Title: Batman: Year One
Author: Frank Miller with David Mazzucchelli (Illustrator), Richmond Lewis (Illustrator)
Release Date:
Series: Batman (1940) #404-407
Page Amount: 144 pages
Blurb:
In 1986, Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli produced this groundbreaking reinterpretation of the origin of Batman--who he is, and how he came to be. Sometimes careless and naive, this Dark Knight is far from the flawless vigilante he is today.
In his first year on the job, Batman feels his way around a Gotham City far darker than the one he left. His solemn vow to extinguish the town's criminal element is only half the battle; along with Lieutenant James Gordon, the Dark Knight must also fight a police force more corrupt than the scum in the streets.
Batman: Year One stands next to Batman: The Dark Knight Returns on the mantle of greatest Batman graphic novels of all time. Timeless in its appeal, Frank Miller and David Mazzucchelli's masterpiece would stand apart from the crowded comics field even today.
This edition includes the complete graphic novel, a new introduction by writer Frank Miller and a new illustrated afterword by artist David Mazzucchelli. Completing this collection are over 40 pages of never-before-seen developmental material such as character and layout sketches, sample script pages, sketches, and more that pro-vide a glimpse into the making of this contemporary classic.
This volume collects Batman #404-407.
Review:
I stumbled upon this at my library and knew it was a well known Batman story. I also know that Frank Miller is very well known in the comic book world. I decided to pick it up.
It was more internal monologue than I thought it would be. Also, I feel like it was more focused on James Gordon than Bruce Wayne/Batman. Which is fine, I like James Gordon, just not what I was expecting. And I found his story interesting to read about. It did indeed go through and chronicle the first year of Batman.
The art was great. There were some very cool behind-the-scenes bits in the back of the book with some good insight that I enjoyed seeing. There were also references to things I know from the Dark Knight trilogy (well, obviously that came after this...) which was cool to see. And a couple of references to another DC character which were exciting to me.