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Batman: Earth One

Amazon.com Price:  $10.19 (as of 01/05/2019 13:38 PST- Details)

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A #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

Batman is not a hero.
 
He is just a man.
 
Fallible, vulnerable, and angry.
 
In a Gotham City where friend and foe are indistinguishable, Bruce Wayne’s path toward becoming the Dark Knight is riddled with more obstacles than ever before. Focused on punishing his parents’ true killers, and the corrupt police that allowed them to go free, Bruce Wayne’s thirst for vengeance fuels his mad crusade and no one, not even Alfred, can stop him.

In the tradition of the #1 New York Times bestselling Superman: Earth One, writer Geoff Johns and artist Gary Frank re-believe a new mythology for the Dark Knight, where the familiar is no longer the expected in this long-awaited original graphic novel from DC Comics.
Amazon Exclusive: An Omnivoracious Interview with Geoff Johns
In the world of superhero comics, there remains one origin above all others, no matter how many times it is retold: an alley, a family, a gun, and a criminal, Batman’s origin is as terrifying as they come. Today, Geoff Johns, superstar scribe and DC’s Chief Creative Officer, leaves a notable mark on the character by taking it in a new direction in Batman: Earth One, a re-imagining of the Batman mythos from the ground floor. To celebrate the book’s release day, Geoff Johns answered a few questions about his version of Batman’s origin, and he provided two exclusive pages to the new graphic novel (available after the jump).

Omnivoracious.com: Batman: Earth One puts a modern-day spin on Batman’s origin. What facets of Batman (and Bruce Wayne) did you focus on modernizing?

Geoff Johns: I think the image on the cover says it all–we wanted to see his eyes. More often than not, Batman’s eyes are white in the comics. We wanted to make this more about a flawed, vulnerable, troubled young guy who is on an arguably insane mission of revenge. So I’m not sure it’s modernizing so much as humanizing. Gary and I pulled everything back. He’s not the Batman who can tear about 30 S.W.A.T. team members without breaking a sweat. He’s not the Batman who has invented a Batmobile. There is not any Batmobile. He’s got a car with tinted windows. He hasn’t even thought of the idea of a Batmobile yet. You see in the very first pages what he carries in his utility belt.

It’s more about Bruce than Batman. And his journey parallels a large number of the other main characters in the series—once you live to tell the tale a tragedy someone else hasn’t, where does your life go? How does that impact you? One character in particular has given up. This is about learning to never give up.

Omni: What sets Batman: Earth One apart from any other “early” Bat-tales, such as Year One and The Long Halloween?

Geoff Johns: Batman’s not the best as what he does. Alfred’s relationship with Bruce, Bruce’s mother, Bruce’s mission, the cops, Gotham’s streets, the name of the game in the basement, the red dirt and the police man from Los Angeles. It’s just a different take on the character.

Omni: What Batman characters were you particularly excited about modernizing?

Geoff Johns: Alfred and the police. Their stories will speak for themselves, I think.

Omni: Whilst you’ve written Batman in Justice League, this is your first time writing him in a solo story. What would you say is the most important part to understanding the Dark Knight?

Geoff Johns: Understanding Bruce. I think, unfortunately, we all understand loss. And this is loss at its very core. A boy and his parents. How you fill that bottomless pit inside you is a bit of a fruitless journey. But Bruce comes to a very big revelation within the story that ultimately changes what Batman is to him and, I think, us.

Omni: What differed in writing a solo Batman story as opposed to writing him as part of an ensemble?

Geoff Johns: I absolutely loved working with Gary on this on account of the singular universe. We built everything from the ground up without having to worry about other stories or other takes on the characters. It could be all ours to re-believe. And with the page count. We were able to tell our whole story, dive deeper into the characters and create a stand alone graphic novel series starring an entirely new Batman.

Omni: You’ve worked with Gary Frank before on Superman: Secret Origin and Superman: Brainiac, amongst other superhero-centric graphic novels. What is it about his style that continues this working relationship?

Geoff Johns: Gary does emotion like no one else can. The subtleties in what Gary’s art conveys, at the side of the power, mystery, strength and drama, it’s unmatched. Our styles mesh very well together. Every single project we’ve ever worked on together has turned out greater than I could’ve imagined. Gary Frank is a true master of his craft, graphic storytelling and character. He brings as much soul to the story as he does to the art and Batman: Earth One would not have worked without him. 


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