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A review by garrodot
Batman: Arkham Asylum - A Serious House on Serious Earth by Grant Morrison
2.0
A high school lit mag if half the contributors has been told the theme was Batman. The art is at times quite beautiful, but more often than not hinders the story. The original script included in the book reveals many important details entirely omitted from the final product due to the murky art. Style utterly trumps the readers ability to understand certain scenes. The author's frustration with the art peeks through a few times in his "commentary" on the script - including a story where the artist refused to paint Robin into the story, thinking the character beneath him.
That being said, even if a great artist had perfectly rendered this script, it would still at best be a heady philosophical mix of symbolisms and allusions at the forefront, run-of-the-mill Batman story as an afterthought. Here we see the weakest Batman I've ever read, who is pushed over the edge by "trauma" lesser than most stories he lives through. Broken and crazy, he stumbles and brutally lashes out, barely surviving a mildly threatening evening.
I appreciate a very unique and thoughtful take on Batman. Clearly there is passion oozing out of every page. They worked hard to bring some depth to a character and genre often treated very shallowly. But when your symbolism is layered unfathombly thick (see the fish represents pisces, tarot, Jesus and androgyny at the same time! Oh also the Joker, and it might have been a time travelled thought.) it's not really impressive... it feels hobbled together. Furthermore, the final product doesn't even include all the pieces for your fish point to be made, because the artist decided it wasn't necessary.
Just didn't work for me.
That being said, even if a great artist had perfectly rendered this script, it would still at best be a heady philosophical mix of symbolisms and allusions at the forefront, run-of-the-mill Batman story as an afterthought. Here we see the weakest Batman I've ever read, who is pushed over the edge by "trauma" lesser than most stories he lives through. Broken and crazy, he stumbles and brutally lashes out, barely surviving a mildly threatening evening.
I appreciate a very unique and thoughtful take on Batman. Clearly there is passion oozing out of every page. They worked hard to bring some depth to a character and genre often treated very shallowly. But when your symbolism is layered unfathombly thick (see the fish represents pisces, tarot, Jesus and androgyny at the same time! Oh also the Joker, and it might have been a time travelled thought.) it's not really impressive... it feels hobbled together. Furthermore, the final product doesn't even include all the pieces for your fish point to be made, because the artist decided it wasn't necessary.
Just didn't work for me.