Friday, February 7, 2014

What's So Golden About... the Batman Newspaper Strip?


Batman: The Dailies 1943-44 (Kitchen Sink Press, 1990)
"The Joker's Symbol Crimes" (March 20-June 3, 1944)
Bill Finger-Bob Kane/Charles Paris

Doug:  Welcome to my first Friday review of 2014!  Today we're going to take a peek inside a really fun book (the first of three volumes, actually) that's been on my shelf for almost 25 years.  And that's hard to swallow -- where does the time go?  I've chosen the third "chapter", which ran in the spring of 1944, for our discussion today.  When we get to the bottom our focus will of course be on the story and art, but we'll specifically look for those elements of Golden Age goodness, too.  Strap in, Bat-fans!

Doug:  We open on the walls of a new, inescapable prison set near Gotham City.  For whatever reason, Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson are touring the perimeter of the facility.  The warden guarantees that its most notorious inmate, the Joker, cannot break out.  Just then, in the yard below, we see the Joker himself begin to make trouble by choking another inmate.  The guards spring to action, but the Joker kicks them away.  Ignoring his lack of a Bat-suit, Wayne launches himself off the wall and onto the Joker's back.  He, too, is rebuffed effortlessly.  The Joker is finally subdued, Wayne's left with some bumps and bruises, and the warden declares that the Clown Prince of Crime has gone stir crazy and will be moved to the State Prison for the Criminal Insane.


Doug:  At Wayne Manor, Bruce muses over some of the trophies from his past encounters with the Joker.  He thinks to himself that all of this is over -- once the Joker reaches the asylum, he'll menace no one again.  Duh...  Back at the prison, guards prepare their man for transport.  Handcuffed and in an armored car, the Joker begins to roll, two guards in the cab of the truck.  Now I'm no expert on prison protocol, but I've seen enough movies to know that a body search would be expected and appropriate for someone of the Joker's track record.  Nope (of course, if they did their jobs here we wouldn't have a story, would we?).  The Joker managed to smuggle a nail, a match, a cigarette stub, and an empty paper bag with him.  As you might deduce, he uses the nail to pick the lock on his cuffs, the match to light the butt which then creates smoke, and the bag to blow up and POP!  The guards think he's somehow smuggled a gun into the truck and has shot himself!  Man -- what's so golden?  Stupid prison guards?  Of course they stop the truck, run to the back and throw open the doors, and Whack! Bam! Biff! off runs the Joker, free as a lark.


Doug:  Back in his lair, the Joker ruminates on his next move.  He knows it has to be something really big.  While out walking through Gotham City in the rain ('cause we need a little noir, you know), he spies a sign advertising a lecture on "symbols of our everyday life" and has a eureka moment.  Later attending the lecture, the Joker sees Professor Matthew Cleek discuss five symbols: one representing pawn shops, an hourglass, a skull and crossbones, the scales of justice, and the symbol of the Batman.  The Joker interrupts the presentation to leave his own symbol -- the Joker card!  Let me say that I've had a very real Conrad Veidt vibe from these panels.  While Jerry Robinson isn't listed in the credits of the story, "his" Joker is fully on display here. As the Joker departs the auditorium, he throws real money to the crowd.  This is a celebratory Joker -- he's "back"!  And he's determined to prove that his symbol and symbol crimes will triumph over the symbol of the Batman.

Doug:  The Joker's first job is a local pawn shop.  He uses a gas gun to spray the proprietor with the laughing toxin.  As the man falls backwards, his face already rigorous in the Joker-grin, the fiend loots his shop.  Before departing, however, he tosses a calling card.  One symbol, one crime -- and a challenge for the Batman.  Throughout this story, we see a very different Batman from the Silver and Bronze Age (and beyond) Batman that we are used to.  This Batman often relies on the police rather than beating them to the punch, he doesn't come off as omniscient, and his detective skills really pale even in comparison to his TV counterpart's.  It's still a recognizable Batman, but a somewhat distant cousin to the fellow we know.  After meeting with the commissioner about the pawn shop crime and deducing that it's related to symbols, Batman and Robin pay a visit to Prof. Cleek.  They learn that the second symbol from his lecture was an hourglass.


Doug:  The next crime is the theft of a jewel-encrusted clock claimed to have belonged to Marie Antoinette.  The Joker shows up in disguise, smoking like a chimney right in the gallery, and pulls the heist after subjecting the other patrons to knock-out gas.  He uses a pistol to break the glass over the clock, but doesn't have time to lift it out before the Dynamic Duo arrive.  Robin's a wee bit headstrong and pays for his enthusiasm with that same gun upside his noggin.  Batman of course tends to his young partner, while the Joker makes tracks.  After a few moments the Dark Knight gives chase, and into the "clock room".  What follows is one of those really cool Dick Sprang-esque images, as the Batman and the Joker duke it out on the face of a giant clock.  Awesome!


Doug:  Robin is able to eventually save the Batman's bacon, but not before another nifty sequence involving a bell tower and some dynamite.  In all this, the Joker of course is able to get away.  So it's back to Prof. Cleek's to consult the symbol list -- because you know, you couldn't just take a shot of it on your Bat-cellphone in these days!  Next on the list is the skull & crossbones, symbol of piracy.  Batman deduces that this must have something to do with a precious cargo arriving on a ship, but is dumbfounded to find that his research turns up no information on any shipping logs of commodities of which the Joker would be interested.  Wondering if he's missed something, the Batman queries the police for assistance.  Still no dice.  Just then, an officer enters the commissioner's office and relates that they have a pigeon willing to talk about the Joker.  He tells those assembled that some trigger men are meeting the Joker at an apartment, and gives the address.


Doug:  Of course by the time Batman and Robin arrive the Joker is nowhere to be found.  They interview the landlady, but she doesn't know anything.  They do find a fingerprint, but what is more compelling is what the landlady says she heard "Mr. Daniels" say: "When the queen leaves the gold room and the blinker starts shooting, we leave the dinkie mob."  Batman, Robin, and Gordon are all stumped.  Stumped, until Batman consults his dictionary of American slang.  What he finds is the break they need:  Translated, the quote means that when the movie queen leaves the wardrobe department containing expensive gowns, and the camera starts shooting, we leave the mob of extras.  The Joker and his men have gained employment as extras in a movie, and the starlet is playing an Roman queen but wearing $50K of real jewels.  The setting, you ask?  On a ship -- bingo on the skull & crossbones!


Doug:  Of course Batman and Robin are able to again foil the Joker's plans, and even have to use a working prop of an old airplane to do it.  There are some great images of fisticuffing in this climactic scene, but again -- the Joker gets away!  So it's back to Cleek.  On his numbered diagram, it is the symbol of the Batman that is next.  As has been his modus operandi, the Joker has attempted to steal or steal from what the symbols represent.  But how will he steal what the Batman represents?  Cut to police headquarters, where the Batman was already scheduled to present a display of his collection of official police badges.  A photographer shows up from View magazine, wanting some shots.  Of course you know who it is -- the Joker again!  He pulls a gun on those assembled, and his henchmen -- also dressed as photographers -- move to take down the display.  But that Batman... thinking ahead, the frame of the display case had been wired with electricity!  So as the goons get a shocking experience, the Joker turns his pistol on our heroes.  As the issue comes to a head, a GCPD officer bursts through the door and fires a single shot, taking the gun right out of the Joker's hand.  Thinking quickly, the maniac pulls a bomb from his coat and hurls it.  Gordon screams like a sissy, but Batman catches it and recognizes it as a phony right away.  Tossing it aside, Batman trails his nemesis.  The Joker, still packing heat, goes into the line-up room.  Batman and Robin follow, and douse the lights.  Batman is able to tap out morse code on Robin's wrist -- talking would have of course betrayed their location in the room -- and when Robin throws the main lights the Joker is stunned.  A couple of solid socks to the jaw later, and our villain is on ice.  Case closed!


Doug:  So, what was so Golden about this 1940s newspaper strip?  A few things stand out to me.  First, the use of kid sidekicks is one of the things that would rankle Frederic Wertham and provide ammo for his arguments about the depravity of American comic books.  Putting adolescents in the line of fire (literally) ain't cool, according to F.W.  Secondly, there's quite a bit of gunplay throughout -- with Robin around, not so good.  I'd also add here that the Joker was pretty violent in a manual way in this story.  I don't really recall seeing him so ready to fight in stories from later eras.  Third, and I love this aspect -- many of the characters in this story would have been right at home in a Chester Gould Dick Tracy strip.  The art is outstanding.  It seems to me that the credits were well-researched in the book, but there's no mention of Shelly Moldoff, Sprang, Robinson, or anyone other than Bob Kane on the pencils here.  If that is indeed the case, then he really did a bang-up job.  And lastly, the notion that super-baddies, particularly at DC Comics, used themes to pattern their crimes is on center stage.  DC would mine that for decades!  If you've never seen this series of trades, it might be worth a look sometime.

16 comments:

david_b said...

LOVE the Kane art (for lack of a better or more-informed kudo..). The Joker depicted here really reminds me of Nicholson in the '89 Batman film...

Nicely rendered, I love this strip. It's the Batman I know and love before the comic authorities got hold of it and created the 'bathound', 'bathorse', 'outerspace-batman', you name it.

Having it kept in B&W adds to it's charm, class and mystique.

Mike said...

Thanks for this post, Doug. That book has always been on my shortlist to buy, but I have never gotten around to it. Looks like a pretty good read. Btw, I just noticed that they're releasing "Batman: The Silver Age Newspaper Comics Volume 1 (1966-1967)" on Feb. 18th. That's probably making my shortlist too since it has some of Carmine Infantino's work in it.

Doug said...

Hi, guys --

There's a Sundays compilation from the Golden Age Batman strip. I know that some Superman strips have been collected as well -- I don't have any of those.

Word to the wise, and I mentioned this when I did a review out of the Spider-Man newspaper strip hardcover: that book prints the strips sideways, so you have to turn the book. Today's strips are printed as you see them scanned, in a rectangular tpb. Much more manageable!

From everything I've read, stay away from the Conan newspaper strips book. I've heard nothing but bad things about the print quality, which is a shame -- Bronze Age Conan by Buscema, Chan, etc. and it looks bad. You'd have to really screw that up...

Doug

Garett said...

Joker looks physically tougher here than his skinny Bronze age version.

Doug said...

Garett --

I felt the same way, and as I said -- I could not get over how physical he was portrayed. I just don't recollect the BA Joker attacking anyone as he did his fellow inmate. Bob Kane really sold the notion that the guy is totally bonkers, and totally dangerous!

Doug

Garett said...

I have the Johnny Comet book of daily strips by Frazetta. Beautiful art, but annoying to have to turn the page sideways to read it.

Edo Bosnar said...

Garett, is that Johnny Comet book you have the most recent one published by Vanguard? I was actually thinking of getting it, but now I'm not so sure - I really hate having to turn a book on its side. It's just so awkward.

Rip Jagger said...

I have some of these Batman books around here, got them remaindered or discounted somewhere. Haven't read them yet though.

On the Conan volume, let add my warning. I'm a huge love of Buscema's Conan and I have picked this thing up a few times and sadly put it back down. It's a disgrace really. The printing is muddy and they have too few strips per page to pad out the volume. Even the binding on the ones I've seen is suspect. It's a pity and shame.

Rip Off

Doc Savage said...

What's so golden is that he's not the infallible a-hole who has no friends he doesn't hate as portrayed in modern times.

Garett said...

Hey Edo, yes it's the 2011 Vanguard Frazetta book. All the strips are printed sideways. But I have to say they did a good job of printing the strips clearly, and it also has the Sunday color pages.

There is another Johnny Comet reprint book that I had many years ago, but for some reason traded in, that printed the strips upright. But I think the printing quality wasn't quite as good, and it didn't have the color pages. Also I don't think it was the complete series.

So overall I'm still happy with the Vanguard book--softcover and a decent price, and a cool look at early Frazetta art. It's high quality early Frazetta--he really put himself into this art.

Garett said...

Here's the earlier book I had:
www.amazon.com/Johnny-Comet-Frank-Frazetta/dp/1560600101/
If you hate reading sideways, this does have the strips upright. Selling cheap for the paperback--I paid more than that back then!

Edo Bosnar said...

Garett, yes, that is quite cheap, but it has a few things going against it, i.e., not complete, no color pages and lower print quality.
The thing is, I have Vanguard book that reprint's Frazetta's White Indian stories (and some others) from the 1950s, and I'm really happy with it. Vanguard really went all out to make these high-quality and attractive books. I just would have preferred it if for the Johnny Comet book that they had used that same "lengthwise" format as the Eclipse edition you linked.

Edo Bosnar said...

Gah! - "Vanguard's book that reprints..."

Doc Savage said...

"Johnny Comet"?!?

Sadly, I'm sure it cannot be as awesome as I imagine...a Vegas lounge singer who solves mysteries on the side...

Edo Bosnar said...

No, Matt, you're thinking of Johnny Velvet... :P

Johnny Comet was a newspaper strip about a race car driver that Frazetta drew in the early 1950s.

SarmaKiller95 said...

For a 7 years I wanted to show this comic to my girlfriend because I read that in one magazine in my country...and year by year,i started to not being interested in finding those comic...today for a 4 hours i was searching,and i found your post.Thanks for this comic!You saved my nervs and life! <3

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