Ratings105
Average rating4.2
Oh. My God. This was very impressive. This was the best start to this series that I can think of, and I look forward to reading vol. 2.
As I read through this volume, I am amazed how each writer and artist combo can create magic with the same character. The court of Owls is another great storyline in the long list of Batman's history. The artwork is different but modern and strong enough to bring a high quality storyline to life. But the best part is that like all the great books in the past this one captures the essence of Batman and adds to it by bringing a Gotham aspect to it which is a nice fresh approach. On the whole, a great storyline and highly recommended read.
The Court of Owls was, easily, one of the best Batman graphic novels I have ever read, right up there with Miller's Year One and Moore's The Killing Joke. (Disclaimer: While I'm making rapid headway through the great ones, I have not read every - or even a lot - of the Batman graphic novels out there.) Equal parts suspense thriller and comic sci-fi, literary achievement and accessible story, Scott Snyder keeps it authentic for comic fans and deepens the Batman ethos through insinuation, metaphor, sociological reference, and light psychology.
The notion of the Court of Owls hiding in the “false” thirteenth floors of Wayne-built buildings - that is to say, hiding in the populace's fear and superstition - terrific. The apparent architectural authenticity backing up the thirteenth floor legend in Wayne buildings felt factual and pushed the narrative in a surprising way. Batman's Gotham has always been a caricature of our own society's fears, failures, and achievements. The idea that a secretive Court of Owls that watches over the city and upholds its own style of justice plays right into our own fears of Big Brother - an example of Snyder's subtle way to grab the buy-in, the emotional connection from the reader so necessary to making a great story.
Using a court of owls - natural predators of bats - as a rival of the Wayne family was another of Snyder's solid decisions. While it is true that the Wayne family's contributions to Gotham's charities, skyline, etc. have certainly not been “nocturnal”, the court of owls appeared to be one step ahead of the family in knowing that its ultimate greatest contribution to Gotham - the Batman - would be. The court knows the Wayne family better than the family knows itself.
In what I have read regarding DC's “The New 52”, reviews are mixed. To a certain extent, I agree. But the launch of The New 52 gave this particular Batman title a chance to reset and Snyder appears to have taken full advantage of that opportunity. It is with anticipation that I begin Batman, Vol. 2: The City of Owls.
One of the best comics i have read. Never seen Batman soo beaten up before but it was also so badass when he got up. Peak.
A great start. It has a clearly objective view of the events unfolding and the subjectivity reveals itself quickly. Very potent. Reminds me of Se7en.
Who knew owls could be so dang creepy. Well, I guess a lot of people, but I never really thought of owls that way until this book.
Scott Snyder writes a great story. Bringing us into Bruce's past to pull the story tighter and making everything suspenseful and creepy. Revelations abound and no one is quite safe in their knowledge. He writes a slightly arrogant Batman, but then isn't that what he is. No one can do the job better than he can and he knows it. He needs no help from anyone, or at least that's what he tells himself. Yet without Alfred and the others he probably wouldn't still be alive. Speaking of Alfred, I really enjoyed the stuff with Jarvis and the letter he wrote to Alfred.
The art is clean and detailed. I'm not a huge fan of the shadowy panels that you see in a lot of comics. I want to see the details and be able to get more of the story from the art alone.
Monster Batman is the way too amazing. Thanks for that Mr. Capullo.