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Mego was a true pioneer in action figure development, responsible for creating the first carded action figure (for S. S. Kresge's), [5] The first exclusive figures (Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson for Montgomery Ward's) [6] and expanded their line to include the 1966 Batman TV series-style Batmobile, the Batcycle. and the Batcopter, as well as ...
The Batman figure was based on the art of Neal Adams. This figure was a retooled Zipline Batman with a new belt, a thicker cape (blue on the outside and black on the inside), a Silver Age accurate paint application, and three accessories: a Batarang, Grapple Gun, and handcuffs.
Batman Black and White refers to the comic book limited series published by DC Comics featuring 8-page black and white Batman stories. Volumes 1, 4 and 5 of the series feature all-new stories (published in 1996, 2013–14, and 2020–21, respectively), while Vol. 2 and 3 contain stories from the back-up feature of the Batman: Gotham Knights comic book.
Figure 18 – Black Lightning (modern) Figure 19 – The Spectre (Crispus Allen) Figure 20 – The Joker; Figure 20 – The Joker (black suit variant) Figure 21 – Nightwing (modern) Figure 22 – Scarecrow; Figure 23 – Arsenal (not released) Figure 24 – Batman (black/gray costume) Figure 25 – Superman; Figure 26 – Gotham City S.W.A.T ...
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Batman appears in a novel by cyberpunk/horror novelist John Shirley, titled Batman: Dead White, from Del Rey. Many other novels and short story collections featuring Batman have been published over the years, including novelizations of each of the recent movies (such as Batman and The Dark Knight Rises ) and many of the comic book arcs.
DC Universe Classics was first announced at San Diego Comic-Con in 2007, with the first wave of action figures on display. [2] The line was scheduled for initial availability in January 2008. [3] At SDCC, close-ups of the second wave of action figures were shown, along with a line of 3" game figures that sold as the "Fighting Figures" sub-line.
This line, merging with the Batman toyline (where the Batman and Joker prototypes were Super Powers repaints and some versions of those finished figures borrowed elements from the Kenner toys) would borrow design elements from many of the Kenner figures, most notably Superman, Robin, and Penguin—who were near identical copies of the Kenner ...