedown Cake’, ‘Rich Uncle’, ’ Banned In Boston’, ’ Lies and Lipstick’, ’Royal Adolescent’, ’ Saucer Full of Secrets’, ’ Sleeping At The Wheel’, ’ Skinny Dipping’ , ’ Spacecoast Dragon Prince’,’ String Bikini’, ’ Too Darn Hot’, ’ A Little Fire Scarecrow’,’ A Little Crabby’, ’ A Moose Fishing On A Pond On Monday’, ’ You Know Who’, ‘Oh My Stars and Garters’, ’ Little Wart’, ’’Outhouse Delight’, ’ Baboon Bottom’, ’ Sassy Redhead’, ’ Swamp Thing’, ’ Yellow Polka-Dot Bikini’, ‘Evil Ways’, ’ Improved Peach Blow’, ‘Zipper Gate’.
Then there is the ultimate, oh yes, ultimate nerdy example:
‘Bat Signal’
And what does the bat signal mean?!
And where there’s Batman there’s a
So there you have it. Hortricultists are trolls. And flowers are awesome.
Until next time folks!
Max Eber
Staff Writer/The Doctor
max@ihogeek.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
This is perhaps the worst week to be a Batman Family fan. Particularly if you are a fan of the Robins. Not only has Grant Morrison killed off Damian Wayne, the current Robin in the pages of Batman Inc this week which of course has sparked lots of debate, contention and massive media coverage, but other members of the Bat family haven’t fared very well either. And with the release of this week’s comics and the solicits for future Batman issues it, when looked at all at once, well it paints a very ugly picture. How ugly? To take a line from the film Houseboat which I reviewed last week; “I hate everybody. I hate everybody in the whole wide world.”
The Batman Family is in stitches in terms of likability post reboot, and with the death of Damian, for me personally nothing that was interesting, fun and engaging remains, and that is sad. Characters I liked are still there, but they are not the way they used to be characterization and personality-wise. The large communal family and personal army the Batfamily felt like preboot has all but been dismantled. And you would think that Damian dying would be the absolute worst thing to happen this week for the Bat Family, well you’re wrong. It’s just one of three particular traumas or ongoing narratives for the Bat Boys in the past few weeks that are absolutely awful.
In addition to Damian’s death, just a few weeks ago Jason Todd, the second Robin now known as the Red Hood (a former alias of The Joker) in Red Hood And The Outlaws #17 has had acid flung upon his face by one of his own helmets. The helmet was seemingly rigged by the Joker during the Death of a Family cross-over event and was left as a lingering surprise for Jason complete with a taunting recording. Ouch.
You may ask, “Hey Max, well yeah that sucks and Damian just died…really would could be worse than either of those?” Well…the third instance of awful leads us to this week’s Teen Titans # 17 which also came out this past Wednesday, the same as Batman Inc #8, and it is surprisingly the true cause of my personal ire this week, not Damian’s death. Why? Because of Tim Drake and the inexcusable things that are happening to him and the plot that is taking place. Tim Drake the “ Once a Robin, nope not a Robin only ever Red Robin” in the Nu52 canon is acting strangely erratic and is seemingly being influenced by something, essentially he is being mind controlled and looking like they are going for a “Red X” narrative if going by future issue covers. The real clincher? This week’s issue has him suddenly out of nowhere seducing Kiran, otherwise known as the criminally underused Solstice still caught in her smoke form which conveniently dissipates when being seduced. In doing so she is effectively cheating on Bart Allen, Kid Flash whom I believe she is dating, if you go by Kiran’s statement of “But Bart”, to which Tim responds with “Isn’t here”.
This is bad in itself, disgusting porno-ish dialogue alone can make me cringe but the added actual sexual assault and the way Kiran is drawn as submitting so quickly and enthusiastically is just gross and paints her in a bad way which is unfair. Bad yeah? Okay, it gets worse when later in the same issue Tim seduces Cassie, otherwise known as Wonder Girl and it is insinuated that they then most likely have sex and it is perhaps not for the first time with Cassie saying “Red, are we really doing this, again?” Note, Tim still hasn’t shared his identity with his teammates yet which has always been a Tim thing that is actually never one of his nicer traits in any incarnation. Why has he kept that Batdickery habit out of all things to keep in this new version?
It then cuts to the new incarnation of Raven seemingly eavesdropping while holding a goblet of blood or red gunk that screams of mall-gothic broodiness which adds even more seedy tones to the entire thing.
Tim is later fully revealed to be under full mind control by the end of the issue complete with glaring red energy eyes and a sadistic Joker smile.
This is not only disturbing because it means not only was Tim probably not in control, but the girls on the team don’t realize Tim isn’t himself either so effectively his advances were sexual assault for both the girls and for Tim himself and if Tim and Cassie actually had sex it constitutes as rape for both of them. If he was aware of what he was doing but couldn’t help it due to the mind control and couldn’t stop it? Well, then that’s really awful. Even worse is if he knew exactly what he was doing.
Is this Trigon’s doing? A Joker parting gift like Jason’s booby-trapped helmet? Raven?! A little bit of all three? You know who is really responsible? Scott Lobdell. The common denominator between Jason’s face getting doused in acid and Tim Drake being possessed or under Joker’s mind control is their writer. And he is the true villain of the week, not Talia or the Heretic, not Trigon, not The Joker. Scott Lobdell. Lobdell’s books while consistently selling rather well are openly criticized for being, well, not very well written. And skimming through these latest issues I must agree. He is awful. He has always been awful. Ever since the first issues.
Red Hood and the Outlaws makes very little sense as a book, replace Red Hood with Nightwing and you’d have a Titans book. Why is Jason running around with Dick’s friends again? Well, to be fair Jason was a Titan. Okay, so there is some validity for him running around with them – but it should be so much better. But no, Lobdell has erased the original Titans. Well sorta, it’s kind of really up in the air, Starfire at one point knew Dick as Robin but now she cannot fully remember things and Dick is cold towards her anyway and now Jason will protect her “every damn day of his life”. Whoops. Yeah that’s so much easier to remember.
It would be different if Jason’s book was about was a quest to find Donna Troy whom he had sparked a friendship with in the (sometimes for the better, ignored) Countdown to Final Crisis or something of that ilk and given her usual “multiverse anomaly” self might have been an interesting figure to feature in the post reboot world since she would remember the pre Pandora constructed reality. A Dick lead Titans book of the same plot would be fantastic as well but alas no Donna, she doesn’t exist at least that we know of. We’re not getting that. Teen Titans as shown above is also is pretty insipid and very slow narrative-wise, starring characters that deserve so much better and this new plot development just puts me over the edge. If Damian Wayne’s death is a tragedy then allowing Lobdell to write comic books and the fact he is moving onwards to Superman too is an absolute nightmare. What happened to the promise to foster new and engaging writers and artists DC? I am not seeing them here if you’re letting Scott Lobdell write them all.
His dialogue is generally terrible. His characters and new canons for them are equally lacking. Wonder Girl? Awful new origin story revolving around her boyfriend. Who needs that? Seriously? For Cassandra Sandsmark? Please. Pacing is horrible and everything drips of 90’s grim-dark drama clichés.Wasn’t this the reason for the reboot? Because the franchises had become so awful? Or does this hurt even more due to Teen Titans towards the end of the preboot run with the introduction of Solstice was slowly, sorta getting it’s groove back after a few years of disastrous arcs and roster shakeups? It feels like DC Comics isn’t learning anything and are doing the same pattern of lather, rinse, and repeat especially with Teen Titans and its patented brand of teenage slaughter and sexual misconduct that ultimately caused it to be rebooted in the first place. I cannot in my right mind seeing this getting any better. And with the coming of a new villainous Doctor Light in this book it seems the criminally undervalued heroic Doctor Light, Japanese scientist Kimiyo Hoshi, is probably also wiped away with the reboot too because having two Doctor Light’s like they had before, one villainous, one heroic, will be no doubt “too confusing” to readers. She’s also been characterized as being in her thirties so probably doesn’t have a chance. How fun for diversity. But really, the biggest thing of this is Tim Drake. Just poor Tim Drake. What Lobdell has done to the character as a whole is just atrocious and unforgivable. And now this. Possible rape. This is just the cherry on top of of this nastiness that has broken the camel’s back for me.
Tim Drake has been butchered by Lobdell since the donning of the so called “swan wings”. You could almost say Tim was under mind control long before this…actual case of mind control. His new Lobdell origin story is now extremely creepy with him being watched by Bruce in secret, essentially scouted. His real name might not even be Tim Drake. He was also given Olympic level athletic skills from the get-go which negates his original role as the Robin who wasn’t chosen or scouted out by Batman but was a normal, rather geeky kid from an upper middle class family with less than stellar athletic skills who nobly volunteered himself for the mantle despite physically probably not very suited for the role aside for his skills of deduction. Lobdell has thrown a wrench in that entire concept which for the most part was the reason why Tim was so popular and perhaps one of the most popular comic characters of the 90’s. I mean they paired him up with Jubilee in the 90’s DC/Marvel crossover, they were the company’s 90’s darlings! And he’s lost it. Tim has lost his role as the “relatable” brainy Robin that quickly came into his own despite some of his limitations and was the favorite of many, evident in that he held his title for over twenty years and his costume has become the base for redesigned and revisited Robin costumes everywhere ever since. He was the only Robin, I myself at age twenty-three today, knew of growing up and could identify with. I knew Dick was Robin and was now Nightwing, I knew Jason Todd died. I knew Tim was now Robin. And he was great at it. It felt like if he was Robin, I could be too.
Additionally while not Lobdell’s fault or doing but it is worth noting is that the removal of Stephanie Brown from the family has also hurt his character immensely. It truly hurts Tim Drake’s person considering Stephanie was featured in his solo title practically as co-star since her creation in 1993 all throughout the early 90’s and early 2000’s until she took the book herself briefly as Robin and then her return from the dead in its final span of issues leading up to R.I.P. And while things relationship wise sort of soured between the on and off again boyfriend and girlfriend particularly during R.I.P and Tim’s taking of the Red Robin mantle, they were pretty much each others match and a great team as Red Robin and Batgirl. At the least they were a pair and would have made a great trio book with Cassandra’s Black Bat. They should have made them the new Outsiders along with Misfit since Morrison wanted Tim to lead the Outsiders anyway. Well there’s a place you could have stuck your “spare” Batgirls and female Batfamily characters DC, look at that! Whelp, we didn’t get that now did we. Looking at this new Lobdell Tim, overall I can pretty much says that the Tim Drake we knew, along with Damian, is sadly dead.
Now, the issue with Lobdell and use of mind control causing this new Tim to seduce his teammates is well, it comes off as the most distasteful thing done probably so far in the reboot, and there have been many instances of distasteful material mostly coming from Lobdell too, but this, this includes rape. And it is inexcusable. Marvel comics already caught a lot of flak not too long ago with I believe Peter Parker seducing his roommate but then it was revealed it was not Peter but the Chameleon in disguise as Peter or something of that ilk. Essentially rape. DC not too long ago in the preboot canon itself had the rather naïve and sweet Miss Martian being occasionally possessed by an alternate evil future self stuck inside her own head and found herself at one point awaking in a bathroom stall supposedly about to be raped by two men; her evil self’s doing. Not Lobdell’s pen but just as bad. DC also had Trigon’s sons influencing the original Titans with different cardinal sins causing Starfire and Nightwing to hook up inexplicably on the spot despite being broken up. Nightwing was raped by Tarantula while he was in a state of shock. Tim was poised to be raped by the villainess he was battling against who had the goal for him to impregnate her towards the end of Red Robin run when he was saved by Cassandra Cain in her first solid appearance as the newly fashioned Black Bat. Bad plot set-up. Awesome Cassandra Cain.
Why so much rape guys? Why? Why continue with that? Can you not think of better ways to write?
Why is it that to show that Tim is being mind controlled the first thing he does is seduce the women on the team? And why would they so easily reciprocate Tim’s advances no matter how good looking and fit Tim is? Is this the same Cassie from earlier issues? That is so sick. Can writers please stop assaulting their characters this way? Sexual assault is not appropriate in all these stories. This is terrible writing and you should be ashamed for perpetuating this. It’s not fun. It’s not edgy. It’s tired. And it’s inappropriate.
Why would you go there Lobdell? Why would you even repeat this trope considering the amount of ire and flak people have gotten for similar plots like this in the past? Again weren’t awful plot lines like the above scene with Miss Martian the reason Teen Titans slipped down in sales and was a mess for years? It is sick. It is sicker still (as if it can get worse) when you take into account that preboot Tim was pretty unique among a lot of male teen heroes. Tim was written as a bit girl crazy, yes, and he had quite a number of girlfriends (and even cheated on them with other girls, he’s not a saint at all) and had tons of girls interested in him (in some cases literally fighting over him) over the years but Tim Drake was unique in that despite his love for girls and girl’s liking him, he was never shown or had ever been written as having had sex with anyone in canon, not even Stephanie his longtime girlfriend who was often shown as the more sexually aggressive and flirtatious party in their relationship anyway. And if he had, they never acknowledged it. That, for many readers was sort of different and refreshing and a big point as to why people liked him or found him endearing.
His perpetual supposed virginity, chaste behavior and prudish streak were often gently mocked by Stephanie in comic (but she did not dump him over it ever either), as well as fans in fanart or fanfiction. It naturally also sparked persistent theories that he was either demi-sexual, romantic-asexual or simply a closeted homosexual or bisexual particularly after his meltdown following the murder of Superboy. I personally have no opinion on any of those theories even though I agree some things Tim has done could be viewed as evidence for all of above care for perhaps pure homosexuality which I will firmly say no to (sorry to those that think so, you are entitled to think that if you choose). Regardless it was an interesting and endearing character trait and as stated, uncommon for the depiction of teenage male superheroes, and further uncommon given that Tim was and had no problem with dating or attracting women especially as he got older.
While sex is fine, and it is okay for Tim to have sex, a fictional character can have sex, especially a teenage one, it is just incredibly awkward going by that history to see Tim Drake doing this kind of thing or being used as a pawn in this kind of plot. The two just don’t go together. And it’s even grosser considering after twenty three years the first time that we are seeing Tim Drake possibly having sex on canon paper, it’s under the circumstance of mind controlled rape and not just that but raping a teammate. Instead of something sweet or nice based on character development and his own choice we are shown something cheap that stinks of male power fantasies all for the sake of showing he is being influenced by evil or gone wrong. It demonizes sexuality and also victimizes Kiran and Cassie reducing them to accessories to show that Tim has gone bad, real bad. Regardless if this new version of Tim has had sex before or not this issue, it really doesn’t matter; this is the first time we’re seeing him doing anything like this in-comic and this is what we get. That’s not very respectable towards the character and the character’s history. At all.
It is one thing that he kissed Cassie preboot while they were consoling each other when in grief over Superboy’s death. While misguided such a reaction is plausible and human. This is not analogous to that. He was being raped and Cassie was being raped if they had sex. Pure (not pure) and simple. If they backpedal and claim they didn’t well then they shouldn’t have gone there in the first place. This trope is gross, the “corruption” of relatively “good boy” and “good girl” characters (poor Mary Marvel) purely for sake of scandal, or drama, or whatever this is it’s just, not good, it’s tired and cliché. And it needs to stop. People can’t get behind this. People should get angry because of this. This isn’t entertainment. This isn’t engaging. And I want it out of comics.
DC Comics, you need to shape up, because people aren’t going to stand for this much longer. It’s no wonder your ‘Young Justice’ line of books of which Teen Titans belongs to is failing aside from that title. And any company that are getting such scathing remarks from your supposed demographic, as in, oh ME, you should take notice, because you are not getting my money. The only money you’ll get from me is for Dustin Nguyen’s Lil’ Gotham digital book, the only book of your entire lineup that is actually fun and the only one where characters are actually…well sort of themselves. Oh and it’s for all ages too. I can read it, I can then show it to my six year-old cousin (who’s a girl does that make you shudder in fear DC?), my fifty-six year old father and my eighty-five year old grandfather all without hesitation and it would make all three laugh. Teen Titans; I wouldn’t show this garbage to anyone or recommend it even to the appropriate age group or older. No one.
Shame on you Lobdell, and shame on you DC Comics and the editor that allowed this plot line. There are better ways to show Tim is being manipulated than to subject characters to this particularly your female characters as those being deceived. You all should be fired immediately or at the least step back and take a good look at yourselves and your business of entertaining people. The Batman Family is just in an incredibly gross state right now and quite frankly I just can’t deal anymore even though I am all but checked out already. Lobdell, I hope you’re in for a lot of negative press, because boy, it’s coming. And I’ll light the torches if need be.
Dear readers, what are your opinions?
I’d love to hear them. Bring kerosene if you want.
Max Eber
Staff Writer/The Doctor
max@ihogeek.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
Let’s talk about the current Robin, Damian Wayne, and how people draw him. The little prepubescent ball of angst, anger and “ttt” grade arrogance (dare you to not imagine him having a soft international British-English influenced accent) who also has a startling vulnerability, has won over a lot of fans since his introduction. He has sky rocketed into popularity following his donning of the Robin mantle in 2008/2009 through his endearing relationship with Dick and surprisingly, Stephanie Brown as Batgirl (truly one of the worst of the reboot losses, their Batgirl/Robin dynamic was too good and his relationship with Babs is nonexistent and bland at best). A mixed-race child taking the mantle of a well-known and ‘iconic’ character should be a big deal; however, this fact isn’t emphasized as much as it should be. He is constantly portrayed by DC Comics’ artists as yet another Bruce Wayne clone: Caucasian, pale, blue eyed and black haired. People generally wouldn’t know he was of mixed heritage at all unless they know the history of his character and the al Ghul family.
Genetics are a funny thing and many children of mixed marriages can either favor one parent over the other or be a strong mix of both. Bruce’s extreme WASP/ possibly Ashkenazi Jewish (if Martha Kane, his mother is related to the same Kanes as Kate Kane, Batwoman, then she was most likely Jewish or partially Jewish herself) heritage is the whitest of the white. There’s no skirting around that. So yes, Damian could very well favor his father. The problem isn’t if he favors his father, it’s just that many elements of his mixed heritage from his mother’s side are promptly ignored by DC artists completely. That’s the problem.
Fan artists seem to understand him a bit more and give him more distinguishable features. In a lot of fan-art online, you see subtle inclusion of Damian’s true heritage; whether its eye-shape or facial structure that suggest he is not white, or he simply has tanned skin, these artists identify him as multi-ethnic. What’s the deal DC? Why can’t you do the same?
One thing that is a hot button issue and I feel I need to get out of the way are his blue eyes. As shown by the Shortpacked comic, most people argue that because he has Chinese and Arab heritage he must have dark eyes. That’s just not true. Many fancasts for live action “Batman” often cast him with young 100% Iranian actor Arsalan Ghasemi specifically because of Arsalan’s vivid blue-green eyes.
Arsalan sadly is much too old now to play Damian, as you can see. Additionally, no one knows of his acting abilities or English speaking, but the sentiment of casting Damian or basing his look off of someone actually from the Middle East is quite admirable. That’s where most of Damian comes from! He could look like that! But just because Arsalan has blue eyes does not mean he is particularly special or worthy of being a good face cast. Many people of various ethnic groups from the Middle East and even Muslim peoples and other communities in China have fair eyes, skin and hair, and many, many different skin tones and features. All are people of color, all are nationally Iranian, Afghan, Pakistani or Chinese. Arsalan Ghasemi’s looks are not that unusual at all for the Middle East. People look like that from there! It’s the same all the way to communities into India as well. So yes, Damian can very well have blue, blue-green or hazel eyes, especially since Bruce can only genetically offer shades of blue and possibly green. Good chance Damian wouldn’t have them? Yes, most certainly. But those features are much more common in in the Middle East than people here in the States would like to believe, as it goes against the stereotypes we are taught about race and how people in those countries look. China is a huge country with many peoples. So is the region of the Middle East.
There are many boys and most likely actors from those areas of the world that look just like him. They are Damian.
The problem with Damian also comes from an inherited and continued problem from his mother’s family and their portrayal. Talia al Ghul herself has a very mixed heritage and how she is portrayed is very problematic. Her canon mother, Melisande, was of explicit mixed Chinese and Arab ancestry. Talia, when portrayed as good, is often drawn and colored as white. When placed in the role of villain, she sadly is often drawn or colored with darker skin and more “foreign” features. There is no excuse to not keep a consistent, and respectful look for her that keeps her looking like the multi-ethnic person that she is and not be deemed dangerous or ‘exotic’.
Her father, the over 600 year old skunk haired Ra’s al Ghul, is problematic and ambiguous himself. Touting an Arab name and hailing from a “a city whose inhabitants’ ancestors have journeyed to the Arabian Peninsula from China”, his race has always been hotly debated but drawn as more or less as Caucasian. He was, like his daughter, played by white actors in Nolan’s Batman trilogy; Liam Neeson and Marion Cotillard respectively. At best, I would put him as being very mixed himself, with an ancestry much like Melisande. Ra’s green eyes are not improbable either, influence of the Lazarus Pit or not, it’s the same as Damian’s blue eyes. Regardless, Ra’s should look mixed, Talia could appear even more so herself.
With Damian, colorists at routinely at fault, coloring Damian as lily-white when they could feasibly choose to do a darker skin tone. That doesn’t excuse artists who draw his features as anything but Caucasian most of the time either. Now, they could keep the Caucasian face structure, he looks a lot like Bruce, but color him with more of an olive or tan skin tone and a slightly different eye shape. Many fan artists seem to go that route, giving Damian simply a noticeably different complexion than the other former Robins. On the flip side, he could be drawn with more traditionally Asian or Arab facial structure and features but be colored as being pale, like Bruce. There is room for easy compromise to show what he truly is. There are many different possibilities. All don’t look exclusively white, blue eyes or not. Why is that so difficult?
Out of any of the current artists at DC Comics, I find Patrick Gleason is the only one who draws Damian as consistently more mixed looking. His Damian actually looks like he has a lot of Asian heritage, from the nose and face structure and in particular, his eye shape, especially as a child. His inking or the inking on his work never leaves room for the colorist to color the irises blue as others do, so they are mainly blacked out and dark. This is not to say that it’s good that he is shown with dark eyes, as I explained Damian can have very blue eyes and it’s perfectly fine, but Gleason gives Damian a very different look which you normally don’t see. The colorist colors him as very pale, but he actually looks mixed.
Despite Damian’s ambiguous appearance or DC’s inability to portraying him accurately, the reason why I think it is important that he be drawn as mixed is all about representation. There are many girls and boys of mixed heritage similar to Damian, or who are Asian or Iranian, Afghan or Pakistani; any of these particularly ignored groups aren’t portrayed often in Western pop media often in roles that are not bad guys or terrible stereotypes, particularly in the world of superheroes. And they need to see themselves. Entertainment in the US is very, very white, and to see a mixed child in a big pop-culture role as Robin is huge. It’s akin to having Miles Morales take over as Spider-Man in the Ultimate universe, and DC should be making more of an effort with Damian in that regard. He could be sold as such a benchmark, but they choose to ignore it instead. They’ve already wiped away Cassandra Cain from the Bat family, with no visible intention to bring her back (having deaged her mother, Lady Shiva, thus making it impossible for her to actually be Cassandra’s mother, a rather passive aggressive blow to Cassandra fans while they fret her existence and relationship to the Batfamily), it really wouldn’t hurt to emphasize the actual diversity that is present in the Batfamily with Damian, considering what little is left now. The fact that DC overlooks this opportunity is really sad.
Of all the pantheons in the post-industrial mythological are we find ourselves in, none has so much to do with the human psyche as Batman, the Dark Knight himself. This relation doesn’t just exist in his rogues gallery, of which every type of abnormal behavior is represented, but also in the man himself, as well as those he partners with. Other heroes deal with this darker side of the mind, but none of them is as relate-able as Batman. Most other heroes gain their ability through: radioactive contamination, magical influences, blue people who dispense jewelry, or simply being born on another planet. Batman, however, achieves his prowess from tragedy, and the sheer determination to see it never happen again. There is no magic, there is no real power. It’s one of the most basic fears we experience as a child. The loss of our parents. This provides sense of reality or believability for readers. It’s extreme, but still allows for the elements involving the human psyche to be that much more powerful then it would be for Superman. So, when it was revealed Superherologist, Travis Langley, who holds a B. A. and Ph.D. in Psychology, was to write a book that combined elements of psychological theory and research, along with glimpses into the mind of one of DC’s darkest heroes, I was beyond excited. Batman and Psychology takes a journey through the publication history of Batman while explaining the cause, and mental reasoning, behind the world’s greatest detective. On top of learning how Bruce’s origin affected him so greatly, you also get to see what drives his villains so hard, and why Bruce will never give up his fight.
It all starts with one question: Is Batman crazy? Langley’s elegant response to that question was the creation of this book. There are several interpretations of Batman that provide a different mentality to the character. One such story, although obviously not canon, showed Batman as a damaged man who wishes to fight crime. In an effort to appease his young master’s fantasies, Alfred donned the disguise of the Joker to alleviate his psychological trauma; sadly, it eventually leads to his death. Yes, in that case he was probably mad. But what about the others? To find the answer to this question, Langley examines ever facet of the Dark Knight’s past. Included in this exemplary examination of his mind are case-files on all his notorious villains. From the Riddler’s obsessive-compulsive nature, to Two-Face’s dissociative disorder that isn’t always truly dissociative. Every aspect of these rogues and their reasons for being so is explored. Robin, in all his forms, is also explored as his relationship with Batman is crucial to his mindset. From Dick Grayson, the first child, to his youngest and biological son Damian Wayne, this book provides already established psychological theories for why they turned out the way they did. Most fascinating is the case for Jason Todd, a character many find sympathy for while others loathe him.
If you love Batman you will love this book. If you love psychology you will love this book! Do not worry about getting lost though, as Langley does an excellent job explaining everything he discusses so those who have never taken a psychology course will understand. Not only will you get one of the most thorough run downs of Batman’s history in all its mediums, you will walk away feeling like you’ve learned a thing or two about the human mind. This is definitely a book you shouldn’t pass up, as once you start reading it you simply will not be able to put it down! You can order this book from Amazon for $9.99, so it’s definitely worth it.