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Batman: Venom (1993)

af Dennis O'Neil (Writer), Russell Braun (Illustrator), Trevor Von Eeden (Illustrator), Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez (Illustrator)

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Serier: Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (16-20), Batman

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1627168,315 (3.33)1
A new edition of the classic Batman tale by writer Dennis O'Neil that introduces the strength-enhancing drug Venom. After Batman fails to save a young girl, he begins taking the drug in order to lift his limitations; however, when the Dark Knight becomes addicted to the substance, his entire life begins to spiral out of control. The drug Venom later goes on to play a major role in the Knightfall storyline that sees the villain Bane breaking Batman's back.… (mere)
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» See also 1 mention

Viser 1-5 af 7 (næste | vis alle)
Overall, it was an interesting story arc. A bit of a product of its time. And more or less a moral tale of drug addiction and overcoming it. Venom could be substituted for heroin, cocaine, marijuana, whatever drug you want to put in bad form and showcase how "its bad" and how a "good" guy like Batman can overcome it.

Some interesting things are how Batman doesn't get true justice in this arc (Porter dies in jail/withdrawl, and Slaycroft dies by Porter manipulating Slaycroft's son). Another interesting thing is that this arc is spread out over a year's time, and has them going to Haiti, Priscia (made up island), and Gotham. Also has Superman in it (in one of Batman's delirium dreams).

The biggest thing to this arc is that it's the prelude to "Knightfall" which is the introduction to Bane. ( )
  BenKline | Jul 1, 2020 |
Batman has done something that he never thought that he would do... he lost someone. After trying to right the wrong he feels powerless and turns to putting an unknown substance in his body. one that promises to make him stronger and faster than he ever thought possible. But what it does is turn him into the very thing that he fights against. It turns him into a monster!
Absolutely fantastic comic series! This is a part of the Batman Legends of the Dark Knight series and one that I would definitely recommend. ( )
  SumisBooks | Oct 12, 2019 |
Batman gets addicted to strength enhancing pills due to him being unable to lift a boulder to save a child. He changes character and at one point agrees to kill Gordon to get more pills.

Hmmm...this is one of the darker Batman books I have read from Batman being unable to save a little girl to a son being overtaken by addiction and on the verge of killing his father. I can’t help (disagree) think that Batman wouldn’t succumb to addiction in the first place or not question why the father wasn’t more upset of his only child dying; and, unfortunately, that ruined a lot of the characterization and does not correlate with his character. They did get their groove back with the last few issues but those first two issues really put a damper on the believability of it all and felt that the writer used Batman as a tool to narrate a story about the effects of addiction and how it affects those around you

Best:
-Batman failing to save someone
-him using drugs to cover up a trauma
-decent art
-great Batman characterization in the last 3 issues (very frustrating)

Bad:
-characterization of Batman in the first two issues
-he never would’ve been addicted like that in the first place (maybe should had a villain force him to take drugs instead)
-bad fight scenes ( )
  NoobNoob | Nov 9, 2018 |
My memory of this one is already pretty foggy. Batman decides that fighting crime is too hard, Batman decides to take Venom to make it easier (in the future, this will be more famous as the drug that fuels Bane), things sort of spiral out of control from there thanks to a somewhat weird plot by the bad guys. Like in a lot of Dennis O'Neil stories, Batman wears some weird disguises, and Alfred engages in some over-the-top physical action. The story covers an awful long period of time, too; a timeline pedant would probably discover that there's just not enough time in the early years of Batman for this to have "actually happened." Anyway, my overall impression was of something decent but not great, and not terribly Batmanish.

Batman "Year One" Stories: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
  Stevil2001 | Oct 2, 2015 |
Wow. Dennis O'Neil knows how to write a Batman story. Venom is about responding to failure and the consequence of taking drugs for the "easy out." Rarely is Batman depicted with such emotional depth (or as a psychopath for that matter), and it makes the character very engaging.

The art doesn't seem particularly striking on first glance, but is actually quite excellent. It enhances the text rather than distract from it. And man is it eerie when the Dark Knight cackles! My only nitpick is a scene where Bruce Wayne goes from clean cut to caveman in one month. What, is there Rogaine in those pills?

It should be noted that DC Comics advertises this as an origin for Bane. Well, only kind of. The villain of the Chris Nolan flick is nowhere to be found, but the guy is addicted to the same strength-enhancing venom introduced here.

But even if DC's marketing for this book is a bit misleading, this is a great comic. Trust me: You'll be happy to be misled. ( )
  wethewatched | Sep 24, 2013 |
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» Tilføj andre forfattere (1 mulig)

Forfatter navnRolleHvilken slags forfatterVærk?Status
O'Neil, DennisWriterprimær forfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Braun, RussellIllustratorhovedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Eeden, Trevor VonIllustratorhovedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Garcia-Lopez, Jose LuisIllustratorhovedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Oliff, SteveColoristmedforfatternogle udgaverbekræftet
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A new edition of the classic Batman tale by writer Dennis O'Neil that introduces the strength-enhancing drug Venom. After Batman fails to save a young girl, he begins taking the drug in order to lift his limitations; however, when the Dark Knight becomes addicted to the substance, his entire life begins to spiral out of control. The drug Venom later goes on to play a major role in the Knightfall storyline that sees the villain Bane breaking Batman's back.

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