we wear tights
Unless we go with the freshly-waxed look; viz. Robin costumes 1 and 2.
'Trash'
Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
we wear tights
Unless we go with the freshly-waxed look; viz. Robin costumes 1 and 2.
So the Robin 1 and 2 costumes were worn while the wearer was old enough to need to wax? Very wrong.
Suddenly I want to see the older kid from Summerland as Robin. I don't know if it's because I'm sick and it has something to do with his depilation. Hope not.
So the Robin 1 and 2 costumes were worn while the wearer was old enough to need to wax? Very wrong.
We're pretty certain Dick STILL waxes.
We're pretty certain Dick STILL waxes.
When he isn't living on a fire escape and can get to the salon, anyway.
::thinking wrong thoughts::
As Dick said, rule number one, we don't kill.
Altough, back in the earliest days of Batman, he wasn't averse to dropping villians off of fatal heights, into vats of acid, or forcing them to fall on their own blades.
While I'm trying very hard not to get sucked back in as a regular reader (time, $$$, and an-obsessive-tendency-towards-completism issues), I wallowing in the Bat-love around here. I became a fan because I liked re-runs of the silly show as a kid (yes, I'll admit it), but Bats became my favorite because his original debut story was the darkest comic I'd ever read up to that point, followed closely by the first appearence of the Joker. For years it was the darkest, outside of horror comics.
I'm back -- the phone call I was expecting at 1 didn't come.
What would Bats think about the Slayer/Killer thing?
I mean -- supposing vampires were to infest Gotham? (I had this thought this morning -- of Bats coming upon a Slayer dusting a vamp -- what would he think about that?)
supposing vampires were to infest Gotham?
There's a few elseworlds on that topic. They're incredibly sturm and drang and over the top, though. The Batman in them is suffering from toxic nobility, and that's not the Bats I enjoy.
Close after the Crisis reboot they featured the Batman in a Superman annual with an Ellie Mae Clampett vampire as the villain. Bats had no compunctions about staking in that one.
We're pretty certain Dick STILL waxes.
FYI, at least for guys who aren't too terribly hairy, areas where the clothes rub tight against the body will be worn almost hairless by friction. So Dick probably looks like he jacuzzis in Nair regularly.
I'm gonna munge together two of my comments from last night's Batman discussion fest. Please don't mock the way I think at half past my bedtime when riffing.
(to a comment about this recurring Jason constuct, its position in this issue, and how it ties into the way Bruce's thoughts on Jason are currently portrayed) It makes such perfect Bruce-sense to me in the context of his unresolved Jason issues, especially his doubts about what really happened with Garzonas and his vast fields of guilt. Bruce, as we know, doesn't tend to see the glass as half-full even when the cup is underwater, bless him. His not-Jason construct makes me feel like part of Bruce wants Jason alive so much, he'd take him as a heartless killer if that meant he could have him at all.
(snip)
In theory, if I were more awake, I'd be looking at the questions his projection of Jason-as-killer draw about Bruce in relation to his mission: how much of the fear/doubt that he had with the Garzonas incident was displeasure at what Jason did or did not do (as the case may be), and how much of it is that he's projecting onto Jason his own worst desires, turning Jason into his shadow self? Jason, at his worst, was after all not unlike the Bruce Wayne that emerged when the JLA members had that identity split in that storyline I'm blanking on at the moment: rage and passion without the layer of tight control to focus it.
(later comment)
I'm remembering how much Bruce flipped and went into full-on denial mode when shown evidence that Cass had killed someone before she was Batgirl. I mean, his level of denial did not stink of the rational there. More random Jason thoughts: there's the obvious, that Jason wouldn't have been of interest to the Joker had he not been Bruce's partner. He'd have been on the streets, possibly a petty criminal, possibly going further, so projection Jason can perhaps also be read as a combination of Bruce's fears for Jason as he was during the Garzonas period and his fears for Jason as he could have been had Bruce not taken a hand, and what if he was wrong to take a hand and Jason had been better off bad? (This previous sentence might not make any sense, as I fear my thoughts are outstripping my words.)