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Review – Absolute Batman #9: Terror in Ark M
Review – Absolute Batman #9: Terror in Ark M

Geek Dad

time11-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Geek Dad

Review – Absolute Batman #9: Terror in Ark M

Absolute Batman #9 cover, via DC Comics. Ray: It never fails to amaze me just how impressive the Absolute books are, packing a level of tension very rarely seen in mainstream comics. That continues this issue, with a brilliant segment where two Emirs, the leaders of Bialya and Khandaq, put aside their long-standing enmity and cut a peace deal that will change the world – only to open the door and discover an absolutely horrific Bane waiting for them, ensuring that the peace deal fails and one not only keeps the status quo, but escalates it because it'll benefit his masters. Bane's always been a massive threat to Batman, but it's been a very long time since he had this level of menace. And back in Gotham, Bruce is focused on a much more pressing issue – his friend Waylon Jones has gone missing, with the man seemingly disappearing off the face of the world. And all indications are that he's been taken deep below – to the mysterious facility known as Ark M. The fixer. Via DC Comics. Bruce now has a much bigger support network, including Alfred and Bruce's old friends like Ozzy, Eddie, and Harvey. Their first planning mission doesn't particularly go well, but Bruce gets what he needs to set out. Similar to Superman and the Kents in Absolute Superman, there are hints of the relationship Bruce and Alfred could have had in another world, but a distance between them. Scott Snyder's worldbuilding is incredibly strong, but it wouldn't be what it is without the stunning artwork of Nick Dragotta. His Bane design is horrific, and the depiction of what the real Ark M looks like is incredibly menacing. It all comes together into one of the best Bat-books I've read in a long time – maybe since Scott Snyder's last run on this title. There are so many other great beats, including Martha Wayne and the former Mayor Gordon, and a flashback to Bruce's relationship with Selina. I'm hoping Snyder has a very long time planned on this title. To find reviews of all the DC issues, visit DC This Week. GeekDad received this comic for review purposes. Liked it? Take a second to support GeekDad and GeekMom on Patreon!

Review – Absolute Batman #8: Deep Freeze
Review – Absolute Batman #8: Deep Freeze

Geek Dad

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Geek Dad

Review – Absolute Batman #8: Deep Freeze

Absolute Batman #8 cover, via DC Comics. Ray: If there's one thing that sets apart the Absolute Universe from the main one, it's that the villains here are absolutely terrifying. They're bigger, more vicious, and far more distanced from reality. That's never clearer than with Mr. Freeze, who in the main continuity is a gimmick crook driven by love and obsession. In the Absolute Line, he's a sickly child transformed into a monster by an obsessed father, and now he's built his own lab filled with volunteers for cryogenic research – who are now trapped in a never-ending chamber of horrors, frozen but conscious in agonizing pain. And now Batman is about to join them, as Bruce Wayne's ruse to discover how his friend Matches Malone died has led him directly into this trap. And even if he manages to escape, a horde of deranged, pain-drunk attackers are waiting to rip him apart in the name of the man who did this to them. Deep freeze. Via DC Comics. There are two main stars in this comic, with the first obviously being Marcos Martin. His art is very different from Nick Dragotta's, and while his Bruce remains on-model, the tone of the issue is perfectly suited for the chilling lab atmosphere. But the second is Scott Snyder's writing. This issue deals a lot with questions of mortality and death wishes, with all of Freeze's victims volunteering for this out of a fear of death. But at the same time, Bruce might have a death wish – something Waylon tries to get out of him in a flashback as they fight. There's some fascinating backstory about Matches Malone and why he fell so far that it eventually led to his death, and the ripples of Thomas Wayne's death continue to create fascinating new storyarcs for his son and the people around him. This is one of the most radical reinventions of Batman I've seen, but it's also incredibly true to all the characters and delivering a stunning story. To find reviews of all the DC issues, visit DC This Week. GeekDad received this comic for review purposes. Liked it? Take a second to support GeekDad and GeekMom on Patreon!

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