Monday, April 6, 2009

Batman: Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?

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"Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?"
Cover of Batman #686 (Apr, 2009). Art by Andy Kubert.
Publisher
DC Comics
Publication date
April, 2009
Genre
Superhero
Title(s)
Batman #686Detective Comics #853
Main character(s)
Batman
Creative team
Writer(s)
Neil Gaiman
Penciller(s)
Andy Kubert
Inker(s)
Scott Williams
Collected editions
Hardcover
ISBN 1401223036
"Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?" is a 2009 story featuring the DC Comics character of Batman. The story is published in two parts, in the "final" issues of the series Batman (#686) and Detective Comics (#853), released February and April respectively. Written by Neil Gaiman, pencilled by Andy Kubert, and inked by Scott Williams, the story is purported to be the "last" Batman story in the wake of severe psychological trauma that Batman endures within the Batman R.I.P. story, and his ultimate fate in Final Crisis.[1]
The story's title is a reference to the backup stories published in DC Comics Presents from the early 1970s to the mid-1980s (which revisited various long-unused Golden Age and Silver Age characters; these stories were all titled "Whatever Happened to (x)?") akin to writer Alan Moore's "last" Superman story "Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?"
Contents
1 Publication history
2 Plot
2.1 Part 1, Batman #686
2.1.1 The Cat-Woman's Tale
2.1.2 The Gentleman's Gentleman's Tale
3 Collected editions
4 References
5 External links
5.1 Reviews
//
Publication history
Gaiman described the job as something he had to be a part of. "It's one of those things where they phoned me up and said, 'This is what's going to be happening with Batman. Would you like to write the last issue of Batman and the last issue of Detective Comics? And when they make an offer like that, you say yes."[2]
Gaiman requested to artist Andy Kubert that the artwork throughout the series represented various eras of notable artists that had worked on Batman. Major names of mention by Kubert include Jerry Robinson, Carmine Infantino, Neal Adams, and of course, Batman's creator Bob Kane.[2]
Like Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?, the two-issue tale presents a "final" Batman story. The Batman presented in the story is not necessarily the one from current DC Universe continuity but rather an indeterminate amalgamation that pays homage to the entirety of the character's 70-year history.[3]
Plot
The plot summary in this article is too long or detailed compared to the rest of the content. Please edit the article to focus on discussing the work rather than merely reiterating the plot. (February 2009)
Part 1, Batman #686
The story begins with a sweeping view of Gotham City. Two narrators speak to each other, the first in a blue caption box, the second in a gray caption box. "Where am I?" the first narrator asks. "You're here. In Gotham." The first narrator asks if he's dreaming as the second assures him he is not. The first says that he knows this city is Gotham, but that it's strange, not quite as he remembers. In a seedy alley, a strange vehicle pulls up to the front of an establishment called the "Dew Drop Inn." The car is an old-style convertible, with a large cat head mounted between the headlights. An attractive, dark-haired woman gets out and walks toward the door as a man in a derby hat walks up and warns her of the viciousness of the alley cats. Unwavering, the woman easily pets the numerous cats as the man is shocked that they're not attacking her. The derby-hatted man offers to watch her car for fifty cents, but the woman assures the man that she's, "already got it covered." The derby-hatted man looks back and sees that the alley cats are all over the car, seemingly guarding it.[4]
The woman walks in to the building and finds herself in the bar, with the bartender cleaning the glasses. The bartender directs her toward the back of the building, where he says that others are "just arriving now." The bartender recognizes her as Selina Kyle. She asks the bartender his name. "It's...Joe, isn't it?" she asks. "Yes, Miss Kyle. Joe Chill." She asks if he will join their party, to which he answers that, "someone's gotta be out front, Miss Kyle. Tell people where to go." Selina begins to walk towards the back when she stops and tells Joe that she heard he was dead. Just continuing to clean his glasses, Joe simply says, "I was here at the start of it all Miss Kyle. I'm not going to miss the end." The first narrator reaffirms that the man was indeed Joe Chill, and says that Selina was right about his being dead. Selina walks into the back room where Alfred Pennyworth is standing as an usher. Numerous chairs are set up in the room, with...(and so on)

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