Saturday Night Showcase> DC High Volume: Batman “Year One”

Just in time for Batman’s 85th Anniversary and Free Comic Book Day, I bring you Batman’s first day on the job.

I’m not a huge fan of Frank Miller’s work. I don’t just mean his more recent stuff where Miller fell into certain tropes, or gave us the “Crazy Steve” version of Batman in All-Star Batman & Robin. Just in general, Miller’s semi-noir style and gritty takes on characters just aren’t for me. There was a time when his writing was really good. Then there was All-Star Batman & Robin or Holy Terror. He’s made some odd choices lately, but back when he did Batman: Year One or the definitive take on Marvel’s Daredevil he was at his best. May I never become a parody of myself.

Originally intended as a stand-alone graphic novel, Batman group editor Dennis O’Neil took advantage of the rebooted DC universe post-Crisis to create not a new take on Batman but an expanded one and saw “Year One” as a good restarting point for Bruce Wayne’s history. It tells of his first meeting with Jim Gordon and his early days on the “job” as the shadowy guardian of Gotham City. He prefered to see the early, screwing up version of heroes and found seasoned hero stories boring. I tend to be the opposite, another reason we don’t see eye-to-eye in approaches. Still, “Year One”, running from Batman #404-407, back when such stories weren’t “writing for the trade”. Remember, this would have been a stand-alone graphic novel originally. The story arc has been released in trade, it’s proper format in a way, and is one of the definitive Batman stories, even getting an animated movie adaptation.

Tonight we look at a different adaptation, the first installment of DC’s “High Volume” audio drama adaptations, produced by podcasting studio Realm. It’s available wherever you prefer to get your podcasts (more info and links here), but we’re using the YouTube version for convenience and because it includes the comic art by artist David Mazzucchelli, colors by his wife Richmond Lewis, and lettering by Todd Klein. Some scenes do not have attached artwork, but not having read the comic I don’t know if these are scenes added to the audio drama or if they just didn’t put them in for some reason. I know episode one includes Miller’s re-imagine of Catwoman’s origin as a prostitute turned cat burglar, but we don’t see her scenes in the visuals. I wasn’t a fan of that addition to her origin, either. We don’t see Bruce become Batman in this installment, but we do see Lieutenant Jim Gordon arrive from Chicago and learn how things work in Gotham City as Bruce comes home to begin his mission. Enjoy.

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BW’s Saturday Article Link> Whatever Happened To Ronald McDonald?

Photo by u4e09u5c81 u9648 on Pexels.com

I grew up watching the adventures of Ronald McDonald and all his friends from McDonaldland. I didn’t care what they were selling. I just like watching their hijinks centered around their desire for fast food…when they weren’t living incarnations of fast food. At some point Grimace, Captain Crook, that scientist, Mayor McCheese, and all the others disappeared. Ronald was the last one standing, as the first(ish) mascot, but what happened to our favorite red and yellow clown? Jake Rosen at Mental Floss decided to find out.

BW Media Spotlight’s Free Comic Book Day 2025 Want List

Yes, kids, it’s that time of the year again. The first Saturday in May is Free Comic Book Day. If you’re Jake from my comic Jake & Leon it’s the most wonderful time of year and oddly I’m not doing a FCBD strip this week because we had a different topic show up and I think I’ve run out of Free Comic Book Day gags.

For the uninitiated, Free Comic Book Day began when Joe Field, who no longer owns a comic book store, suggested a day to bring in new readers through the power of free stuff. Diamond Comics, who is currently between owners after years of mismanagement and screwing over smaller comic stores, took up the cause. Yeah, this is an interesting year for Free Comic Book Day. The idea isn’t that you get regular comics for free but special previews that the readers don’t have to pay for. However, the comic story totally pays for those comics so be sure to buy something from them if you can!!!!! The way things have been for them lately they could use the money. Sadly I am dirt poor this year and I’m still going to look to get at least one or two, even if only from the back issue bins as I have plenty of boards and bags. That’s if I go this year.

I didn’t go last year because I wasn’t up for it and I’m not sure how I’m going to feel tomorrow with my allergies (plus last night my insomnia was interrupted by a pop-up storm knocking out power for almost an hour so I’m a bit tired at the moment) or what the weather is going to be like. So I may be forced to resort to online digital versions from ComiXology/Kindle, Global Comix, Drive Thru Comics, or whatever else gets put online. Sometimes publishers even put them on their website. That would be a shame, since meeting fellow comic fans and finding out what’s out there that HASN’T broken your heart or made by people who call you scum for not kissing their rear ends is the best part of going. Whatever the case, it’s time for my annual look through at the Gold and Silver sponsorships. One costs the store more so they might not get them and given when I wake up they might be gone before I get there. Still, if I go, this is what I hope to obtain:

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Jumbo Comics #11

I heard that movie theaters have been getting rowdy lately.

Jumbo Comics #11

Real Adventures Publishing (December/January 1939)

I was going to look at a title I hadn’t seen before, Funny Pages, but only a couple of stories were adventure stories and the comedies didn’t look at that funny. So we’ll jump to this one, which Comic Book Plus is getting from fische. I’m at a point where I have to reread some of these reviews to see if I liked the previous issue enough to continue. These Golden Age anthologies really don’t stick with you, like binge watching a series. That makes it harder for something to stand out, making me realize any heroes we follow today that started back then still being around is nothing short of amazing. And the current comic publishers keep screwing them up with a full length comic. Good going, guys.

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> 10 Marvel Characters Who Came From Outside The Comics

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Hollywood Needs To Re-Earn Optimism

I remember the days when the announcement of a movie adaptation of things I loved was a positive thing. I didn’t need the live action version. Animated was fine. The theatrical film was the BIG story, the one too big for the small screen. Or a sequel to a movie I already liked. People loved hearing that Star Wars was getting a third movie, or a new trilogy that filled in the lore officially. We didn’t know if it would be good but if they worked hard on it, and we knew the right people were involved or returning, we had high hopes.

Hope has gone to die in today’s Hollywood.

Not for lack of trying. I see people so sure that THIS movie will be where they get it, right, where they realized their mistakes from before and this time they’re going to make what the fans want, something true to the source material. And then they’re disappointed again when the new movie or streaming show is just as bad as the last one, still pushing some agenda above the story whether it’s sociopolitical or just someone pushing their own tastes into something they clearly hate and taking out what the fans love because they’re so sure they’ll like “my” version better…and then throw a fit when they don’t.

I wish I could be excited for things like I used to, but I can’t. I’ve been hurt too many times and I can easily point to all the problems…problems I don’t see changing anytime soon.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Executive Assistant Iris Preview

I could use an assistant like that.

Executive Assistant Iris Preview

Aspen MLT (April, 2011–digital copy)

WRITERS: David Wohl (script) & Brad Foxhoven, co-creators with Michael Turner

ARTISTS: Eduardo Francisco & Jason Gorder

COLORIST: John Starr

LETTERER: Josh Reed

This is an eight page preview, but I’m a little short on time this week so I’m running with it. Rather than a full review I’ll be judging it as a preview comic.

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