With the cancellation of the animated Batman:The Brave and the Bold, I thought I would head to the back issue box and review The Brave and the Bold #160, a Batman Supergirl team up from March 1980. I hoped hoped hoped that Supergirl would somehow get a guest spot on the show but it never happened.
The cover carries the blurb 'Together again - the team you demanded!' and it must have been true as the two heroes had teamed up just over a year before in The Brave and the Bold #147. That issue or the dynamic between the two characters must have been well received for Supergirl to appear in the book again so quickly. There is something interesting about a sideways World's Finest, teaming the more staid and dark Batman with the emotions and eagerness of Supergirl.
The creative team is the same from the B&B #147 issue. Writer Cary Burkett is able to fit in enough story to make this a satisfactory 'done in one' issue even if some of the events within stretch my suspension of disbelief. That said, the characterization and contrast between the Dark Knight and the Maid of Might are really the treat of this story, not necessarily the plot.
I grew up with a healthy diet of Jim Aparo art here in Brave and the Bold, plain old Batman, and the Adventure Comics stories of Deadman and the Spectre. I will always have a soft spot for him. And his Supergirl is really wonderful.
"The Brimstone Connection" opens with one of those all to convenient coincidences that spurs on the story. As Batman finishes up his nighttime patrol, he just so happens to be swinging outside of a building where a man is shot. And not just shot ... shot and somehow thrown from the high rise window. If Batman had been swinging a couple of blocks away this story doesn't happen.
Anyways, this still is a great splash page, throwing the reader into the action. Perhaps my favorite part, which might explain my bizarre tastes in comics, is that Aparo put the dying man's fingertips just outside the frames constraints. It just adds to the sense that this man is falling!
And, of course, this isn't a simple murder. It's the killing of an undercover government agent trying to stop a terrorist group from obtaining the four components of an experimental rocket fuel. He begs Batman to discover the route that the components are on and stop them from landing in the wrong hands. The agent is only able to give Batman one clue ... Brimstone. Unfortunately this conversation allows the killers to escape.
I do like how Batman immediately swears to finish this man's work and avenge him.
Batman doesn't get far in his investigation and is surprised to see Supergirl arrive at Wayne Industries in her Linda Danvers secret identity. Supergirl is distraught as her father has been kidnapped and she has been unable to make any headway in her own investigations. She thinks it has something to do with his work at STAR labs on a new rocket fuel! Again, a convenient coincidence.
I can't help but chuckle at this brief scene. When Supergirl first comes in, Batman is all cool and collected, almost dismissing her concerns ... after all who would want to kidnap Fred Danvers. But as soon as she mentions the fuel, which overlaps with his case, he is all ears. It reminds me just how easily Supergirl was dismissed sometimes.
They head to the Danver's home and look over Fred's home office, the site of his kidnapping. Batman notices a caramel apple core in the waste basket, a place she overlooked when she combed the scene. Batman thinks he can match the bite marks in his Bat-computer in the cave. Unbelievable.
More unbelievable is that he is able to do it. The bite matches Jasper Casbeer's, a mob button man who has an odd predilection for caramel apples. So let me get this straight ... you are a mob hitman, you kidnap someone quietly enough to not awaken his wife who is down the hall, but you leave peculiar and damning evidence at the scene of the crime?
Anyways, as I say, one of the things I love about Supergirl is that she is still on the hero's journey, still learning. She is shocked she missed this clue by overlooking the waste basket and says she won't make that mistake again. She learns from her mistakes.
Casbeer's hideout is in an amusement park and Supergirl and Batman head over to question him.
In another odd tactical decision, Batman tells Supergirl to stay outside and watch the exits while he goes in to bludgeon thugs and pound his way into Casbeer's office. But there are too many troops for the Batman to handle alone. Supergirl has to rush in. And with her father's life potentially at risk, she doesn't go in slowly. She tosses the mob's enforcers around like ragdolls, through pinball machines and walls. And then breaks in to confront Casbeer himself, holding him up with her fists clenched. Very nice.
Casbeer refuses to talk. But his speed in burning the document he was holding leads Batman to believe it was crucial to the case. In classic Silver Age mode, Supergirl's Kryptonian powers are limitless. The brief glimpse she above is buried in her photographic memory. A short bit later, she is able to draw out the map which leads to the drop site for Casbeer to leave his component of the formula. Batman deduces that this Brimstone Connection must be the work of his old enemy Colonel Sulphur. Get it ... brimstone ... sulphur.
I do like the middle panel above. For some reason it reminds me of the more classic 'finger at the side of the mouth' quirky pose Supergirl had in her earliest stories.
The next day, disguised as Casbeer, Batman makes the drop. Meanwhile, Supergirl acts as the 'eye in the sky' following the weaving path of the data until it leads to a warehouse by the seashore.
I thought this panel worked incredibly well, showing the reader just how many twists and turns the package took while still showing that Supergirl had her eye on the thing. Very well done, especially the monotone nature of each drop point, making it clear to be a separate place and time. Wonderful composition there.
When the heroes arrive on the scene, a plane suddenly takes off. Batman tells Supergirl to stalk to plane to see if it leads to somewhere even more important all while he takes on the people in the warehouse by himself. Once again, Batman seems pretty secure in his skills and feels he can send Supergirl away.
With Supergirl away, Batman is again overpowered by thugs and knocked unconscious.
Rather then kill the Dark Knight, or unmask him, or ransom him, Sulphur decides to let Batman awaken, gloat over capturing him, and then putting him in a ridiculous 'Austin Powers' type death trap. Batman is tied to a pole on a pressure plate. Should he step off the plate, a bomb will explode killing both him and Fred Danvers, who is also tied up in the room. Of course, the bomb is on a timer anyways, scheduled to blow up at dawn killing them both anyways. Laughing maniacally, Sulphur leaves for the safety of the 'briny deep'.
Why not just shoot Batman? Anyways, even without his utility belt, Batman is able to lasso a heavy chair to take put on the plate allowing him to free Fred and escape.
Supergirl returns having realized that the plane was a decoy drone. Knowing her father is safe, she and Batman give chase, realizing the 'briny deep' must mean Sulphur is in a submarine.
I thought this was another nice scene, Supergirl first shaking the sub like a rattle and then bringing it out of the sea. And Batman being in the view of the periscope is precious.
And once again showing the differences between her and her cousin, Supergirl lays out the helpless Sulphur, punishing him for kidnapping her father. That sort of emotion is what is so great about Kara. And Aparo renders her so well. I love the steaming Supergirl in the first panel.
And, like many B&B issues, it ends on a high note. Here Batman invites Supergirl and Fred out for a cup of coffee. If this was a sit-com we would freeze frame that shot and the credits would run.
So overall this is a somewhat strained and silly story with a number of clues/events falling into place to help Batman and Supergirl. That said, it is that condensed sort of story that is necessary for a 'one and done' type team-up book. As I said before, it isn't necessarily a plot about a rocket fuel that is the key here. Instead it is the differences between Batman and Supergirl ... the quiet, skulking, controlled loner mode of Batman versus the faster, rush in, emotional tactics of Supergirl. Neither is perfect and that is showcased here. Burkett does a good job of allowing each character to shine here.
I would also add that Aparo is simply a master. And seeing his Supergirl is a treat.
From a Supergirl collection viewpoint, I would say this is of medium importance. It doesn't add much to her overall mythology. But it does allow the spotlight to shine on her, and allows her some alone time with Batman. That makes it a good issue to have. It is these glimpses of Supergirl in the context of the whole DCU that enriches her. This probably can be found for under $5 in stores or at cons.
Overall grade: B/B+
Showing posts with label Jim Aparo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jim Aparo. Show all posts
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Monday, June 16, 2008
It Came from the Back Issue Box: Brave and Bold #147
A week ago I was reminded about how great Jim Aparo was as an artist on the Fortress of Fortitude blog (http://fortressofortitude.wordpress.com/2008/06/08/sunday-pin-up-35/).
It's funny, but it is his version of Batman that usually comes to mind when I picture the Dark Knight in my head. Most likely this is from the glut of Batman issues he drew in the formative years of my collecting. One such issue was The Brave and the Bold #147, release in February 1979, and written by Cary Burkett. Aparo both drew and inked the book.
The story is titled 'Death-Scream from the Sky' and guest stars Supergirl.
The story starts out with a terrorist group called The Children of Light announcing that they have hi-jacked a Wayne Enterprise communication satellite and rigged it with a huge laser cannon capable of destroying whole cities. Unless their demands for prisoner release and cash are met they will begin annihilating cities. (I can't help but be reminded of Dr. Evil in Austin Powers talking about his air-quoted laser.)
And what a time to start this plot! Outside of Batman, the rest of the JLA just happens to be away on a space mission. The Dark Knight follows some clues to the STAR labs in Midvale. And who should he literally stumble upon there, Supergirl.
Kara explains she has been following a student from New Athens college who exudes some field which weakens her. She followed him to STAR where her powers abandoned her and she was ambushed and knocked unconscious.
Figuring that Supergirl can help take out the satellite, Batman hops into a single passenger space shuttle and heads into space. The terrorists have thought things through though. The satellite is rigged to emanate red-sun radiation which will make Kryptonians powerless, so Supergirl cannot approach it. (The student/terorist she has been following has been working so closely with the red-sun radiation technology that he has been giving off low levels himself, thus explaining his effect on Supergirl.)
Amazingly Batman tries to take out the satellite only to be gunned down by the cannon. Kara is able to save him from a death in deep space and brings him quickly earthward.
Back on Earth, the two do some more snooping and find a key clue in the student's apartment. Turns out the "top secret" terrorist group are wearing badges on there chest (scroll up to first pic) which are handed out at a night club in Gotham called 'Le Soleil'. Those tricky terrorists!
After breaking into the terror cell, it is revealed that the mastermind villain is Dr. Light, still decades away from becoming a rapist and getting mind-wiped in Brad Metzler's Identity Crisis. Here, he is just another evil scientist trying to scam a buck.
Batman trashes the goons and deactivates the red sun field around the cannon. In a rage, Light activates the laser cannon. In the best moment of the book, Kara has to outrace Light's radio signal to the satellite. She gets there in the nick of time, destroying the satellite before it can fire.
This is fairly typical 'one and done' B&B issue with standard excellent Aparo art. His Supergirl is both strong and beautiful.
As for Supergirl, this takes place during the "Superman Family" continuity period meaning Linda is working as a guidance counselor at New Athens college. It is a period of her history that I actually know little about. In this issue, she seems in awe of Batman. Throughout the story he tells her to stay behind for her own safety since the villains have a way of robbing her of her powers. In the end, she acts the way we expect Kara to act - heroically- and charges into the terrorist HQ to save Batman while risking her own life.
If only to see Batman and Supergirl interact one-on-one, I would recommend this issue to all Supergirl fans.
Overall grade: B
Labels:
Batman,
Brave and Bold,
Dr. Light,
Identity Crisis,
Jim Aparo,
review,
Supergirl
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