Category Archives: Comic Books/Graphic Novels

Batman Year One (2011) a (mildly belated) review

There was a time when I was incredibly eager to see what Frank Miller was up to.  While I by and large missed his original run on Daredevil (I did follow his return to the character a few years after that initial run), I was a Frank Miller fan the moment I read The Dark Knight Returns #1.  To me, this single issue remains one of my all time favorite comic books.

While the rest of that series (IMHO!) wasn’t quite as good as that first issue, I nonetheless was eager to follow whatever new works Mr. Miller had going.  In 1987, he wrote a four part story entitled Batman: Year One.  This story appeared in Batman #’s 404 through 407 and was  illustrated by the great David Mazzucchelli.  The story featured, natch, the “first” year of Batman’s career.  However, the story devoted equal -perhaps even more!- time to the arrival and acclimation of one Jim Gordon to the rough streets of Gotham City.

Mr. Miller added interesting, and some not so interesting touches, to the “early” Batman legend (one can argue, for example, whether it was wise to retro-con Selena Kyle/Catwoman’s origin to be a one time prostitute).  Overall, I felt the story was strong and presented a good primer on a gritty, almost noir “take” on the Dark Knight.

Now, many years later, DC Comics has released a film version of the four part comic book.  It was released directly to DVD and, a couple of nights ago, I finally had a chance to see it.

It’s difficult, however, to put my thoughts into words regarding what I’ve seen.  If what you want to see a very slavish copy of the mini-series done to film, then this feature is for you.  Mr. Miller’s original story is followed almost panel by panel and with no apparent deviations (there may be a couple of flourishes here and there, but they are minimal).  Likewise, the “look” of the comic book is also followed slavishly.  David Mazzucchelli’s artwork is essentially carbon copied.  Camera angles are replicated to the point where the only big difference in terms of art is that in the movie people are actually moving while in the comic book they are frozen in time.

So, again, if you want to see an almost reverential retelling of the story, this is for you.

However…

One can argue about how best one can take a story and translate it to the screen.  There are those who are irritated with liberties taken by a director or actor or screenwriter when doing a translation.  “The book was better” is one of those cliched refrains.  Others may pick apart certain aspects of a translation, noting that the author’s original intention was ignored.  Often, the connotation is negative.  Why didn’t they stick closer to the source material?

In this case, the people behind this animated movie did just that.  However, the degree to which they did so wound up, in my opinion, harming the work, though not fatally.  Let’s face it:  Comic books are not movies and vice versa.  What may work on a comic book page may not work when things are in motion.  I’m not saying that Batman Year One is a failure.  Far from it.  The work is solid and I would recommend it to those interested in either Frank Miller or David Mazzucchelli or Batman or any combination of the three.

It’s just that…I wish the film’s makers had realized that they were indeed making a movie instead of a moving carbon copy of a comic book.  They didn’t have to go with every angle and shadow that Mr. Mazzucchelli originally laid out.  They could have tried to add their own flourishes.  Mind you, what I’m suggesting is that there could have been a better balance…perhaps a little more.  By all means use Mr. Miller’s story and Mr. Mazzucchelli’s artwork as the template for the adaptation but see where things could be “punched up”.  My feeling is that the action sequences, in particular, could have worked better if the movie’s makers had decided to make a movie rather than a too perfect moving adaptation.

Still, I do recommend it, although with the above reservations.

Watchmen 2…

…or should we say Watchmen -1?

According to Entertainment Weekly’s Jeff Jensen, a Watchmen prequel is in the works…

http://shelf-life.ew.com/2012/02/01/watchmen-prequels-exclusive-details/

Had I read about this a decade and a half or so ago, I would certainly have been more shocked.  Perhaps back then I may have even hoped that Watchmen series writer/co-creator, Alan Moore, might have a hand in this new series.  After all, and if memory serves, he was the one who originally thought this was a workable concept.

However, with the passage of time and further interviews with Mr. Moore, it is clear the rift between he and Watchmen publisher DC Comics is as wide as it is deep.

When Alan Moore’s first American work appeared in DC Comic’s Saga of the Swamp Thing, the book was well on its way toward cancellation.  In the store I frequented at the time, I might well have been the only person buying the book, and even I was about to give up on it when Mr. Moore showed up.

When his first issues appeared, I was stunned, shocked, delighted, amazed, and entranced.  Mr. Moore’s writing on this series, to put it bluntly, was amazing.  So much so that I had to look up his British works.  When I found out his works appeared in a magazine called Warrior, I hunted the issues down, discovering the incredible V for Vendetta and Marvelman (soon to be renamed Miracleman) and being doubly amazed by the man’s talents.  So too did others.  Swamp Thing not only wasn’t cancelled, it thrived.  While Warrior magazine was cancelled, DC Comics picked up and completed V for Vendetta while various companies picked up and completed Mr. Moore’s run of Marvel/Miracleman.

When I first heard about Watchmen, I eagerly anticipated it.  When it came out, I devoured each issue.  While the series mined the same general material as Marvelman, it was a great series…until its end.  One thing I came to realize was that as good a writer as Mr. Moore was, the conclusions to his tales, especially the longer running ones, were often anticlimactic.  In the case of Watchmen, unfortunately, the entire ending to the series wound up being a retread of and old episode of The Outer Limits entitled “Architects of Fear“.  I don’t know if this was intentional or unintentional on Mr. Moore’s part.  Regardless, toward the very end of the series, tellingly, we have a panel showing a television set.  An announcer notes that they’re about to play that episode of the series…obviously a nod by Mr. Moore to that particular show.

Regardless, I was still a big fan of the man’s works, and I was hoping to see more from Mr. Moore.  Especially his take on DC characters.

This was not to be.  The success of Watchmen, ironically, created a rift between Mr. Moore and DC Comics.  Though I don’t pretend to know all the ins and outs of the situation, Mr. Moore broke away from the company and, in subsequent interviews, repeatedly expressed the cause of the rift a desire to gain control over Watchmen.  DC Comics apparently had a clause in the Watchmen contract that ensured they retained control of the property as long as they kept it in print.  If that’s the case, it is possible the Watchmen prequel may be an attempt to continue doing just that.

As the years passed and Mr. Moore moved on, I found myself less and less interested in his subsequent works.  I tried many of them, some which received considerable positive reviews, but they just didn’t appeal to me as much as his earlier stuff.

The line up of talent involved in the Watchmen prequel books is unquestionably impressive, but even if Mr. Moore himself were somehow involved in this new book, I don’t think I’d pick it up.  While I retain fond memories of the original series despite certain flaws, the book featured a completely self contained story.  Even when I originally read it, I didn’t think there was a need for more stories set in this universe, whether before, during, or after the events presented.

I still feel that way.

But I’m just one voice.  If nothing else, I’m curious to see how this series does with modern audiences.