The Batman Universe
  • Batman Universe Comics
    • Comic News
    • Previews
    • Comic Reviews and Editorials
  • Batman Universe Media
    • Films and Movies
      • Movie News
      • Movie Reviews and Editorials
    • Televison
      • News
      • Reviews and Editorials
    • Video Games
      • News
      • Reviews and Editorials
    • Even More
      • Media News
      • Media Reviews and Editorials
  • Bat-Fan Culture
    • Merchandise
      • Merch News
      • Merch Reviews and Editorials
    • Everything Else
      • News
      • Reviews and Editorials
  • TBU Podcast Network
    • The Batman Universe Podcast
    • The Batman Universe Comic Podcast
    • TBU Specials
    • The Batman Universe Bat-Fans
    • Batgirl to Oracle
    • Robin: Everyone Loves the Drake
    • Batman Books: The Dark Knight in Prose
    • Everyone Loves Young Justice
    • TBU Commentaries
    • TBU Bat-Books for Beginners
tbu podcast episode 277 podcast cover
The Batman Universe Podcast

TBU Podcast Episode 277: DC High Volume: Batman – Year One Audio Drama

by Ian Miller May 11, 2025
written by Ian Miller

tbu podcast episode 277 podcast cover

https://media.blubrry.com/tbup/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/01-The%20Batman%20Universe%20Podcast/Episode%20277/TBUP%20E277.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embed

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | RSS

 

In episode 277 of The Batman Universe Podcast, Ian (@ibmmiller) and BJ (@bjshea33) review the new audio drama podcast, DC High Volume: Batman – Year One. Who is this adaptation for? How does it compare to the comic and the 2010s animated adaptation?

For our Bat-Family: What Batman comics would you like to see adapted by DC High Volume?

Drop us a line at TBU@TheBatmanUniverse.net.  As always, if you like this episode, please rate, share, and subscribe on the streaming platform of your preference. It’s a great way to show your support, and it’s quick and easy! Thank you, loyal Bat-fans!

Find past episodes of The Batman Universe Podcast right here.

May 11, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Birds of Prey #21 main cover and featured image
Comic Reviews and Editorials

Review: Birds of Prey #21

by Ian Miller May 10, 2025
written by Ian Miller

In this review of Birds of Prey #21, as the Birds of Prey are attacked on all sides, all over the globe, the world is about to learn why the Birds are of PREY!

 

Birds of Prey #21 main cover and featured image

Birds of Prey #21 main cover by Annie Wu (DC Comics)

Birds of Prey #21
On the Run, part 2
Writer: Kelly Thompson
Artist: Sami Basri
Colors: Adriano Lucas
Main Cover: Annie Wu
Variant Covers: Nimit Malavia, Rian Gonazales, Cliff Chiang, Lee Garbett
Release Date: May 7, 2025

 

This review contains Spoilers

As Big Barda plummets to earth from an exploded rocket, Babs desperately calls a Code Black for a downed Bird. Cass Batgirl and Sin/Megaera fight in the Gotham Sewers, while Black Canary shrieks her Canary Cry at the snake villain Copperhead in Tokyo. Canary refuses to run, despite Oracle’s orders.

Batgirl fights a cheetah-type villain with super speed, figuring out how to punch where she WILL be, and saves Sin from a soul-stealing sorcerer villain. They leave the seward and escape together.

Near Dubai, Bards hits the ground, alive but unconscious, and the mysterious shape shifting villain Inque from last issue uses her knife arm form to cut a hole in Barda’s armor and skin and then shoots a tranquilizer dart into the wound.

In Tokyo, Copperhead runs as a huge army of drones attack. Canary is able to scream some of them down, but enough escape to steal the tech.

Oracle warns all operatives of the Birds from the first part of this run of the danger, and tells them not to come in.

In a shadowy Gotham army base, the mysterious drone controlling villain Daemon assembles their forces – the cheetah and sorcerer villains from the sewers, Copperhead from Tokyo, and Inque from Dubai, now in Barda form.

Analysis

After a really excellent first issue where writer Thompson and artist Basri drop our experienced heroines into a much bigger fire than they expected, we see the fallout of those fights in this issue. Not a ton of character development or moments for the heroines this time, though Canary and Oracle both get nice lines in their monologues and dialogues. However, the focus on desperate action and villains who seemingly have intelligence and planning instead of just blundering around fighting the heroines gives a nice sense of a plot instead of a car crash of events. Thompson continues to have a really strong sense of the voices of these characters and how to write an action packed, straightforward story with nice mystery and twist elements that feel like the classic Dixon and Simone Birds of Prey. Two solid issues in, this arc “On the Run” promises to be at the least very entertaining!

Sami Basri continues to provide top notch art for the characters and action. Solid villain design renderings for our despicable baddies, and suitably heroic and appealing renderings for the Birds. There’s a clean-lined solidity to Basri’s work that never feels rushed or haphazard. While not quite as overly sexy as classic Birds of Prey artists like Greg Land, Butch Guice (RIP this past week), Ed Benes, or Joe Bennett, Basri’s Birds are still quite sexy while still being more interested in kicking butt than sticking their butts out. Colorist Adriano Lucas provides perfect straightforward action colors – no washed out silliness like the early arcs of this run, just straightforward plain comics coloring for a straightforward excellent action adventure issue.

Annie Wu’s main cover features a clever inverted reflection of Cass Batgirl and Sin/Magaera in the sewers, the drips of water providing a lot of great visual interest – as to be expected from Black Canary’s 2015 punk rock artist. Nimit Malavi’s gorgeous yellow-hued Black Canary variant features Cass Batgirl kicking all around Dinah as a kind of animated frame composition – quite nice. Rian Gonzales’s chibi variant features Black Canary as a paper doll with variant outfits – extremely cute. Cliff Chiang’s connecting AAPI heritage month cover features Katana’s full torso as well as parts of Swamp Thing and Robin Damian Wayne, among others. Lastly, Lee Garbett’s 1 in 25 incentive variant features Canary and Oracle atop a stack of dead CRT monitors, as Canary screams defiantly and Oracle works on her laptop – a nice image of their friendship.

Let me know what you think on twitter @ibmmiller, or join the conversation in our Discord!

Final Thoughts

Thompson and Basri continue the action packed globe trotting feeling of a great Birds of Prey story. Not a TON of character stuff for our heroes, but some nice conflict with a large chunk of our villain team sets up the second half of the arc nicely.

Birds of Prey #21 main cover and featured image
Birds of Prey #21
Final Thoughts
Thompson and Basri continue the action packed globe trotting feeling of a great Birds of Prey story. Not a TON of character stuff for our heroes, but some nice conflict with a large chunk of our villain team sets up the second half of the arc nicely.
3.5
Final Score
May 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Poison Ivy #33 main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

Comic Review: Poison Ivy #33

by Gareth Turner May 8, 2025
written by Gareth Turner

In this review of Poison Ivy #33, Poison Ivy and Peter Undine work on an environmental utopia while the tensions with Janet from HR come to ahead. 

 

Poison Ivy #33 main cover

Poison Ivy #33 main cover by Jessica Fong (DC Comics)

Poison Ivy #33
Writer: G. Willow Wilson
Artist: Marcio Takara
Cover: Jessica Fong
Variant Covers: Joshua “Sway” Swaby, Kyuyong Eom, Cathy Kwan
Page Count: 32 pages
Release Date: May 6, 2025

 

This comic book review contains spoilers 

 

The Story

Poison Ivy #33 opens with Ivy pontificating about the nature of dreams. She wonders if we enter an alternate reality when we dream, and if that reality is really the real one. Janet from HR is still recovering from last month but Ivy takes her to see a riverbend village her and Peter Undine have been working on. Janet gets weak and passes out. Undine says living in Marshview has infected her and she may only have a few months to live. Janet overhears this and then meets with the forest spirit Bog Venus to see if she can help. Venus agrees but only if Janet tells her how to separate Ivy from the spirit Xylon and prevent a war. Venus says she will not harm Ivy so Janet tells her she just needs to remove the spell hiding Marshview from the world. 

Meanwhile, Peter Undine demonstrates how the new village he constructed will move and change based on the necessities of the natural environment. Ivy asks if she can do anything to repay Undine and he reveals that he is touch starved since he can no longer touch normal humans without killing them due to his toxic skin. Ivy pities him and agrees to cuddle with him in the sunlight. Suddenly, the spell hiding the marshland evaporates and a police helicopter starts firing at them. She grabs Undine and Janet and pulls them to safety before confronting the attackers. Janet laments that Venus wasn’t supposed to hurt Ivy while Ivy tells Peter Undine to bring her The Order of the Green Knight. 

 

Analysis

Poison Ivy #33 sees some interesting developments as the many disparate storylines start to coalesce. G. Willow Wilson has been teasing us with dream theory since at least issue 16 when unsuspecting Seattleite “Chuck” was infected with labia spores which gave him psychedelic interpersonal dreams with Ivy. Here it comes off more as simple metaphor, but it’s recurred frequently enough that hopefully Wilson eventually gives us some kind of mind-bending dream related payoff.

Janet pulls a Fredo in Godfather II right down to speaking the line “no one was supposed to get hurt.” Her general motivations still seem muddy to me. She resents Ivy for treating her as inferior and withholding information but she never considers leaving? She loves Ivy but she also betrays her to save herself? Everyone seems concerned about keeping Janet alive and Bog Venus appears to be the only one capable of doing that, but Janet keeps this secret to create a kind of artificial rift between her and Ivy which can be dragged out ad infinitum. 

There’s something tragically lonesome about Ivy and Undine’s platonic cuddle-sesh. It’s intimate in a somewhat transactional way, but Takara depicts Ivy’s facial emotions in such a way that she appears unbothered and even maternal. While she doesn’t show any explicit sexual interest in Undine, she also doesn’t appear annoyed or vacant from the experience. It’s like she really cares for Undine and wants to offer him physical tenderness completely divorced from carnal attraction. It’s a really complex but subtle emotion the team is able to get across. The imbalance of romantic interest between them is transcended for a few pages by a mutual satisfaction for what they’ve accomplished and a matured acceptance of each individual’s misfortune. It’s spelled out in the writing but even if you couldn’t read, you could still follow these emotions fully from Marcio Takara’s art. I’m convinced ninety-nine out of one-hundred other artists couldn’t pull that off. 

Final Thoughts

Poison Ivy #33 is a return to form for the run, giving us a satisfying payoff of seeds planted in prior issues as well as an emotional exploration of Peter Undine. 

Poison Ivy #33 main cover
Poison Ivy #33
Final Thoughts
Poison Ivy #33 is a return to form for the run, giving us a satisfying payoff of seeds planted in prior issues as well as an emotional exploration of Peter Undine. 
4
Final Score
May 8, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
tbu comic podcast season 17 episode 8 cover image
The Batman Universe Comic Podcast

TBU Comic Podcast: Season 17 Episode 8

by Theodis Wright May 4, 2025
written by Theodis Wright

tbu comic podcast season 17 episode 8 cover image

https://media.blubrry.com/tbucp/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/02-The%20Batman%20Universe%20Comic%20Podcast/S17%20E8/TBUCP%20E417.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embed

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | RSS

 

The Batman Universe Comic Podcast Season 17 Episode 8 is live on on your favorite platforms. In this episode, Steph and Theo review three titles due to the 5th Wednesday in the month of April. This episode, they review Detective Comics #1096, the Detective Comics 2025 Annual, and Batman #159, part 2 of Hush 2. After that, they have fun with Greater Gotham.

But what do we have here, fellow Gothamites, a detective story in the pages of Detective Comics? Please say it’s so? And after two chapters, how are our host feeling about Hush 2 thus far? Listen in and find out.

 

Books Covered In Season 17 Episode 8

Detective Comics #1096
Detective Comics 2025 Annual #1
Batman #159

 

Greater Gotham Titles

Nightwing #125
Batman / Superman: World’s Finest #38
Catwoman #75
DC x Sonic the Hedgehog #2
Harley Quinn #50 (Steph goes off on it at least)
Batman / Superman: World’s Finest 2025 Annual #1
Batman: The Long Halloween – The Last Halloween #7
The Question: All Along the Watchtower #6
Batman: Wayne Family Adventures #160-162

 

Follow The Batman Universe

Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/BatmanUniverse
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thebatmanuniverse/
Discord: https://discord.gg/sKZncrm
BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/batmanuniverse.bsky.social

May 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7 main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7 Comic Review

by BJ Shea May 4, 2025
written by BJ Shea

In this review of Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7, the hunt for Holiday rages on, even after Robin has been shot by the gangland killer.

 

Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7 main cover

Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7 main cover by Tim Sale (DC Comics)

Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7
Writer: Jeph Loeb
Artist: Dave Johnson
Main Cover: Tim Sale
Variant Covers: Dave Johnson, Cully Hamner
Page Count:
32 pages
Release Date:
April 30, 2025

Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7 opens after Robin has been shot by “Holiday”. Batman is training him in the cave to try to remember the shooter. Robin has a busted shoulder and it is a six week recovery. After the six weeks is up, Batman challenges Robin to be a detective and find out where Mario Falcone has been all this time. Robin questions Alfred as to why Bruce hates him so much. Alfred says that it is the opposite. That if anything happened to Dick, he would never forgive himself.

Next Gordon is in his office trying to piece together who Holiday is when Detective Lopez returns and she suggests that Catwoman be added to the list of suspects. Gordon agress. While Robin finds a lead on Mario, Batman visits the graves of Martha Wayne and Mary Grayson. 

With Robin’s information, Batman busts in to save Mario from Poison Ivy and an Ivy Brainwashed Catwoman. Batman is able to free Catwoman and save Mario but still questions what Catwoman’s role is in all of this. As Ivy escapes, she is shot down by a .22 caliber bullet by a man in a trench coat. Suddenly that man’s hat is shot off by another man with a .22 and a trenchcoat. The man who was shot is revealed by Calendar Man who says “This does complicate things”.

Gordon and Batman find Poison Ivy and notice that there are two bullets there but only one wound. He wants to know where Harvey and Gilda Dent are. Catwoman meets with Mrs Falcone because they both have something each other wants. Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7 ends with a nice moment as Robin talks to his mother at her grave about how he has found a new life as Batman’s partner.

Analysis: Any BJ Shea superfan will know that The Long Halloween and Dark Victory are very high on my Favorite Batman Stories list. Jeph Loeb is one of my favorite writers. Not just on Batman but Superman and his Marvel Color series. So when this was announced, even with the sad passing of Tim Sale, I was super excited for this series. But for the most part this run has left me a little cold. I think a part of it is the rotating art but a major part of it was the mood that Tim Sale created with his art. The rotating art just has not given me that yet. I thought Dave Johnson was solid on this art however.

Also this is the first time I have read a Loeb mystery monthly and not in trade. All the others I could binge read and be fully into but now I have to wait. I wonder if when this is over and I binge read, if it will hit better for me.

However, I really like this Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7! I like the moments with Batman and Robin. The Bruce/Dick dynamic has always been one of my favorite things about the Batman mythos. Batman going to see Dick’s mother’s grave and telling her that he will give Dick a purpose was great and it lef to the ending with Dick seeing his mother and telling her he has a purpose.

We only have three issues and we have not gotten much with the new Holiday and the mystery of it all. We got a small step with Calendar Man meeting…. Holiday? Harvey? A Falcone? It feels like we need to start picking things up here. And maybe we are with this Calendar Man element.

Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7 main cover
Batman: The Long Halloween: The Last Halloween #7
Final Thoughts
We only have three issues and we have not gotten much with the new Holiday and the mystery of it all. We got a small step with Calendar Man meeting…. Holiday? Harvey? A Falcone? It feels like we need to start picking things up here. And maybe we are with this Calendar Man element. 
4.5
Final Score
May 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Detective Comics 2025 Annual main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

Detective Comics 2025 Annual

by Adam Koppel May 1, 2025
written by Adam Koppel

In this review of the Detective Comics 2025 Annual, why does the victim of a bizarre murder ask Batman to not solve the crime? Then, Batman’s #1 fan lives his wildest dream when he helps the Dark Knight investigate a mystery at his school.

 

Detective Comics 2025 Annual main cover

Detective Comics 2025 Annual main cover by Mikel Janín (DC Comics)

DETECTIVE COMICS 2025 ANNUAL
Written by AL EWING and JOSHUA HALE FIALKOV
Art by JOHN MCCREA, STEFANO RAFFAELE, FICO OSSIO and MIKE NORTON
Cover by MIKEL JANÍN
Variant Cover by JOHN McCREA
Page Count: 40 pages
Release Date: April 30, 2025

 

This review contains spoilers

Detective Comics 2025 Annual features two all-new, self-contained Batman stories that puts the “Detective” in Detective Comics, and also features an unexpected team-up on an unusual case.

The first story, “Batman Don’t Solve My Murder” is told in three parts by writer Al Ewing and several artists:

Chapter One begins with an obscure musical message that leads Batman to the secure underground bunker of a reclusive, book-loving tech billionaire, where the Dark Knight discovers its sole occupant has been stabbed to death, and the message “Batman don’t solve my murder” scrawled in the victim’s blood. Batman investigates the smart house and uncovers a shocking clue in the form of an incomplete manuscript containing a formula of immense power.

Chapter Two takes Batman across the Atlantic to a small English village where he locates a duplicate (and complete) manuscript at a local publishing house, and squares off with a magic-wielding local. Batman outsmarts the second-rate warlock (by using his knowledge of local topography), and then returns to the publishing house currently under siege by the true murderer/mastermind.

Chapter Three comes full circle (after a fashion), as Batman confronts the mastermind behind the scheme to create a magical weapon from the old manuscript. The mastermind has a bomb strapped to a hostage, so Batman gives him a key page from his manuscript after playing a hunch. Batman correctly deduces that the mastermind misinterpreted the weapon’s purpose as the mastermind activates the spell, and traps himself in an impenetrable bubble of frozen time.

The first story in Detective Comics 2025 Annual ends with Batman back in Gotham City, pondering the fate of both the imprisoned murderer/mastermind and the destructive potential of the manuscript Batman now holds.

The back-up feature, “Batman & David Rosales, Seventh Grader”, is a charming all-ages mystery that balances an intrepid amateur sleuth’s observations while  on a thrilling team-up with his idol.  Twelve year-old David Rosales, (head of the local chapter of the Batman Fan Club), becomes suspicious of problems plaguing Gotham Public Middle School after incidents of students experiencing terrifying hallucinations continue to multiply.

While poking around the school, David gets himself accidentally locked in a storeroom connected to the cafeteria, where he encounters Batman sneaking in through a window (in the daytime). The pair trade notes and theories as Batman continues his investigation in the lower levels of the school, while offering words of encouragement to David.

David’s theory that Scarecrow’s fear toxin is behind the rash of student freak outs is proven correct, not because of a sinister scheme Batman points out, but rather that Gotham City built the new middle school directly over the site of one of Scarecrow’s abandoned labs, and the fear toxin leached into the ventilation system.

The second story of Detective Comics 2025 Annual ends with Batman taking steps to fix the problem, and then offering David a ride home in the Batmobile.

Analysis 

Writer Al Ewing proves he’s done his homework for Detective Comics 2025 Annual, as he riffs on the classic locked-room murder mystery, but cleverly pivots by revealing it to be the scheme of a magic-obsessed culprit. Ewing puts Batman in full detective mode here, piecing together clues, solving puzzles and deducing the potential danger of a centuries-old manuscript. Ewing also displays his knack for writing character, dialogue and narration, as a large portion of this story revolves around Batman’s inner monologue.

Chapter One is drawn by Stefano Raffaele (The Joker), who manages to make his pages exciting despite the plot essentially being “Batman wanders around an underground smart home and looks at things in different rooms”. His figure work and layouts are remarkable. Raffaele’s art style appears to be influenced in part by Batman artists Jorge Fornes and David Mazzuchelli (among others), but his eye-catching style is still decidedly his own.

Chapter Two features art by Hitman co-creator John McCrea, whose layouts are solid, but his style is sketchier here. McCrea crafts a few interesting panels with Batman in action, but there are other instances of body contortions and scale issues that prove distracting, with Batman fighting a pair of magical ghosts (it’s a thing), and also when he towers over a trio of local British cops making it look like he’s ten feet tall while standing on the ground.

Chapter Three is drawn by Fico Ossio (Marvel Adventures Spider-Man) with cool action shots, some nice figure work and exciting panel layouts, as well as amazing facial expressions (see the look of utter madness on the murderer’s face for example). Ossio has adopted a sketchier style here (not nearly as hatch-marked as McCrea’s), but his artwork ties the entire story together by including flashbacks from the previous chapters in Ewing’s story.

After reading Detective Comics 2025 Annual, I keep wondering about the original DC Connect solicits for this issue, and how current series writer Tom Taylor’s plan for “…a haunting case that he can’t seem to solve…” involving “…some of his most maniacal foes…” would have turned out, and how Detective Comics 2025 Annual would have tied into Taylor’s overall run on Detective Comics.

The back-up feature, Batman & David Rosales, Seventh Grader, (nobody panic, maybe it’s DEI, but it’s all good), is a charming all-ages mystery that balances the point-of-view of an intrepid young sleuth’s observations about his school with an unexpected team-up with Batman.

The story by Joshua Hale Fialkov and Mike Norton reads as more of a middle-grade story (with little action, and only mild profanity), but overall it’s just a fun mystery story of a young man who admires, rather than fears Batman. When David deduces that his classmates were suffering from Scarecrow’s fear toxin, I was convinced the story would end with the reveal that David’s team-up with Batman was also an hallucination. Thankfully, that did not happen.

Final Thoughts 

Detective Comics 2025 Annual is a solid, self-contained effort, with clever dialogue, intriguing mysteries and magical maniacs, but a mixed bag of art that bogs down the main story. The back-up story is an entertaining tale with a simple mystery and feel-good ending.

Detective Comics 2025 Annual main cover
Detective Comcis 2025 Annual
Final Thoughts
Detective Comics 2025 Annual is a solid, self-contained effort, with clever dialogue, intriguing mysteries and magical maniacs, but a mixed bag of art that bogs down the main story. The back-up story is an entertaining tale with a simple mystery and feel-good ending.
4
Final Score
May 1, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
bto episode 259 podcast cover
Batgirl to Oracle

Episode 259

by Kimberley Rockmore April 30, 2025
written by Kimberley Rockmore

bto episode 259 podcast cover

https://media.blubrry.com/bto/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/10-Batgirl%20to%20Oracle/E259/BTO%20E259.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embed

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | RSS

 

In this no-frills episode, I review Batgirl vol. 6 #6 and Birds of Prey vol.5 #20. Stella’s Dungeon of Smut and my literature recommendations also appear.

April 30, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
tbu specials episode 59 podcast cover
TBU Specials

Episode 59: Al Ewing Talks the Detective Comics 2025 Annual

by Theodis Wright April 29, 2025
written by Theodis Wright

tbu specials episode 59 podcast cover

http://media.blubrry.com/tbus/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/04-The%20Batman%20Universe%20Specials/059-Detective-Comics-Al-Ewing/TBUS%20E59.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embed

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | RSS

 

In our latest episode, TBU Specials Episode 59, The Batman Universe’s editor-in-chief Theo sits down with comic book writer Al Ewing to discuss the Detective Comics 2025 Annual. The latest annual is out at comic shops everywhere on April 30, 2025. Need to order a copy, you can pre-order it now from Amazon or from My Comic Shop.

 

Find More at TheBatmanUniverse.net

Join our Discord, and share your thoughts on Batman:Resurrection. Prefer email? No problem. Drop us a line at TBU@TheBatmanUniverse.net.  As always, if you like this episode, please rate, share, and subscribe on the streaming platform of your preference. Thank you, loyal Bat-fans!

Don’t Forget to Follow Our Sister Site at  The Comic Book Spot.

 

April 29, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Batman #159 main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

Batman #159 Review

by Gareth Turner April 24, 2025
written by Gareth Turner

In this review of Batman #159, Batman attempts to save the Joker while receiving an unexpected visit from an old partner.

 

Batman #159 main cover

Batman #159 main cover by Jim Lee (DC Comics)

Batman #159
Written By:
Jeph Loeb

Art and Main Cover: Jim Lee
Variant Covers: ANDY KUBERT, GABRIELE DELL’OTTO, JULIAN TOTINO TEDESCO, JIM LEE, JOE QUINONES, MICHAEL CHO, SIMONE BIANCHI
Page Count: 32 pages
Release Date: April 23, 2025

 

This comic book review contains spoilers.

Batman #159 opens with Batman rushing the Joker to Leslie Thompkins’ Park Row Clinic for emergency care. Batman injects him with a serum to induce a medical coma, and Leslie stitches him up but says he’ll still require round-the-clock care. Bruce takes him back to the Batcave to monitor him and study his brain signatures, but he is ambushed by his former partner and rival, Red Hood, AKA Jason Todd. Jason attempts to kill the Joker and knocks Bruce out. When he finally comes to, his car and the Joker are both missing.

Meanwhile, the Riddler meets with Barbara Gordon and Dick Grayson at the Gotham Clock Tower and offers to help take down Hush.

Analysis

Jeph Loeb and Jim Lee continue their Hush revival with Batman #159, an issue as simplistic as it is confusing. In the years since the original Hush storyline, there have been several status-quo-altering changes that Loeb now has to reckon with, since this story takes place in the mainline DC continuity. Most notably, the resurrection of Jason Todd and the subsequent decades of development between him and Batman. His way of handling this is to mostly ignore everything that has happened since the original 2002 storyline.

Batman talks about Jason Todd as if he has barely interacted with him since Clayface impersonated him in the original Hush over 20 years ago. He says, “Tommy has brought out this piece on the board before. This feels different. This time my attacker moves exactly like the real one would… I thought we had made amends.” It’s a truly bizarre way to have Bruce talk about his surrogate son, with whom he’s maintained a tumultuous but complex relationship over the past few decades. It’s as if Jason’s only relevance to Bruce is through his connection to Thomas Elliot, a character he has barely crossed paths with in recent years.

Even more bizarre is the way Jason talks about the Clayface impersonation incident as if it just happened: “I know all about how Clayface impersonated me. Games you played with Tommy Elliot. Like tonight.” I don’t have the slightest idea what he’s talking about here. For those who don’t remember, Jason worked directly with Hush and Clayface to mess with Batman in the original Hush story, which is clarified in Batman Annual #25.

We don’t know precisely why Jason wants to kill Batman and the Joker yet (besides the obvious), but does this feel familiar to anyone else? Loeb has regressed Bruce and Jason’s character development back twenty years to retell parts of Batman lore that have already been successfully digested by the comic-reading public. We know everyone liked the end of Under the Hood when Batman tried to stop Jason from killing the Joker, so why don’t we just do that again? The climax of this issue is a beat-for-beat retread of Batman #650, which DC has done so many times now. Not only that, but it ignores the hundreds of stories told between these characters in the years since. Can Jeph Loeb really be doing something so transparent?

The original Hush felt like a blockbuster movie that brought in all the elements of Batman’s world: his past, his relationships, his love life, his identity. It paid off decades of storytelling and was full of huge elaborate set pieces like the opera house and the Daily Planet. So far, this is to that what those straight-to-video Disney sequels from the ’90s were to the classic originals: a handful of the same elements inside a cheap, hollow replica of what made the original special.

I could go on about how Batman is taking the Hippocratic oath with the Joker to absurd and obscene levels, but I would risk sounding as repetitive as DC. Instead, I think I’ll just ask what’s going on with the Riddler. If you’ll remember, at the end of the last arc he weighed maybe 120 lbs soaking wet, and now he looks like Dave Bautista. Clearly, Jeph Loeb doesn’t care about continuity — he’s ignoring most of the last 20 years of comics. I know Jim Lee has always been really excited about continuing the mainline Batman book from 1940, but it really is pointless if you have no connection or awareness of its current iteration. This would’ve made much more sense as a standalone non-canon sequel to the original story.

Jim Lee shows a slight improvement from last month with a few cool panels of a grizzled, chin-stubbed Batman. Although perceptive readers will notice his now self-aware tendency to obscure the character’s feet whenever possible is back. The angles are still awkward, and the character poses are robotic. Little attention is given to the subtle character intricacies that set his best work apart. The focus is on the full-page splashes like Batman in the ‘Thinker’ position on page 10 or Batman and Jason pressing guns to each other’s heads near the end. The connecting panels offer no more than what’s necessary to get to the big stuff. This is early-’90s Jim Lee, for better or worse.

Scott Williams’ inking in Batman #159 is anything but precise, playing into the looseness of Jim Lee’s more-is-more style of linework. Alex Sinclair’s coloring does this issue no favors, with the brief flashback panels being a notable exception. We see a very brief reprise of the wonderful watercolor flashbacks from the original Hush storyline with a depiction of the moment Leslie Thompkins came across a recently orphaned Bruce Wayne. They’re not Jim Lee’s best drawings, but they still provide a nice reprieve from the issue’s incessant and largely nonsensical action. Ditto the red, black, and white dream sequence of the Joker killing the Waynes.

But these moments aside, I found the color choices for Leslie’s clinic and the Batcave relied on cold, washed-out shades that gave off a pedestrian malaise. It’s as if the Joker’s pale skin permeates entire pages with whites, light greens, and greys. Even the unmotivated red backgrounds during the Batman/Red Hood fight at least provided some much-needed contrast to amp up the stakes.

Final Thoughts

Batman #159 remains a disappointing and confusing follow-up to the original 2002 storyline. The characters are reduced to their most primitive iterations, and even the art is unexceptional.

Batman #159 main cover
Batman #159
Final Thoughts
Batman H2SH remains a disappointing and confusing follow-up to the original 2002 storyline. The characters are reduced to their most primitive iterations, and even the art is unexceptional.
2
Final Score
April 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
tbu podcast episode 276 podcast cover
The Batman Universe Podcast

TBU Podcast Episode 276: Batman Forever – In Memoriam: Val Kilmer

by Ian Miller April 22, 2025
written by Ian Miller

tbu podcast episode 276 podcast cover

https://media.blubrry.com/tbup/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/01-The%20Batman%20Universe%20Podcast/Episode%20276/TBUP%20E276.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embed

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | RSS

 

In episode 276 of The Batman Universe Podcast, Ian (@ibmmiller) and BJ (@bjshea33) decided to try to honor Val Kilmer after his recent passing with a discussion of his performance as Batman in Batman Forever (1994). Join us as we look at the highs, the lows, and the Schumachers of this (in our opinion) underrated Batman film!

For our Bat-Family: Which Batman Timeline is Your Favorite?

Drop us a line at TBU@TheBatmanUniverse.net.  As always, if you like this episode, please rate, share, and subscribe on the streaming platform of your preference. It’s a great way to show your support, and it’s quick and easy! Thank you, loyal Bat-fans!

Find past episodes of The Batman Universe Podcast right here.

April 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Connect with TBU

Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube Discord

Support TBU

Support TBU

Support TBU

Answer the call and check out the various ways that you can support TBU to keep the awesome community thriving for years to come.  Head over to our TBU Support Page now. 

Join TBU

Join TBU

Join TBU

Which member of the Bat-Family do you best represent? Whoever it may be, consider joining the TBU Family and contribute awesome content with other dedicated Bat-Fans. Check out our TBU Staff Page for more details.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • Youtube
  • Discord

The Batman Universe is now a part of The Comic Book Source, LLC and all material contained © 2008-Present. All Rights Reserved (All Wrongs Avenged). Contents may not be reprinted without permission. The Batman Universe is a "fan site" and is not affiliated in any way with DC Comics, DC Entertainment or Warner Bros. "Batman" and all elements are the trademarks of and © by DC Comics. No copyright infringement is intended. All promotional stills/artwork copyright by their respective intellectual property holders.

Contact Us

The Batman Universe
  • Batman Universe Comics
    • Comic News
    • Previews
    • Comic Reviews and Editorials
  • Batman Universe Media
    • Films and Movies
      • Movie News
      • Movie Reviews and Editorials
    • Televison
      • News
      • Reviews and Editorials
    • Video Games
      • News
      • Reviews and Editorials
    • Even More
      • Media News
      • Media Reviews and Editorials
  • Bat-Fan Culture
    • Merchandise
      • Merch News
      • Merch Reviews and Editorials
    • Everything Else
      • News
      • Reviews and Editorials
  • TBU Podcast Network
    • The Batman Universe Podcast
    • The Batman Universe Comic Podcast
    • TBU Specials
    • The Batman Universe Bat-Fans
    • Batgirl to Oracle
    • Robin: Everyone Loves the Drake
    • Batman Books: The Dark Knight in Prose
    • Everyone Loves Young Justice
    • TBU Commentaries
    • TBU Bat-Books for Beginners