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Sunday, November 25, 2018

Comic Review, “Batman (1940-) #1”

Comic Review, “Batman (1940-) #1” 

There’s variations on #1.  At times something is technically #1 for beginning earlier and at times something is qualified #1 for beauty.  I’m pretty new to Batman comics, so bear with me.  I can really see the grammar across these pages in different forms of randomness and it can be suspected that English grammar, especially on my encounters with comic artists on Deviant Art, is something of a privilege even for those who use it poorly.  Ordinary people express nothing but this comic issue by DC comics tests the limits of grammar by giving it visual implications through Batman’s fights and Robin’s help.  Stop cracking up so much or else you may find yourself in a fight with Robin as this “first” issue displays on moral behavior understood for kids of the time.  Of course, now it’d probably be politically incorrect for a comic book to show a murdering superhero and then tell kids reading it, “Hey, you can be just like our superhero!”  That’d be pretty gross.  Kids don’t know much on life because a lot of life is built on the past which requires education for approving or dismissing decisions made by grown-ups.  And let’s not hear sounds from a comic book: it’s silent, it’s not a speaker run by electricity other than the fact it’s a comic from the printing press in DC’s name.  DC stands for “detective comics”.  Right now I belong to a comic user website from DC Universe (under $7.99 a month) where I can read a lot of comics old and new.  Because the early Batman comics now likely cost a lot of money ($$$) on eBay I look at this $7.99 offer as the best price/offer.  Here, in this #1 comic issue, you’ll find horror and entertainment going through each page as the story builds up to expanded horizons on cue to Bat tools.  The Joker (in fake smiles) wants to kill others and the Batman comic can get pretty wild from all the police pursuits near Egyptian coffins.  I’m speaking of museums, police departments, open waters of the sea, stressful traffic in some major cities, etc.  A lot of this #1 comic was built on many Republican ideas such as “industriousness” that spells fate for one of Robin’s travels over the stormy waves.  Oceans of this magnitude might lose themselves on chance to passing storms.  Batman himself is pretty articulate and I’m surprised that he came up with a potion while giants reigned Strange’s universe.  Remember those scenes that have to do with clocks?  Pressure really builds up on the clock scenes due to all the noise and confusion which may spread in Joker’s happy dance over the grave.  This Batman comic arrived at the near-end of the Great Depression in the United States of America when poverty had struck even plenty of the rich Americans.  You’ll find intense action in these pages and, trust me, the Joker will find a way to scare you in this issue and knock your socks off.   




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batman

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