Showing posts with label The Monk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Monk. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2011

Detective Comics #32 (October 1939)

Well, our cover isn't as memorable as last month, but it does feature Police Chief Hitler throttling a Tommy Gun wielding Clark Gable.
Bad jokes aside, we continue with the Batman's pursuit of the mysterious Monk in the wilds of Hungary...

"Batman Versus the Vampire, Part Two"
Writer: Gardner Fox
Pencils: Bob Kane
Inks: Sheldon Moldoff
Synopsis: We begin with a spectacular drawing of the Batman by Bob Kane. It's mysterious and brooding and memorable, sure to influence the look of Batman in the works of artists such as Neal Adams and Bruce Timm. The Batman is tracking a carriage through the wilds of Hungary. (Editor's Note: By the time this story was written, Transylvania was located in Romania, but for years the home of Dracula had been within Hungarian borders). The Batman gases the occupant of the carriage, only to find it is a mysterious woman. He brings her back to the hotel where he is keeping Julie Madison. He keeps both in the same room, standing watch, but in the middle of the night the woman, Dala, awakes, sleepwalking, and knocks the Batman out with an Academy Award before escaping. When he awakes the Batman examines Julie to find two small marks on her throat -- the sign of the vampire!! Luckily, Dala hasn't gotten far (the yard of the hotel) and the Batman swoops down and captures her. He comes to the conclusion that Dala and the Monk are vampires and must be destroyed, but Dala pleads with the Batman that she is but a pawn and will help him to destroy the Monk.
The Batman leaves Julie behind and departs with Dala for the Monk's lair in the Bat-gyro, which is now called the Batplane, although it is still drawn as an autogyro. However, the Batplane is caught by a large silver net and pulled to the ground, as Dala has betrayed our hero to the Monk. The mad Monk puts the Batman under his mind control and leads him to the castle seen on last month's cover. He also telepathically wills Julie to them (they must not have been far away because she walks the whole way!). Julie sees the Batman under the Monk's control and exclaims "His eyes are suffering, but he cannot move!", which is actually pretty horrifying. The Monk threatens to put Batman into the Den of Wolves, and exclaims that soon Julie will be a werewolf like him and Dala.
But... I thought they were vampires???
Nuts to that, because the Monk transforms into a wolf before the eyes of Batman and calls a pack of wolves to a pit that he has placed the Batman in. However, the Batman gases the wolves and escapes by attaching his silk cord to his Baterang and roping a column above the pit and climbing out.
He finds Julie safe asleep, and then makes himself silver bullets by melting down a silver statue. In most stories, silver bullets are what kills werewolves, but occasionaly they kill vampires as well. Here they are said to kill vampires, but then the story seems to be confused on which Dala and the Monk are.
The Batman finds the vampires' tombs and shoots them with the silver bullets, killing both. Julie declares herself forever grateful to the Batman and they fly back to America.
My Thoughts: Part two continues on from last month in similar fashion, although the structure is more linear and less confused than in part one. Things flow logically forward, and we get more and better interaction between Batman and the Monk, although there is still no direct confrontation between Batman and one of his enemies. The introduction of the Dala character allows for a nice betrayal moment, but like with the Dr. Death story the climax is much too fast and sudden. Still, it's a fine, neat wrap-up to Batman's first two-part tale.
The Art: Once again Kane and Moldoff deliver very good work. Kane's become very good at delivering the Batman in spectacular poses, using his cape for good dramatic effect, while Moldoff's inks create the spooky, moody atmosphere necessary for both the Batman and this story in particular. The page illustrating the Batman's fall into the wolf pit is particularly well done and a great example of sequential art.
The Story: Gardner Fox's writing is certainly a lot better than the last three months, but the main nitpick this time is that he can't seem to decide if the Monk is a vampire or a werewolf or if both are the same thing. Certainly there has always been some overlap in the legends -- sometimes silver bullets kill vampires, and Dracula was said to be able to transform into a wolf -- but the confusion really causes the story to lose harmony. At the end of the day its a pastiche of old horror movies with Batman added, and would've been more than exciting for the children reading, who would not have cared about such distinctions. Also, Fox is to be praised for delivering the first really memorable Batman villain, a large improvement over Dr. Death -- although like Dr. Death the Monk would not reappear until a 1982 Gerry Conway story.
Notes and Trivia: First time Batman is seen to use a gun, first mention of the "Batplane", final Golden Age appearance of the Mad Monk
Batman Body Count: 6, if you count the destruction of the undead as a kill

Detective Comics #31 (September 1939)

Okay, I have to open by saying this is a bloody magnificent cover. The combination of moody etherealness and iconic imagery makes it memorable and dynamic, and has led to it being copied at least twice. Inside this cover, we'll find the first part of DC's very first multi-part story - a story which resonates so well that it has been retold in both the Bronze and Modern Ages. The story of...

"Batman Versus The Vampire, Part One"
Writer: Gardner Fox
Pencils: Bob Kane
Inks: Sheldon Moldoff
Synopsis: The story begins with moody, iconic imagery of the Batman patrolling the rooftops of New York (not yet Gotham) City. He spots a young woman about to attack an older man, apparently under the orders of "the Master Monk." The Batman saves the man, and discovers the young woman to be none other than Bruce Wayne's fiancée, Julie Madison. He takes her back to her apartment, and the next day Bruce takes her to a doctor. The doctor believes Julie was hypnotized, and recommends an ocean voyage to Paris as treatment (???) and later to Hungary, land of "history and werewolves!" The doc has an odd look on his face, as if he too is hypnotized - the reader can almost imagine his shifty eyes. Bruce buys Julie the ticket, but then decides to follow her as the Batman. For this purpose he has two new inventions, the Bat-gyro (a plane with the rotors of a helicopter, look it up kids), and the Baterang, which is described as being specifically designed after the Boomerang. The Batman then follows Julie's ocean liner in the Bat-gyro over the Atlantic. He leaves the Bat-gyro hovering above the ship, climbs down a rope ladder to speak to Julie, and they get attacked by a mysterious figure in a red rope with a somewhat KKK-looking hood -- it's the mysterious Monk! His hypnotic glare seems to paralyse the Batman, but he manages to throw a baterang at him, which breaks his concentration. The Batman then jumps onto the rope ladder and back into the Batgyro. Which... I suppose leaves Julie helpless to the Monk, who is still down there???
Ignoring that, the Batman soon reaches Paris, where he then searches all over town looking for clues to Julie's whereabouts, which I assume is a lot easier than just following her? And presumably much, much easier than if he'd just come with her on this trip as Bruce Wayne?? Nevertheless, he tracks her to her hotel room and jumps in through the window whereupon a GIANT GORILLA IS WAITING TO KILL HIM! Batman sidesteps the gorilla, but in doing so he somehow manages to fall down a trap door and into a giant net!
He is now suddenly in the lair of the Monk, who taunts the Batman and flips a lever to lower him into a pit of snakes. But the Batman throws his baterang, which smashs an overhead chandelier, and the Batman uses the shattered glass to cut through the ropes and out of the death trap. He runs after the monk, but is again trapped in a giant cage which also holds the GIANT GORILLA! However, Batman manages to escape by climbing up the rope that lowered the gorilla into the cage, and he proceeds to escape the building and get back into the Bat-gyro.
He then pursues a car speeding away from the building, throws gas pellets at it, and then after it crashes into a tree, recovers Julie from it and gets back into the Bat-gyro. He then sets a course for Hungary, land of werewolves and vampires. Part two next month!
My Thoughts: This is one of the all-time classic Batman stories. The first time I read it was in the first edition of The Greatest Batman Stories Ever Told TPB. Yet, it really shouldn't be. It continues Gardner Fox's habit of gaping plotholes and leaps of logic, and really doesn't hold up well as a tale by itself. But there is just so much excitement and iconic action and suspense and mystery and macbre, weird details that the whole thing seems far more fantastic and exciting then a Batman comic has ever been. The fact that the tale ends with the Monk still out there, and Batman continuing to track him was a unique and unheard-of ending in comics at the time, and has the reader waiting with baited breath for next month's issue.
The Art: The art is what really sells this story. While the actual plot borders somewhat on nonsensical, Kane and Moldoff create moody, dynamic, exciting action and suspense images. The Batman looks great in these panels, with a long, swooping cape, long ears, and now longer, extended gloves. The visual design of the Monk is unique -- instead of the stereotypical Dracula look, he wears a red cloak and hood, and upon the hood a yellow skull and crossbones on the forehead. All in all it is Kane's artwork here and in part two that contributes to this story being well-remembered, and shows a definite move forward in the quality and style of the art for the Batman feature.
The Story: While Gardner Fox does deliver on his promise to introduce a foe worthy of Batman's mettle, and gives us the first truly fantastic Batman tale, his actual plotwork is shoddy at best. If Julie was being hypnotized into attacking people, why didn't the police get involved? If the doctor was obviously shifty, why take his advice to travel to Paris? What kind of prescription is that anyway? Why did the Batman not take the Monk down when he (somehow) appeared on Julie's ocean liner, instead of leaving him there to commit further evil? Luckily, Bob Kane's artwork sweeps us along the story so well that we don't really ask these questions while we're reading, happy as we are to just keep going with the story. An interesting note is how the character of Julie Madison is introduced into the strip with no introduction or development -- she's just suddenly Bruce Wayne's before-now unseen fiancee and is already the damsel in distress focus for the plot. That's the Golden Age for you. Julie will be the first of many attempts to introduce a regular love interest character into the Batman stories.
Notes and Trivia: First appearance of Julie Madison, first appearance of the "baterang" and "Bat-gyro", first appearance of the Mad Monk, first death-trap and death-trap escape, first multi-part story in comics, first unresolved ending,