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Comics character Batman Cover of the DC Comics Absolute Edition of Batman: Hush (2011) Art by Jim Lee Publication information Publisher DC Comics First appearance Detective Comics #27 (cover-dated May 1939; published March 30, 1939) Created by Bob Kane Bill Finger [a] In-story information Alter ego Bruce Wayne Place of origin Gotham City Team affiliations Justice League Bat-Family Outsiders ...
Batman R.I.P. is an American comic book story arc published in Batman #676–681 by DC Comics.Written by Grant Morrison, penciled by Tony Daniel, and with covers by Alex Ross, the story pits the superhero Batman against the Black Glove organization as they attempt to destroy everything that he stands for. [1]
Media scholars Roberta Pearson and William Uricchio, in their 1991 work The Many Lives of the Batman: Critical Approaches to a Superhero and his Media, also noted beyond the origin story and such events as the introduction of Robin, "Until recently, the fixed and accruing and hence, canonized, events have been few in number", [3] a situation altered by an increased effort by later Batman ...
If you sat through all three hours of The Batman, you may have felt a familiar presence at the end.Spoilers ahead for the Matt Reeves film starring Robert Pattinson and Zoë Kravitz.Director Matt ...
A common expression regarding comic book death was once "No one stays dead except Bucky, Jason Todd, and Uncle Ben", [3] [4] referring to the seminal importance of those characters' deaths to the title character: Captain America's sidekick (retconned dead in 1964), [5] Batman's second Robin (dead in 1988), [6] [7] and Spider-Man's uncle (dead ...
Batman #426, the first issue of "A Death in the Family", was released on August 23, 1988, and Batman #427, the second, was released two weeks later, on September 6. [4] Fans voted to determine Jason's fate between September 15 and 16, and Batman #428, which featured Jason's death, was released on October 18. [4]
Kevin Conroy, the voice actor whose distinct voice will forever be synonymous with Batman after voicing the character on Batman: The Animated Series and a number of other Batman projects, has died.
Armie Hammer was set to star as Batman in George Miller's 2007 "Justice League: Mortal," but then everything went wrong.