Review: BATMAN: CURSE OF THE WHITE KNIGHT #6
[Editor’s Note: This review may contain spoilers]
Writer: Sean Murphy
Artist: Sean Murphy
Letters: AndWorld Design
Colors: Matt Hollingsworth
Reviewed by: Carl Bryan
Summary
“Batman…Thanks for trusting me!” – Harley Quinn
This is the sixth installment of Batman: Curse of the White Knight!
Positives
Sean Murphy continues to take the recipes of prior Batman canon and offers his unusual and thorough take on Bruce Wayne and his origin. Never has a book series offered more of a thorough re-imagining of canon since the introduction of Scott Snyder’s Court of Owls.
That being said, the roller coaster ride continues with the Joker being broke out of Arkham by a newly minted Azrael in his Batman costume. Remember when you saw the first “batarangs” he used. Well…. they are here.
Murphy pays tribute to all walks of Batman’s career and hides/reveals/celebrates them within the pages of his writing. You’ll find no story spoilers here, but look for a wonderful exchange immediately between the Joker and the Mad Hatter. Great writing!
The weaving in of Jason Blood (adorned as a priest) is real tongue in cheek stuff. And the new origin of the Wayne blood line paints a picture that exceeds Scott Snyder’s work. Enough cannot be written praising the historical look back at Bakkar and Edmond Wayne.
This is Murphy’s sandbox and his work with Batman, Mr. Freeze, and now announced, Catwoman, provides us with optimism that his nods to other time lines among the comics and movies is on the horizon.
Positives (Artwork)
Murphy draws an awesome Batman/Azrael. I am still drawn to his renderings of a Batman that is almost that of Marvel’s Wolverine. And Harley…whew. Has there ever been a better drawn Harley as of late as she is both devoted mother and heroine in this tragedy of a story.
“Suit up!” Batman’s words resonate as they go after the Joker/Jack Napier to get Harley and Jack’s twins.
Duality…who needs Two-Face. Murphy draws the struggle between the Joker and Jack Napier with every nuance. We are literally drawn into (no pun intended) this struggle and we don’t know which way to lean.
Finally, the budding relationship between Harley and Bruce is an interesting take. As a constant Batman reader and the “solidifying” of Selina and Bruce in the current DC timeline, I really appreciate how Murphy is treating the nuances of the situation between Harley and Jack and Harley and Bruce and Jack…you get the picture!
Negatives
Dick Grayson makes spotted appearances and he’s a vital part of the Batman mythos. I want Murphy to build more Robin into this playground.
Verdict
White Knight should be on your shelf! It’s a must read to get you into this series that Sean Murphy is painting for his readers. This issue shakes it down to the core a bit. Again, no purposeful spoilers here, but the last few pages make you gasp for breath!