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Comic Review: Batman Dark Prince Charming

November 7, 2017 by Jon Del Arroz Leave a Comment

Batman Dark Prince Charming comes in a nice hardcover package – a bit small for the hardcover treatment and at a bit of a steep price point at $12.99 for what looks like a thin book. It doesn’t help the book comes shrink-wrapped so if you’re not in the know in having researched it, you are gambling on the quality of the book, find out on UFABET the best online sports betting. Marini being the only creator listed on the front was confusing to me too, as I didn’t know who that was going in. The cover art really doesn’t do the story justice either, with a very un-exciting look of a Batman mid-shot pictured above. Not sure why they went with that as it probably harms the book sales rather than helps it.

Enrico Marini is an Italian artist and writer who does the full duty from start to finish on the comic, as he’s done on several others published through a French press. It’s something we don’t see often in the comics world and so it’s intriguing by itself, but what’s inside is some beauty nearly unparalleled in comics.

His art style is one of my favorites. It’s that hyper-detailed pencil-to-colors look where you don’t get the broad strokes of the ink covering up the original drawings save for where the artist chooses to for the art’s sake. I personally think it makes for a very fresh looking quality. It’s one Tomas Giorello used on the first 3 issues of X-O Manowar, another Italian artist, and I wonder if their styles come from their training over there. Either way, once I saw the art, I was immediately in for this book. Even if the story was non-existent in this book, I would have  probably liked to flip through the panels just to get a glimpse at Marini’s drawings. They’re that good.

Story wise, we have a standard Frank Miller-esque dark Gotham with a Joker who is kidnapping children, a Bruce Wayne who’s getting hit up for a paternity allegation, and a Batman on an obsessive mission to find the Joker and save the day. What I like about this that I don’t see in the current Batman ongoing  — which is where I think the Miller-esque Batman has gone a bit too far – is Batman doesn’t sit around whining about how he’s lonely or how he’s sad and how he doesn’t feel he’s making a difference. He’s being a hyper-driven Detective here by  every means possible, and so it’s more fitting with the character. We get some nice cameos from Killer Croc and Catwoman (who is stunningly drawn).

Other than that, it’s a standard Batman v. Joker fare. Joker is out of control insane, and leaving a trail in some ways to toy with Batman. He acts a bit shocking throughout – this is very dark, close to R-Rated in its  content. I usually don’t like that in a comic, but it fits here decently.  I wouldn’t say the story is mind-blowingly different in any regard to other stories I’ve read, but it IS classic Batman. It feels right, and that’s what’s important.

It is half a story as this is a part 2. So you are committing to $12.99 x 2 to get the full story here. But on the flip side, it’s clear the amount of art quality and time they took toward making this book, I’m all in on it and I’m waiting for more. Marini’s art has me wowed and I’m itching for the conclusion.

9/10

Filed Under: Comics, Reviews Tagged With: The

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Comments

  1. Xaver Basora says

    November 7, 2017 at 3:02 pm

    Jon
    When you mentioned Enrico Marini
    The name struck a bell. So I checked him out and yeah I’ve read his French comics Scorpion, Gitaine and the Aigles de Rome are really fun comics and beautifully illustrated.
    The women are beautiful and the men are manly.
    He’s a tad on the dark and conspiracy theory stuff. But he’s entertaining and the illustration ate rich and the dialogue is logical. No sjw nonesense

    xavier

    Reply
    • otomo says

      November 7, 2017 at 4:13 pm

      Excellent report thank you! I’ll hunt some of that down.

      Reply
      • Xavier Basora says

        November 7, 2017 at 8:01 pm

        Jon,
        Does Los Angles sell non English comics? I would suspect so. To my knowledge, Gitane or Scorpion aren’t available in English. So you might end up perusing them in French 🙂

        Reply
  2. GoldenEye says

    November 7, 2017 at 3:21 pm

    I wonder how much this will sell.

    Reply
    • Xavier Basora says

      November 7, 2017 at 8:04 pm

      I suspect it’ll do fine. Not mega selling but respectable enough.
      Marini is quite prolific and a pro. So comic book readers will appreciate his style. It’s has a beautiful pulp/action comic vibe. Many comic book readers will be attracted by it

      xavier

      Reply

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