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Is There a Darkness Greater than Death?
Dr Alex Tang
The Batman/Bruce Wayne put on the cape and cowl to become a vigilante after the
murder of his parents to protect the people of the Gotham City. To become the
Batman, he has trained and mastered his body in many types of martial arts,
became a master detective and the terror of the criminals. The Batman, created
by Bob Kane, was one of the three most respected and well known heroes of the
comics fandom. The other two being Superman and Wonder Woman. Unlike these two,
the Batman does not have superpower.
One of the sacrifices that the Batman/Bruce Wayne has to make is to master his
emotions. Whenever the Batman leaves the bat cave, he reminds himself of some
ground rules… “never go out angry”… “never go out reckless”… “never, never make
it personal.” These are important ground rules if the Batman wants to stay
alive. What happens if the Batman breaks his own ground rules? What happens if
the Batman let his emotions affect his judgment? This was explored by comic
writer Bruce Jones and Ariel Olivetti in Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight,
issue 207-211 (Aug-Dec 2006). The artwork by Mauro Cascioli was superb.
The story arc starts with a depressed Batman asking himself, “Is there a
darkness greater than death?” Janie Rutledge was kidnapped and Bruce Wayne was
asked by the sister Lilith Rutledge to help. In the process, Bruce fell in love
with Lilith. Another girl, Miriam Hargrove also went missing. The story picked
up its tempo when the Batman went in search of the missing Janie and during the
process struggle with his love for Lilith. The kidnapper kept sending fingers of
their victim to Lilith to force her to pay the ransom. In the meantime, the
Batman tangled with Oswald Cobblepot (Penguin), Greasy Lee, Tiki Rivera (and her
snakes) and Bedham in his effort to rescue Janie. In various stages of the
story, the Batman find himself answering his own question, “Is there a darkness
greater than death?” In…the darkness of peace…the darkness of defeat…and its
name “love”?
In the end it turned out the whole kidnapping was a con planned by Lilith to
steal money from Bruce Wayne. The fingers were not from the kidnap victim, Janie
(who was part of the con) but from Miriam. Unfortunately, in the final
confrontation, Lilith died in a car crash.
A
desponded Batman/Bruce Wayne knelt by her body and the question was answered.
Is there a darkness greater than death? Yes. Greater
than the darkness of loneliness… Greater than the darkness of peace, or fear, of
defeat…The blackest darkness of all…the unending nights and restless unanswered
dreams…of that which might have been.
This is so true. One of our frailties of being thinking beings is our ability to
imagine the future and our past. Many of us are haunted with what might have
being, a road not taken. Regrets of things not done, opportunities not seized
and relationships not developed, now lost forever. In a way, this is a darkness
greater than death.
This is one of the better story arc of the Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight.
The questioning and the struggling of the Batman/Bruce Wayne of what it means to
be human is a valuable background to the ‘slam/bang’ of the comic pictures. The
drawings added a valuable visual assets as it should a macho muscular Batman
struggling with his emotions.
.
|posted 4 February 2007|
updated 75th anniversary bookmark
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