Saturday Night Showcase> Batman: Year One

Batman: Year One is not my favorite version of Bruce Wayne’s origin. There are two major sticking points with me and they’re both personal. This was BEFORE Frank Miller lost his mind, after all. I can appreciate the quality of the story and how well it’s told. Still, I didn’t need Jim Gordon having an affair that for the most part has little impact on events and there’s no reason for Selina to have started out as a prostitute except Frank Miller. For the most part, I’d still call it good. I just have my preferences and I will not apologize for them.

Since this is Free Comic Book Day, or Comics Giveaway Day depending on which distributor your local comic store went with, in the US (I don’t know about other countries…maybe Canada?), I wanted to use YouTube doing free with ads postings of Warner Animation’s DC movies by doing a comic adaptation, not just a story with the characters. Year One just happened to win the lottery. It’s still not my favorite adaptation. There’s some great acting, but Alex Rocco as Falcone is the only real standout. Brian Cranston’s Jim Gordon is okay but he won’t replace the late Bob Hastings in my head. Ben McKenzie isn’t a bad Batman and we see little of his Bruce Wayne, but he’s competing with Adam West, Kevin Conroy, and Diedrich Bader, though the best currently alive Batman might be Troy Baker. He’s also a good Joker. I’d throw Rino Romano but he’s my favorite Spider-Man, so if I had a choice, Baker would be Batman and Romano would be Spider-Man if they ever adapted my favorite crossover of the two.

Again, I’m not saying it’s terrible. It’s just not the origin I would go with. It’s still a good Showcase for the occasion. Enjoy.

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BW’s Saturday Article Link> How Comics Train Their Customers

He’s not very good at dodgeball.

Marketing is a manipulative business, especially if you’re trying to get customers to add your product, service, or production to their regular routines. One of the long term downsides of the 2020 lockdowns is how they rewrote habits that broke people out of old ones and now businesses have to figure out how to get back into being habit. That’s not necessarily malicious or a bad thing. It’s just how we operate versus how businesses operate, in both cases using instincts needed to survive.

Rob Salkowitz of ICv2 goes over how comics convince people to get into their stuff and the stupid things they’ve done recently that hurt them for breaking those habits.

Free Comic Inside> Batman’s UK Pop Tart Ice Cream Adventures

Free Comic Inside logo

So where do we stand here? The DC Cinnamon Mini-Buns comics are still two reviews short because I can’t find “Superman Vs. Metallo” or “Justice League Vs. Amazo”. Trying to find more Legions Of Power not only failed but one of the links just goes to BW Media Spotlight and the one comic I found while Google AI just found my list of wanted comic scans. I should do an updated version of that someday now that I’ve found websites with some of the ones off of that list.

However, I did accidentally find a NEW comic we can discuss, or rather series of comics so short that a compilation file on the Internet Archive went to about 34 pages, including a stand-in cover. All I can find out about Batman’s team-up with Kellogg’s Pop-Tarts is that isn’t Kellogg’s but Good Humor. If the research is accurate, this is a series of Good Humor bars licensing the Pop-Tarts name and using their flavors as ice cream flavors. Sounds interesting, but I think it’s only available in the United Kingdom, or was. I don’t know for sure.

In 1966 a promotional tie-in with National Comics (future DC Comics) did a series of minicomics recreating old issue of Batman and Detective Comics. They are not reprints in comic strip form. I used the internet to check. Half of them are actually original tales, while the other half are essentially abridge versions of already short Silver Age Batman stories. They’re new art and even some new character designs for guest characters. The DC Fandom wiki says they’re “Earth One” versions of the “Earth Two” stories, where the Golden and early Silver Age still happened. And DC wonders why they’re continuity is always a mess. You can read along with me. This is why I do this series, folks. To find the weird stuff.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Rocket Comics #1

“Rocket Riley”. That’s cheating, Rocket Comics, and you know it. We want actual rockets!

Rocket Comics #1

Hillman-Curl (February, 1940)

Let’s see. Planet Comics had planets. Fight Comics had fights. Jungle Comics had jungles. If this has rockets, and it looks like a sci-fi comic, explain Police Comics having so few police officers! I just want what it says on the box.

Yep, no superheroes in this one from what I can tell. Meanwhile it’s still the usual 60+ page count but according to Comic Book Plus we’re talking seven stories instead of almost ten. So maybe they’ll have the page count to tell some good stories. Now all they need is the talent.

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> A Museum Exhibit On The Old Coloring Method

This exhibit was long over when I found it. It does give you a good idea about how they colored comics before computers came into use.

Catch more from KPBS Public Media on YouTube

 

Tronix’s Comics Giveaway Day Pull List

Saturday isn’t just going to be Free Comic Book Day this year. When Diamond screwed up and killed itself, Universal Distribution Network took over the event. However, the same exclusivity that gave Diamond near-absolute power in comic distribution is also what killed it when they ticked everybody off too many times, including the publishers after artificially extending the 2020 Plague rules so nobody could distribute comics even when stores could open up. At a time when comic stores were already getting hit that was very bad timing on their part. No exclusive contracts were renewed and many publishers took their business elsewhere entirely.

One of the places they went was Penguin Random House, usually known for publishing novels more than comics. Still, they have a comics division and this year they decided that, rather than work with Universal to push the Free Comic Book Day brand, to go their own way. Time will tell if that was a good idea or not. They’ve posted a list of what comics are being offered for their “Comic Giveaway Day”, happening the same day as Free Comic Book Day to the convenience of customers, but it’s not a very good listing. Unlike Free Comic Book Day, which sadly gave up the PDF samplers, the Comics Giveaway Day site is just a list of comics and covers for what they’re offering. No summary, no credits, just a list in an article. That’s kind of weak, really.

What’s worse is I don’t even know if I’m going to be able to get anything. According to their store map neither of the comic stores I can properly get to for my free comics is taking part. Their websites and Facebook pages just list Free Comic Book Day, so I may not be able to get any of these. That’s not a good start, and I know they get their comics from Penguin that aren’t available elsewhere. I’ll be asking both owners about that and I’ll let you know what they say. (I’m friends with both of them because they’re awesome. One’s a former DC editor and the other I’ve gone to for decades until I lost my income. The former editor used to work there before going to DC, getting tired of their nonsense, and coming back to open his own comic store.)

So this article is going to be a bit different. SInce there’s more guesswork involved as to what, if anything, I can get or will even want, we’ll just go over what I’d like to get, though I might have to explore digital options.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Amazing Universe Presents: Dominion (Preview)

And that was just Tuesday.

Amazing Universe Presents—Dominion: Redemption Part 1 (Preview)

LPJ Design & Enemy One Entertainment (2025)

WRITERS: Louis Porter, Jr & Martín Miguel Renard

ARTIST: António Brandãd

COLORIST: Seb Valencia

LETTERING: Lettersquids

The comic is ten pages, previewing the “Amazing Universe”, but it’s enough to get an idea of what the full comic might be like and there’s other stuff in there as well introducing this new shared universe. So it’s at least enough to do a review for.

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