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batman and robin #19 main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

TBU Comic Review: Batman and Robin #19

by Daniel Goldberg March 15, 2025
written by Daniel Goldberg

In this review of Batman and Robin #19, Batman and Robin labor over continued misunderstandings as Batman senses danger closing in. Oracle warns Batman but he presses on and in the process loses Robin to Memento’s grip.

 

batman and robin #19 main cover

Batman and Robin #19 main cover by Javier Fernández (DC Comics)

Batman and Robin #19
“Memento, Part Six”
Writer: Phillip Kennedy Johnson
Art and Main Cover: Javi Fernández
Colorist: Marcelo Maiolo
Variant Covers: Juan Ferreyra, Miguel Mendonça, John McCrea
Page Count: 32 pages
Release Date: March 12, 2025

This review contains spoilers

Batman and Robin #19 begins as a figure is sitting alone in a cell. Outside the cell, Memento sharpens a sickle blade on a whetstone. Days later, the Dynamic Duo is soaring across the rooftops towards reported shooters. Batman is still experiencing hallucinatory effects of Gravedigger’s Poppy. Robin is narrating the known facts of the Memento case. The pair quickly dispose of the shooters and Robin identifies the Vauxhall Opera House as Memento’s next target.

Oracle comms in, and Batman tells Robin to return to the Batcave after extracting a promise that Robin will not confront Memento alone. Robin agrees and departs. Oracle informs Batman that Dr. Bashar received funding from a shell company associated with the League of Assassins. Elsewhere, Robin calls Detective Lautrec and asks for help in finding a treatment for Batman’s worsening symptoms. She agrees. Lautrec is accompanying Jim Gordon on a visit to Scarecrow. Scarecrow is unrestrained, unmasked, and unwell. He rambles but returns to lucidity long enough to inform Lautrec that her old professor is waiting for her. Lautrec calls a colleague in Scotland Yard and asks them to exhume Atticus Blye’s body and confirm its status.

At home, Batman invites Robin out to dinner, to try and experience a “normal” life. With Lucy the macaque draped around his shoulders, Robin demurs. Batman tries again, acknowledging that he should not have instructed Robin to stay away from the chessboard, and offering to reset the pieces and play a game later. Robin smiles and says that he’d love to play after his shift at Sacred Heart. During the sequence, Batman has planted a bug on Robin’s shoes, and Oracle is none too pleased.

They continue to argue about it as Batman listens from the rooftops of Gotham. At Sacred Heart, Dr. Bashar invites Damian to visit hospice patients. They enter the elevator and Damian steps in a coffee spill. As he bends down he identifies the bug and tosses it on the floor in disgust. The lights suddenly go out. They come back down but the elevator is headed to the basement rather than the second floor as Dr. Bashar intended. The door opens and Memento is waiting.

He slashes Dr. Bashar with the sickle blade as he intones his fearful rhymes. Batman races to the scene in the Batmobile, imploring Robin not to engage. He initiates Valkyrie sequence and ejects to the passing Batplane. Batman arrives less than 30 seconds later only to find a dead Dr. Bashar, with his face removed. There is no sign of Robin. Dr. Bashar’s revenant appears and informs Batman that Memento has both the face of Nicodemus Crowe and Batman’s son.

Analysis

Batman and Robin #19, part six of the Memento arc, continues to turn the emotional screws. The tension between Batman and Robin reaches a nearly unbearable pitch, only to have writer Phillip Kenney Johnson ratchet the pressure even further through Memento’s capture of Robin.

In part five, the emotional distance between Batman and Robin increases partly as a result of a misunderstanding. Batman fears for Robin and wants him to have as normal a life as possible, which he doubts is available to anyone working as Boy Wonder. Yet Robin hears only Batman’s doubt, stripped of context, which deepens the mistrust and resentment he feels towards his father.

Whereas previous writer Joshua Williamson countered the tendency to focus on the problems and conflicts between father and son through optimism, warmth, and connection, Johnson returns to the more familiar themes in this book. I have no problem with this, as long as the writer characterizes the relationship between two multi-dimensional, bright, and complex beings. Johnson accomplishes this. Although I am certainly not defending clandestine surveillance of a child, most parents can likely understand the protective impulse that led Batman to bug Robin. That Batman’s instincts regarding the danger Robin is in prove right is the coldest of comforts.

The action kicks back up again in the book, as apart from the interlude at Wayne Manor, Batman and Robin are on the move for the entire book. Few other characters occupy much time and space in the book, although the reduction of Scarecrow is startling and gives readers a sense of the scope of Memento’s power. Readers are left to worry about the extent of the similarity between the darkness at the heart of the Memento narrative and the shadow cast over Batman and Robin’s relationship.

Johnson’s writing of the characters and their relationship is deep, dark, and complex, like our heroes themselves. Artist Javi Fernández does his best to keep up, but the anime influences in his linework seem off-tone, at a minimum. I would almost prefer to see Mikel Janín, currently illustrating Detective Comics, to have a go at Batman and Robin, as his horrorcore suits the same elements in Johnson’s writing.

Final Thoughts

I continue to appreciate Phillip Kennedy Johnson’s approach to The Dynamic Duo. The depth and darkness of Batman and Robin’s relationship mirrors the narrative itself. Memento himself is disturbing and both of the superheroes’ vulnerability is on full display as the arc races towards its climax.

batman and robin #19 main cover
Batman and Robin #19
Final Thoughts
I continue to appreciate Phillip Kennedy Johnson’s approach to The Dynamic Duo. The depth and darkness of Batman and Robin’s relationship mirrors the narrative itself. Memento himself is disturbing and both of the superheroes’ vulnerability is on full display as the arc races towards its climax.
4
Final Score
March 15, 2025 0 comments
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poison ivy #31 main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

Comic Book Review: Poison Ivy #31

by Gareth Turner March 8, 2025
written by Gareth Turner

In this review, Poison Ivy and Peter Undine uncover the secret history of Marshview. 

 

poison ivy #31 main cover

Poison Ivy #31 main cover by Jessica Fong (DC Comics)

Poison Ivy #31
Writer: G. Willow Wilson
Artist: Brian Level
Colors: Arif Prianto
Main Cover: Jessica Fong
Variant Covers: Kyuyong Eom, Jenny Frison, Jorge Fornés, and Tula Lotay
Release Date: March 5, 2025

 

This comic book review contains spoilers 

 

The Story

Poison Ivy #31 opens with Ivy in bed with Janet from HR. They have both formed contrasting alliances with the swamp creatures Bog Venus and Xylon but right now Janet is more worried about the creature that’s been following her around on rooftops. 

Ivy then meets up with Peter Undine to find out the secrets of Mashview in Slaughter Swamp. Back during the construction of Gotham City, land developers tried to create a permanent settlement in the swamp. Despite constant flooding, they eventually created an underground piping system to flush out the water so they could build their town. Slowly the swamp started to fight back by releasing poisonous gases and invasive vines. Eventually the swamp was able to kill everyone living in the town except for one man named Ed Cooper. Now it turns out Ed Cooper has evolved into a horrific monster, the same one that’s been following Janet around on rooftops. 

 

Analysis

Poison Ivy #31 is primarily told in flashback as we get an abbreviated history of Marshview and a backstory for the creature that’s been stalking Janet the last couple issues. The mainline story is essentially stagnant as we get a reminder about Ivy and Janet’s relationships with Bog Venus and Xylon, but no further development therein. Instead, Peter Undine returns to the story (cool design as always) and uses his plant powers which are vaguely described by writer G. Willow Wilson: “Undine’s strange abilities feel like cousins of my own. Related but not closely enough to be immediately familiar. He’s pulling us through the crude intersection of natural and man-made environments to see what they both remember.” The lengthy flashback is told through narration and imagery rather than as a standalone story so it reads more like a Wikipedia article to get you caught up on the history of this town than a compelling narrative in its own right. We’re told everything directly including who the creature that has been following Janet is without any character having to learn it through investigation. It’s the most lazy kind of exposition dumping you can do. 

The extended flashback does nothing to emotionally hook the reader, and instead relies on summarizing the ongoing struggle between a people and the town they inhabit. Even the reveal that this swamp creature is Ed Cooper means nothing to us as he’s a character that was just introduced pages prior. There is no forward momentum in Janet and Ivy’s relationship nor Ivy and Undine’s, it’s just another issue of spinning the narrative wheels. 

Brian Level takes over art duties from Marco Takara with mixed results. Ivy’s initial nightmare is visualized in a unique way that I don’t think Tarkara would’ve done, showing a disembodied head staring down at her from her bedroom ceiling. He experiments with page layout in the issues backhalf and Arif Prianto is a consummate professional in making sure every page is balanced and visually dynamic. Unfortunately there is just no way not to feel Takara’s absence in this book after he’s made such an indelible impact on it. Here Ivy and Janet are back to being sexualized (I’m not sure what’s going on with Ivy’s anatomy at the bottom of page 2), and we get some truly unflattering moments like Ivy’s face at the bottom of page 4 and odd perspectives like on page 20. On the whole it looks totally fine, but it’s clear to me that Marco Takara has consistently been this book’s x-factor. 

Final Thoughts

Poison Ivy #31 comes back with a new artist and a backstory for Marshview in Slaughter Swamp. Unfortunately the backstory reads more like homework and the visuals suffer with the change-up. 

poison ivy #31 main cover
Poison Ivy #31
Final Thoughts
Poison Ivy #31 comes back with a new artist and a backstory for Marshview in Slaughter Swamp. Unfortunately the backstory reads more like homework and the visuals suffer with the change-up. 
2
Final Score
March 8, 2025 0 comments
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Batgirl #5 main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

Comic Book Review: Batgirl #5

by D.M. Grant March 6, 2025
written by D.M. Grant

Eighty miles outside of Gotham, Cassandra is on her own against The Unburied in the rescue of Lady Shiva! Check out our review of Batgirl #5.

 

Batgirl #5 main cover

Batgirl #5 main cover by David Talaski (DC Comics)

BATGIRL #5
Written by TATE BROMBAL
Art by TAKESHI MIYAZAWA
Main Cover: DAVID TALASKI
Variant Cover: KEVIN WADA
Page Count: 32 pages
Release Date: March 5, 2025

 

This review contains spoilers

Having planted a tracker on her mother, Batgirl #5 begins as Batgirl travels to the Nest of the Unburied some eighty miles north of Gotham City. Entering solo, she stealthily avoids the larger hub of Unburied populace (which includes women and children), and follows Nergui and Chodak, who eventually get the drop on her. With Shiva’s words ringing in her head throughout the fight, Cass manages to defeat every Unburied member who attacks her, before getting gassed by Nergui and falling unconscious.

Memories swirl of her time with Lady Shiva, from her birth to her first meeting of her “as” Batgirl, to each of them killing each other, to her time as Orphan. Eventually, Cass is met by the vision of Stephanie Brown – the other Batgirl and her best friend. “Stephanie” encourages Cass to vocalize all of her feelings since her reunion with Shiva and the battle with the Unburied. Cass recalls how her upbringing under David Cain led her to hate herself, and she sees in Shiva a perfect version of what she could become, which she despises. She wants to save Shiva, so she can save a part of herself that she views as bad. Steph congratulates her for getting everything off her chest, then hits her back awake, where Cassandra is hung upside down across from an equally suspended above ground Shiva, who’s determined to defeat the Unburied with her long lost daughter.

Analysis

Five months into this series, and I’m getting this theory that the odd-numbered issues are the best. With #5, this is the best in the series so far. The focus in entirely on Cassandra, as we see her on her own for the first time in her book. She’s not playing catch-up to a new plot, she’s not being introduced to enemies new and old. She’s on her own and she thrives, for a while anyway. I enjoyed everything this issue had to offer, but the first half where Batgirl infiltrates the Nest of The Unburied I loved.

In these reviews, I’ve been sparse on my praise of Takeshi Miyazawa, as there hadn’t been much for be to discuss beyond simple quality workmanship. I’ve always enjoyed Miyazawa’s work, but particularly his early style when he did Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane. He had a more recognizable manga-inspired design work that appealed to me. These days, that design work is there if you squint, but mostly tamped down for more grounded, realistically rendered illustration. Still good, but not my favorite when comparing the two eras of his career.

This issue however, showcases Miyazawa at his best, and it’s all in how he depicts Cassandra. In presenting her entering the nest and stylishly moving from spot to spot undetected, he at once achieves a characterization of Cass that is far too unsung and recalls the heights of her best run during the Kelley Puckett and Damion Scott era – that being she’s as good at sneaking around as Batman. From the superhero landing to her pulling up her cape to blend in the shadows and hide her face, these are some details I’ve not seen in decades. Above all else, it just plain makes her look cool, which is how it should be at all times. In the recent past we’ve seen Cass as part of a Bat-Family ensemble and paired with Stephanie, so there’s not been many instances where we see her styling on the book on her own. With Brombal’s script and Miyazawa’s art, we’ve got vintage Batgirl in this first half of the book, doing her thing and being awesome at it. More of this please!

Throughout it all, Cassandra has Shiva’s words from previous issues replay in her head. I like this device as it shows an attention to detail in the overall character driven aspect of the story, and also keeps Cass silent, which is where she’s at her best. Mute or not, she is the Silent Knight, and her actions must always speak louder than her words. This also justifies the dump of emotional outpouring she gives to “Stephanie” later in Batgirl #5, as “Steph” gives her permission to, and she’s not much for speaking on how she feels to begin with.

In my previous reviews, I’ve already outlined what’s going on through Cassandra’s head throughout everything, so what she tells “Steph” in Batgirl #5 isn’t terribly revealing unless you’ve not been paying attention, or are unaware of Cassandra’s history. Brombal is flexing his fanboy bonafides by explicitly invoking the best of Cass’ continuity with the Batgirl/Shiva death duel (with exact dialogue from Batgirl #7), and even near the end of her original series with the very WLW dream sequence with Stephanie. This recalls not only Batgirl #72-#73 at the end of her last ongoing book, but also issue #62.

Basically, Cassandra loves to dream about Stephanie whenever she gets beaten up. While at first this rang a bit too hard into fanservice for my tastes, what I like about Steph’s integration in Cassandra’s head is that she’s presented a bit more like an older sister for Cassandra to vent her anxieties to. That’s not exactly how their relationship has been in the Batgirls title or elsewhere, but in terms of how Cassandra would view her, I buy it and I think it’s a perceptive level of characterization that Brombal has nailed in an unexpected way. Shippers can still ship, but there’s no distractive romance in “Steph’s” scenes, keeping the focus purely on how Cassandra is feeling at this point.

Two more points of interest: Much of the book has been on how Lady Shiva is bad and Cassandra is the good version of her. It’s a bit messy in terms of Shiva writing. Bryan Edward Hill during his Batman and the Outsiders book was far better in detailing how cool Shiva is on her own, and the evil dragon-mom version isn’t the best iteration of her. What I’m getting at is, with the way the book has been leading I’m expecting Shiva to die in a sacrifice to save Cass. I hope that’s not the case, the character is above that and it would feel not unexpected but at the same time shallow and unneeded. Shiva’s “died” before in James Tynion’s Detective Comics run, so it wouldn’t be unexplored territory.

Speaking of that run, point #2 in terms of Batgirl #5, is where we are with continuity. In Cassandra’s memories, she recalls her early adventures as Batgirl against Shiva, the original version of David Cain, but also her time as Orphan. How do these versions cohere? The character of Mother isn’t mentioned (which fine by me), but Cass being “Orphan” and not Batgirl was a very contentious point in time during her history. Her original run as Batgirl informs the best of her, but to keep Orphan in continuity is questionable. I recall the issue written where she and Steph saw that they were both Batgirls and of course the whole Dark Knights Metal Multiverse thing basically took the New 52 timeline out of pocket, but this is still a big question for me. It doesn’t ruin anything, merely confuses how Cass might see herself. Because the 2000s era and the Orphan era are distinctly opposed to one another, how might they coalesce?

Regardless, even that didn’t bother me too much. With so little talking, allowing for Miyazawa’s action to take center stage and Cassandra Cain at maximum aura, this is the best presentation of the character since Batgirls #14 in 2023. Where this first storyline goes will determine exactly how good Brombal is for the character, but this issue right here has presented his peak. I’m excited not only for the conclusion, but also what comes next after this.

Batgirl #5 main cover
Batgirl #5
Final Thoughts
With so little talking, allowing for Miyazawa's action to take center stage and Cassandra Cain at maximum aura, this is the best presentation of the character since Batgirls #14 in 2023.
4.5
Final Score
March 6, 2025 0 comments
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detective comics #1094 main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

TBU Comic Review: Detective Comics #1094

by Daniel Goldberg March 4, 2025
written by Daniel Goldberg

In this review of Detective Comics #1094, Batman sends Robin on an intelligence mission but aborts it when Damian experiences danger.

 

detective comics #1094 main cover

Detective Comics #1094 main cover by Mikel Janín (DC Comics)

Detective Comics #1094
“Mercy of the Father, Part Five”
Writer: Tom Taylor
Art and Main Cover: Mikel Janín
Variant Covers: Bruno Redondo, Ariel Olivetti, Juan Ferreyra, Ryan Benjamin, Dustin Nguyen
Page Count: 32 pages
Release Date: February 26, 2025

 

This Review Contains Spoilers

Detective Comics #1094 opens with Batman and 14-year-old Spencer Robertson lying immobile next to a burning car. Batman struggles under the influence of the midazolam Asema injected into him. Robertson is bleeding out. Batman contemplates Robertson’s story, noting that his detention at the Faultless Juvenile Detention Center made little sense. He activates an injectable benzodiazepine reversal agent from his utility belt, hoists Robertson into the Batmobile and activates its mobile medical bay. The vehicle’s computer analyzes Robertson’s blood type and Batman begins a blood transfusion as the autodrive races them to Gotham General Hospital.

Robertson fades out of consciousness, but not before he remarks that neither he nor his friends were ever scared of Batman because he is from Gotham and is theirs. Later, on the rooftops of Gotham, Batman asks Robin to follow the only lead they have: Faultless itself. Damian dons a disguise, Oracle concocts a backstory, and he heads off to Faultless after promising Batman he will obey authority to ensure he has enough time to gather the needed intelligence.

As Damian is processed in the facility, Bruce Wayne infiltrates the front of this Potemkin Village by claiming that he is interested in investing in the carceral state. Once inside Warden Slattery’s office, he ensures that the Warden trips and slams his head on a table. As a guard helps the warden from the office, Bruce taps into their security feed and harvests the contents of the warden’s laptop.

Across from Gotham General, Asema watches and waits. A noise startles Detective Bullock, who is guarding Robertson. It is Batman, who discusses the oddity of Fautless and a recidivism rate high enough to match Arkham Asylum’s. Inside Faultless in the cafeteria, a guard prepares to beat a 10-year-old boy for a rules violation. Damian is unable to countenance this and initiates a fight that leads to the inmates’ takeover of the mess hall. Oracle comms Batman to update him and Batman smiles grimly.

He calls Faultless, and the guards hand Damian a mobile phone with “Mom” on the line. Batman tells Damian to stop but understands that he cannot permit harm to come to the inmates. Damian surrenders on the accepted condition that no other inmate is to be harmed. He is hustled into a chamber, strapped to an upright gurney, and approached by a syringe-wielding Warden Slattery. Later, in solitary confinement, Batman arrives.

Damian prepares to defend himself but there is no need. Batman agrees that defending a child about to be assaulted by a grown man is a moral necessity and indicates that he will not leave his son in Faultless for a moment longer. Damian informs Batman that Warden Slattery took a vial of his blood and surmises that Sangraal continues plasma from Faultless inmates.

The Dynamic Duo arrive home and at the gates a note is taped to the wrought iron. On the front of the envelop is printed the words, “The Truth You Need to Know. – Asema.”

Analysis

Writer Tom Taylor extends the back-and-forth cadence that is emerging in his “Mercy of the Father” arc. After an intense issue 4, here, Detective Comics #1094 again decelerates. There is action – Batman saves Spencer Robertson’s life and Damian infiltrates Faultless – but once again little is seen of Asema, other than Oracle the Bat-Family is nowhere to be found, and Damian’s undercover op lasts only a single day rather than the planned four.

I appreciate Taylor’s careful stoking, and the slow-fast-slow sequencing is effective in building tension and anticipation. This book never feels stunted or tedious, and I personally enjoyed a book literally filled with high-tech gadgets no doubt originating from the genius division at Wayne Enterprises (Fox and colleagues!). Not everyone enjoys Bat-tech, but for those who do, this book is an absolute treasure trove. The utility belt, the fact that the Batmobile has a mobile med bay that operates simultaneously with autodrive, and the digital snooping Bruce deploys in the warden’s office all left this espionage and gadget fun virtually clapping with delight.

Where does he get such wonderful toys?

As a reviewer for Batman and Robin, I found the dialogue between the Dynamic Duo to be almost unexpectedly nuanced. I have never found Taylor to be especially subtle in his rendering of dialogue and character, and yet the relationship between Batman and Robin depicted here ended up surprising me. Almost immediately after entering Faultless on a critical intelligence information expected to take up to four days, Damian violates his express commitment to Batman to obey authority and stay undercover. We might expect the often grim, taciturn, and unyielding father to castigate Damian. Damian himself certainly does.

And yet Taylor’s Batman surprises, adopting a startingly familiar paternal figure, one would never, regardless of objective and context, permit his son to suffer that which the father could prevent. Damian is the one who protests that the mission is incomplete, but Batman will have none of it and shelters Damian just as one would expect from a loving parent. Perhaps Batman has been affected by his recall at the beginning of the book, that Spencer Robertson’s father walked out on him when he was 13 years old.

Artist Mikel Janín continues his absolutely stellar work on this book, achieving remarkable ends in almost exclusively a red, green, and blue color palette. Of blood and money and authority comes the mercy of the father. Batman’s own mercy is contrasted elegantly with the frightening rendition of the warden, with Janín’s legendary horrorcore put to great effect in the cloistered environment of a juvenile carceral institution conducting medical experiments on adolescents.

Final Thoughts

I really enjoyed Detective Comics #1094. The Bat-tech is fun and exciting, the relationship between Batman and Robin is complex and warm, and the artwork continues to shine.

detective comics #1094 main cover
Detective Comcis #1094
Final Thoughts
I really enjoyed Detective Comics #1094. The Bat-tech is fun and exciting, the relationship between Batman and Robin is complex and warm, and the artwork continues to shine.
4
Final Score
March 4, 2025 0 comments
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season 17 episode 4 podcast cover
The Batman Universe Comic Podcast

TBU Comic Podcast: Season 17 Episode 4

by Theodis Wright March 3, 2025
written by Theodis Wright

season 17 episode 4 podcast cover

https://media.blubrry.com/tbucp/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/02-The%20Batman%20Universe%20Comic%20Podcast/S17%20E4/TBUCP%20E413.mp3

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The Batman Universe Comic Podcast Season 17 Episode 4 is live on on your favorite platforms. In Season 17 Episode 4, after giving some news, Steph and Theo talk about their thoughts on the latest issue of Detective Comics with Detective Comics #1094. Why does Steph consider this issue a better Batman and Robin story than the actual Batman and Robin series? An why is Theo harping over the current issue of Black Canary: Best of the Best? Listen in and find out why.

Books Covered In Season 17 Episode 4

Detective Comics #1094

 

Greater Gotham Titles

Nightwing #123
Batman/Superman: World’s Finest #36
Batman and Robin: Year One #5
Catwoman #73
The Question: All Along the Watchtower #4
Batman: The Long Halloween – The Last Halloween #5
Harley Quinn #48
Little Batman: Month One #4
Batman: Wayne Family Adventures #152-153

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March 3, 2025 0 comments
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harley quinn #48 main cover
Batman Universe ComicsComic Reviews and Editorials

Harley Quinn #48

by Adam Koppel March 3, 2025
written by Adam Koppel

In this review of Harley Quinn #48, Harley’s secret rendezvous with Poison Ivy becomes an unwelcome throuple when a member of Batman’s rogues gallery (no, not that one), crashes the party.

 

harley quinn #48 main cover

Harley Quinn #48 main cover by Elizabeth Torque (DC Comics)

HARLEY QUINN #48
Written by ELLIOTT KALAN
Art by MINDY LEE
Main Cover: ELIZABETH TORQUE
Variant Covers: DAVID NAKAYAMA, JORGE FORNÉS, BAILIE ROSENLUND, RYAN BENJAMIN
Page Count: 32 pages
Release Date: February 26, 2025

 

This review contains spoilers 

Harley Quinn #48 begins in Slaughter Swamp, as Harley and Poison Ivy try for a romantic getaway (it’s hard to find time for a relationship when both members of a power couple have successful solo titles). Ivy presses Harley on her recent troubles, as Harley’s judgmental inner voice also berates her. Ivy’s not the psychiatrist here, but she thinks Harley just wants everyone to like her (which is a stunning inner conflict for an anti-hero to have).

As Harley ticks off her numerous personal and professional issues, a pair of Professor Pyg’s musclebound dollotrons emerge from the water. Harley and Ivy dispatch the mind-controlled automatons with ease, realizing too late that they were just decoys. Professor Pyg tranqs them both and takes them back to his evil scientist lair which is also conveniently located in Slaughter Swamp.

Pyg ties Harley up, and promises that his mind control procedure will make Ivy a perfect girlfriend (by drilling a hole in her head). Harley breaks free and takes out her frustrations on a large group of dollotrons before turning her attention to Professor Pyg. Harley works through her inner rage during a brutal multi-panel brawl with Pyg, and also achieves a breakthrough about her relationship with Ivy.

Harley then discovers that Ivy was awake the whole time, (her enhanced body filters toxins; how did I know this and Harley didn’t?) Harley’s annoyed by the ruse, but realizes that Ivy did it to help her work through her issues. Pyg vacillates between his creepy mother fixation and his creepy mad scientist vibe as Harley continually pummels him.

Harley Quinn #48 ends as Harley and Ivy embrace while watching Professor Pyg’s lab burn down. Pyg is sprawled somewhere in the swamp, as the various dollotrons wander aimlessly around the burning structure.

Analysis 

Harley Quinn #48 isn’t quite as entertaining as the previous four issues of this story arc, but it’s still wildly enjoyable. Writer Elliot Kalan provides more of his humorous and insightful dialogue, especially for Harley’s inner voice, which seems to act as her conscience and as a pseudo-therapist for the conflicted anti-hero. The sight gag of a shaky caption box for her inner voice as Harley regains consciousness in Pyg’s lab is hilarious.

Poison Ivy fits seamlessly into Harley’s strange world without contradicting her own solo title’s current storyline and their chemistry is palpable, even if they have unusual ideas about monogamy.

It is easier to root for Harley as an anti-hero, than as just a straight-up villain, and that’s important since she’s also the main character. She has shown remarkable growth just in these five issues, with her new role as protector of her old neighborhood, her relationship with Ivy.

Mindy Lee’s art continues to be a perfect fit for this series, mixing her energetic, cartoonish style with facial expressions that speak volumes with a single look. This hybrid style reflects the more oddball nature of the character, while mixing in elements of the more grounded person she is attempting to become.

Final Thoughts 

Overall, this creative team brings new depth and dimension (along with plenty of laughs), to the fan-favorite power couple, despite some outlandish guest stars and circumstances.

harley quinn #48 main cover
Harley Quinn #48
Final Thoughts
Overall, this creative team brings new depth and dimension (along with plenty of laughs), to the fan-favorite power couple, despite some outlandish guest stars and circumstances.
4
Final Score
March 3, 2025 0 comments
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batgirl to oracle episode 257 podcast image
Batgirl to Oracle

Episode 257

by Kimberley Rockmore February 28, 2025
written by Kimberley Rockmore

batgirl to oracle episode 257 podcast image

https://media.blubrry.com/bto/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/10-Batgirl%20to%20Oracle/E257/BTO%20E257.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embed

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After some brief updates about the Buffalo Bills and my new language journey, I review Batgirl vol. 6 #4 and Birds of Prey vol. 5 #18. Stella’s Dungeon of Smut and my literature recommendations also appear.

February 28, 2025 0 comments
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batman and robin serial cover for the tbu podcast
The Batman Universe Podcast

Episode 273: We Watched The 1949 ‘Batman And Robin’ Serial

by Scott Waldyn February 27, 2025
written by Scott Waldyn

batman and robin serial cover for the tbu podcast

https://media.blubrry.com/tbup/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/01-The%20Batman%20Universe%20Podcast/Episode%20273/TBUP%20E273.mp3

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Two episodes ago, your daring hosts, Scott and BJ, watched the 1943 Batman serial from Columbia Pictures. In this week’s episode of The Batman Universe Podcast, Scott and BJ watched the 15-episode sequel serial from 1949.

In Batman and Robin, a new cast dons the crime-fighting outfits of the Dynamic Duo, and viewers are treated to appearances from supporting players like Commissioner Gordon (who was absent in the first serial), Vicki Vale, and Alfred Pennyworth. They’re also up against an original villain who was solely created for this serial – a sinister character known as The Wizard! It’s an another action-packed romp filled with big-time heists, murder, corporate espionage, and a twist ending after the reveal of who’s the mystery man behind The Wizard’s hood!

If you want to join our podcast hosts and watch this serial, you can find it on Tubi. Otherwise, get ready as Scott and BJ tackle topics like:

  • What’s changed between the 1943 serial and this one?
  • Why does Vicki Vale have a brother, and is he canon or an original character?
  • Who is The Wizard, and has he ever appeared in the comics?
  • Two different actors portray Batman and Robin in this sequel serial. How do Robert Lowery and Johnny Duncan (the new Dynamic Duo) compare to Lewis Wilson and Douglas Croft?
  • Do Batman Robin STILL not have a Batmobile?
  • What Bat-gadgets appear in this serial?
  • And more!

Other topics this episode include a catch-up on all of the DC Studios happenings recently spoken about by James Gunn and Peter Safran.

For our Bat-Family: Which Batman and Robin do you prefer — 1949 or 1997

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. For more from your hosts, you can find Scott on Bluesky (@writerscott.bsky.social) or at ScottWaldynWrites.com and BJ on Twitter (@BJShea33). Come back in two weeks for our episode on all the times Batman retired!

February 27, 2025 0 comments
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catwoman #73 main cover
Comic Reviews and Editorials

Review: Catwoman #73

by Ian Miller February 24, 2025
written by Ian Miller

In this review of Catwoman #73, while in Tokyo, Selina finds pieces of the plot against her.

 

catwoman #73 main cover

Catwoman #73 main cover by Sebastian Fiumara (DC Comics)

Catwoman #73
Long Time, No Time, Part 1
Writer: Torunn Gronbekk
Artist: Mariana Ignazzi
Colors: Patricio Delpeche
Main Cover: Seba Fiumara
Variant Covers: Frank Cho, Dan Panosian, Leirix, Noobovich
Release Date: February 19, 2025

 

This review contains spoilers

Catwoman #73 begins years ago, where Selina, in her Evie Hall identity, finds the Belov family torturing a man in a basement.

Now in Tokyo, Alexander Belov learns “Evie” is alive. Selina makes friends with people on the plane to hide in plain sight, though the van she takes with her new friends is trailed by a motorbike working for Concrete. She loses the biker.

Alexander Belov tortures a hitman who was trying to kill Evie to find out who put out the hit.

Selina meets with a man who helped her disappear as Evie years ago, getting tools, a safe house, and C4.

That night, Catwoman breaks into Belov’s building, rigging the data center to blow. When her demolitions are set, she finds the tortured hitman and frees him, fighting a guard, but the hitman tries to kill her. She demands to know who ordered the hit on Evie, the hitman says “Belov” then shoots himself.

Selina leaves the building, then takes off her hood and invites the hidden watchers behind the camera to play.

Analysis

Conceptually, the idea of a Catwoman book where Selina travels the world, hiding from Criminal Big Brother and trying to find out who’s trying to kill one of her old identities is a good one. In practice, you have to make us care about the characters Selina interacts with, and though her writing is polished and professional, Torunn Gronbekk has completely failed to make either her villains or her allies for Selina stand out at all. The Belov family is a homogeneous mess of generic evil gangsters – no personality quirks or tastes or signatures that make them stand out.

All of Selina’s allies have potential for fun, but disappear after a few pages. The network of hitmen and shadowy Belov operatives is similarly unclear. All in all, the story’s execution continues to be a forgettable grey oatmeal that frustrates the mind when a new issue comes out and the reader has to figure out who everyone is. For all that Gronbekk doesn’t fall into the pitfalls Tini Howard dug for herself, at least I knew who Valmont WAS.

Adding to the frustration of the main plot is the pure self indulgence of the pacing. Two pages on a conversation about “are women funny” does nothing to further Selina’s character, nor add to the enjoyment of the comic unless you are really invested in that particular debate.

On the plus side, instead of coy hints at Selina being Catwoman, she finally puts on her costume and mask in the data center demolition job for this issue, which was good. Sadly, once she goes into action “rescuing” the tortured hitman, the action feels limp. The lighting is flat and unvaried, giving no atmosphere, and the bizarre choice to make gunsmoke pale yellow makes it feel like flower bursts rather than a serious threat.

Seba Fiurmara’s main cover is extremely stylish, highlighting an upside down Catwoman climbing a building in Tokyo with a bright golden key on her belt, as seen in the comic itself. Frank Cho’s main variant shows Selina in her new costume leaning on a fancy plant vase, tiny bat flying above her – a very nice work that also features in virgin variant as the 1 in 50 incentive cover. Dan Panosian’s variant shows Selina in a very sexy version of her new costume in a basement vault letting cats into a stack of gold bars. Leirix’s “Hush” variant shows Batman, Hush, and Catwoman looking over her shoulder on a lightning torn night. Lastly, Noobovich’s 1 in 25 incentive highlights Catwoman in her new costume without her bolo jacket leaning out over a neon hued Tokyo.

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

Final Thoughts

While Gronbekk and Ignazzi write a decent Catwoman sequence finally, the completely generic and painfully slow main plot continues to lack any real hooks for the reader to invest in. 2.5 out of 5 Batarangs.

catwoman #73 main cover
Catwoman #73
Final Thoughts
While Gronbekk and Ignazzi write a decent Catwoman sequence finally, the completely generic and painfully slow main plot continues to lack any real hooks for the reader to invest in.
2.5
Final Score
February 24, 2025 0 comments
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The Batman Universe Podcast

Episode 272: Batman and The Court of Owls

by Scott Waldyn February 24, 2025
written by Scott Waldyn

tbu podcast episode 272 court of owls podcast cover

https://media.blubrry.com/tbup/thebatmanuniverse.net/video/Podcast/01-The%20Batman%20Universe%20Podcast/Episode%20272/TBUP%20E272.mp3

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In this episode of The Batman Universe Podcast, Scott is once again joined by Rob from Comic Book Chronicles. The two chat about Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo’s canon-altering “The Court of Owls” storyline that first appeared in the revamped Batman #1 (from the New 52 era).

It’s been nearly 14 years since the debut of the Court of Owls. After a smashing success, it wasn’t long before the court was adapted into TV shows, video games, and other media. The court was also expanded, growing into a worldwide Parliament of Owls, as well as off-shoots like the Court of Eagles.

While the impact of “The Court of Owls” and subsequent “Night of the Owls” storylines have certainly left their mark, how do they hold up? Are they the worthy Batman adversaries we’ve been led to believe, and do they earn their place in the Batman mythos?

Listen in as Scott and Rob share their thoughts. Listeners can also find Comic Book Chronicles at:

  • TikTok: @comicbookchronicles
  • Instagram: @comicbookchroniclesrob
  • YouTube: @ComicBookChroniclesRob
  • Threads: @comicbookchroniclesrob

For our Bat-Family: Where Does the Court of Owls Storyline Rank Among Your Favorite Batman Stories? 

Tell us your thoughts about the Court of Owls. Drop us a line at TBU@TheBatmanUniverse.net or leave a comment. 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. For more from your hosts, you can find Scott on Bluesky (@writerscott.bsky.social) or at ScottWaldynWrites.com and BJ on Twitter (@BJShea33).

February 24, 2025 0 comments
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