Renee Montoya's Rise as The Question: A Parable of The Faceless
A look at three comics starring Renee Montoya as The Question, through which writer Greg Rucka and his collaborators explored humanity’s darkest impulses
Read MoreA look at three comics starring Renee Montoya as The Question, through which writer Greg Rucka and his collaborators explored humanity’s darkest impulses
Read MoreThe final entry in our Gotham Central: Case by Case series uses the last arc, Corrigan II, to explore the themes and ideas that have been present in this run from its beginning.
Read MoreThe second-to-last edition of Gotham Central: Case by Case is here, and it’s focused on the one-shot story SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY, an Infinite Crisis tie-in that delves into religion.
Read MoreOur Gotham Central - Case by Case series continues today with a look at the penultimate arc of the book, Dead Robins, in which a serial killer is dressing his victims up as the Boy Wonder.
Read MoreIn the Gotham Central story arc Nature, Munroe thought he had gamed the system, but was eventually eaten up by one of its ‘freaks’. That’s just the law of Nature in Gotham City.
Read More“Keystone Kops” is another tragic tale, wherein early on Batman appears to tell Renee not to barter with Alchemy, leaving Kelly yet another pawn of ‘freaks’ that the GCPD cannot even turn back into a person.
Read MoreWith Gotham Central being a series that is all about the police and their relationships with Batman, “Lights Out” explicitly redirects conversations towards Batman’s status as vigilante.
Read MoreBy Bruno Savill De Jong — Before now, Jim Corrigan has appeared in the background picking through crime scenes of Gotham Central, collecting evidence and providing forensic analysis as a C.S.U. of the GCPD. In “Corrigan” he comes to the foreground, with a Gotham Central storyline where numerous established themes start to coalesce. It is a half-way point that connects the previous issues to a thread crucial for the book’s ultimate ending. Here, the GCPD corruption creeping around the edges of Gotham Central shows its clearest form yet. The previous “Unresolved” arc brought a reminder of Harvey Bullock’s old-fashioned self-justified corruption. Now “Corrigan” shows this corruption as a still-present part of the system, a toxic element that hinders even the ‘righteous’ elements within the department.
Read MoreBy Bruno Savill De Jong — Life is Full of Disappointments is an odd storyline. It feels almost purposefully removed from the tapestry of Gotham Central, downplaying the immersive world-building that was central to all the previous issues. Gotham Central might make minimal use of Batman, but Life is Full of Disappointments has zero Batman, nor any ‘freaks’, nor (nearly) anything connected to Gotham’s ‘culture’. Even the recognizable detectives from Gotham Central itself (Montoya, Driver, Josie Mac) are dropped to foreground the underdeveloped police from the Major Crimes Unit, the three issues rotating in a new pair of detectives to examine the case.
Read MoreBy Bruno Savill De Jong — While Half a Life is Gotham Central’s famous storyline that examines the weight of Gotham upon a single cop, Soft Targets is another popular plotline that examines a single case’s impact upon the whole city. Over Christmas, Gotham is gripped by a supervillain’s terrorist threat. Now, that might sound like a typical superhero set-up. Indeed, Tom King did exactly this in The War of Jokes and Riddle (Batman Vol. 3, #25-32) a few years ago. But while I like that storyline, Gotham Central, well, centralizes Gotham in a way mainstream Batman titles cannot
Read MoreBy Taylor Pechter — “When a lie is confronted, there are three choices. Admission, and thus honesty. Perpetuation and thus feeble deceit. Or hostility, the child of fear.” Diana of Themyscira, postulating about her current situation. The examination of lies, and said confrontation of them, is brought forward during the first 25 (technically 26 with the Rebirth one-shot) issues of Wonder Woman’s 2016 ongoing series during DC Rebirth. Marking the return of legendary Wonder Woman scribe Greg Rucka — joined by the artistic talents of Liam Sharp, Nicola Scott, and Bilquis Evely, with colorists Laura Martin and Romulo Fajardo Jr., and letterer Jodi Wynne — this run is seen as one of the most unique, and most critically acclaimed of the early Rebirth era.
Read MoreBy Bruno Savill De Jong — During her morning jog, Renee Montoya is approached by a stranger. Moving from her familiar neighborhood where she lives into an isolated park, Renee is asked to identify herself. Identity and recognition are core concepts of Gotham Central, a series about what it means to ‘be a cop’ in Gotham, especially when your efforts are overshadowed by symbolically masked vigilantes. Detective Driver, our de facto protagonist for the preceding issues, is so desperate for the efforts of the GCPD to simply be ‘seen’. Now whether she likes it or not, Montoya is dragged into the spotlight, as Gotham Central strays from procedural casework into an interpersonal storyline, where Renee herself is at the centre of the investigation.
Read MoreBy Bruno Savill De Jong — “The problem with motiveless crime is that there’s always a motive”, Detective Marcus Driver tells his temporarily assigned partner Romy Chandler, “we just can’t see it. ‘Cause no one kills someone with no reason”.
Read MoreBy Bruno Savill De Jong — “Could we leave the Bat out of this for now?” Detective Marcus Driver mutters these words to Renee Montoya and Crispus Allen as the three discuss the death of his partner, Charlie Fields, at the hands of Mr. Freeze. It’s a phrase which hangs over all of Gotham Central, like the Bat-Signal perched atop the police headquarters, or the squadroom’s clearance-board which Fields wrote “the Bat” onto, wishing to incentivize the department into action.
Read MoreBy Taylor Pechter — Diana of Themyscira (a.k.a. Wonder Woman) is many things: A hero, a warrior, an icon, but most of all, she’s an ambassador...coming to Man’s World to bring love and peace to a society that is often embroiled in violence and war. This side of Diana is explored heavily in what many say is one of — if not the — defining runs on the character, the run of issues that was written by Greg Rucka.
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