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icon_uk ([info]icon_uk) wrote in [info]scans_daily,
@ 2009-04-28 00:29:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:char: batman/bruce wayne, char: robin/nightwing/dick grayson, creator: dick dillin, creator: dick giordano, creator: frank robbins, creator: irv novick, in-joke: bondage, publisher: dc comics, title: batman

Robin's Worst Week - A requested reposting from the old s_d
This is from Batman 246 - Story by Frank Robbins, Art by Dick Dillin, Irv Novick and Dick Giordano

It's one of those covers that I'm sure just LEAPT off of the gets endlessly repeated by those with delightfully prurient minds.. in other words the entire membership of scans_daily!



But what goes on inside this testament to the perils of dabbling with autoerotic asphyxiation horror and fear? This masterclass in "Sidekick in peril"-dom? Now the story can be told... well, selected chunks of it. (I think this totals out at around 7 pages from a 23 page story.)



We start with this splash page, which tells us things are not going to be looking good for our Teen Wonder in this story:



In the space of one page is he hit with an arrow, stabbed with a sword, hung from a noose and drowned with a weight chained around his ankles. Oh, and one where he appears to have been mugged by the Riddler (But note even there, the gratuitous ass shot peeking out from under the cape drape). And a very upset looking Batman in the middle. No one likes to see their favourite toy broken because other people wouldn't play nice with it.. I mean "him".



I swear, that title just defies parody, even on scans_daily, whose membership has probably already written several books on precisely how!

We start with Batman summoned by a fake Batsignal, only to find a mysteriously silent shape waiting for him



Panel 2 - Or possibly he's just PO'd that you forgot his last birthday and is sulking.

Panel 4 - Oops! or not....



Leaving the fate of his plummeting, arrow-struck sidekick to one side, as he's clearly more worried about his own hide (Way to win father of the year Bruce) Batman swiftly finds a remote controlled crossbow and THEN goes to check on Dick, who, with an arrow sticking out of his heart and landing from a fall like that, looks to be pretty much worm food.



But wait, it's not Dick at all, it's a dummy! Or possibly he’s call Dick a dummy (Which isn't very nice), but this was the 1970’s pre Bat-prat so we’ll give him the benefit of the doubt.

(On the plus side at least he doesn’t say "This is nearly as good quality as the Robin dummies I use in the Batcave for sex sparring!")

So where is the real Robin? Could the striped arrow be a clue? Well it pretty much has to be as there aren’t any others… aside from all that high tech arrow-firing gear someone left behind and must have bought at some point, but this is a whodunit of the old school so we'll leave the "plain sight" clues to one side.

But first, try the obvious ways of finding out where Robin is...



Yeah, yeah, we know you're jealous Bats



On the other hand, maybe NOT that much to worry about. Good grief Dick, you're the studly young heir to a billion dollar fortune, you can do better than HER as a bedwarmer, surely?



(Images of Robin trussed up like a Christmas turkey are distinctly... odd. Not unpleasant as a tie-em-up scenario to be be sure, but "vore" isn't my thing though, mercifully)

Batman deduces that the clue refers to the Striped Arrow Country Club, at 11pm the next night. Way to go world's greatest detective!!

Now, if I were Batman I'd be haring off to the place there and then, to take it apart, looking for captive Robin's, By God, if anyone's going to tie up and gag a Robin it's going to be Batman goddam it! they're going to pay!

Instead of this, however, Batman whiles away a day trying to find out where Dick is, and then ambles along just in time to watch the from out front. That way he has a great view of the next unfortunate scene



The magic act of Chandra the Magnificent and his sword trick ends with an unplanned guest appearance in the manner of "Police Squad" opening titles.

Again, rather than checking on his bestest little buddy (who has a ruddy great sword sticking out his back), Batman sets off after the magician, who challenges him to a duel with swords.. except being a magic act, Batman's turns into a bunch of flowers halfway through the fight, which sort of makes things uneven. A well placed smokebomb later, the bad guy gets away.



NOW Batman goes to check, and finds that this is indeed another sex toy dummy. with another note... and again with PS's!

And does Batman make any attempt to find out who the magician really was? Does he question the magician glamorous assistant? No, does he examine the weapon for any evidence trace, again, no.

Instead, we get a scene worthy of the 60's TV show. He takes a "cape" and "sword" and from this deduces that the next murder will take place at "Swordfish Pier off Cape Fear"... This is impressive, as the only reason the words fish and fear enter into the equation are his own ramblings, and the bad guy also left behind a top hat and a latex mask, so "Good grief, he's at the Great Heavens Rubber Hat Factory!" would be just as valid!



(Guess where THIS one is going?)

So Batman dutifully shows up on a conveniently foggy pier on time (Does the word "stakeout" mean anything to you Bat's? The guy has given you a 24 hour head start here, and you decide to show up on time? Good manners yes, good method for rescuing captive sidekick, not so much. But he's in just enough time to see this...



Now, to his credit, this time Batman does the right thing, and leaps to Robin's rescue rather than worry about his own safety. One might have thought the easy thing to do would be to check to see if there was a pulse, facial expression or air bubbles, or indeed any sign of actual flesh on the dummy. But no, Batman climbs hand over fist down the length of Robin (Purely for professional reasons I'm sure) and starts cutting the chain.

He stops when he noticed a message written on the side of the block, reading "Fooled again, Batman! Will tomorrow night be the real thing?"

Upon reading the message Batman promptly takes it at it's word (and again rather than, say, check that this Robin was doing anything like oh I don't know, DROWNING) swims back up to the surface. If that had been the real Robin after all, he'd have every right to be annoyed... for whatever time he had left. Oh, and some member of the Gotham City Scuba Club is in for one heck of a surprise someday...

With another leap of mental of logic that would have the Riddler going "You're just making this shit up as you go along, aren't you?" Batman works out that the next location will be the OTHER place sailors are buried...



St Elmo's Graveyard, where we come across the still rather disturbing cover image.

Clearly Batman is now suffering deep sexual frustrations, with all these sextoy dummy Robin's around and he's not getting to play with any of them! Life's not fair!

It's odd that Batman now bemoans the lack of a clue about the next site, considering how scanty they were in the past. I'm sure there's a bar called "The Throttled Sidekick" or "The Well Hung Bird" or even "The Scantily-Clad Catamite Club" somewhere in Gotham.

Finally realising that there is a pattern to the killings; arrow, sword, drowning and hanging that match the MO's of the four killers currently in Gotham's death row, but there was a fifth, that Batman can't remember for no apparent reason. So he makes a call.

So the name is finally revealed and....it’s no one we’ve ever heard of before, nor will hear from again! Emil Ravek, out of prison a week on a technicality!

Last WEEK? This guy has managed to be freed from jail, establish a base of operations in the Waxworks Museum, take a trip out to Hudson University specifically, and sadly never shown, to kidnap the Teen Wonder, make very lifelike (and possibly anatomically accurate) waxwork models of him AND his costume, and set up an elaborate series of death-traps inside a week? Oh, and perform as a magician in public. Whatever else you might say, this guy has a real “Can do” attitude you just gotta admire!

We're in the home stretch now.



(I actually left the top panels in only to hightlight how tricky it must be for Batman to be able to sweat THROUGH his cowl. He's REALLY missing his little Robin now, that's for sure. A Batman got NEEDS dammit)

At this point one has to wonder about Batman's mental faculties again. He's plucked amazing word combos out of the aether, worked out chains of events which would baffle Holmes on a good day, but it took him FOUR DAYS to put together that someone is murdering waxworks... and that there's a place in Gotham called the "Waxworks Murder Museum" which was the haunt of a serial killer, and he's never checked up on the place? (True, in Gotham it's probably hard to find ANYWHERE which hasn't inspired at least ONE serial killer/criminal genius, but even so...) Or even investigate where any of these wax dummies came from in the first place? But I digress....

So we see that Robin is, as he so often has been, drugged, and tied up on the floor buy the bad guy.... for at least FIVE DAYS!

In the first place even the Teen Wonder 's gonna be kind of... rank after that, and second of all, and I hate to bring this up, but there's the matter of basic.. well, biological needs to contend with. I understand the Bat-clan have got iron bladder control (Batman probably has a lockable chamber with a waterfall and “Drip, drip drip little April shower” on continuous muzak loop, AND NO TOILET, to test them), but for pities sake, five days unconscious? That’s not willpower, that’s a medical problem!

Possibly it's linked to his complete absence of stubble, does Dick use electrolysis or something? I can't think of anyone aged 18+ who doesn't have at least a whisper of stubble after nearly a week.

Now I was impressed by Ravek's skills, but c'mon; you're a depraved lunatic, you've got one of the hottest guys on the planet tied up and drugged in your power, and best you can do is monologuing at him? Sigh, villains those days had no imagination. What a waste. (Or maybe he's the reason Dick has no stubble, having been given a wax job like no other by Ravek....

Anyway, now Ravek see’s that Batman is conveniently coming in a window he can see he decides it’s time to start things going for real.



See, this guy had potential to be a player in Gotham, he has a flair for drama second to none! First time out and he's already staging elaborate fake death scenes and the final one is worthy of Vincent Price in his prime.

Alfred would be proud of Dick here as, even drugged he still holds his head up!



Plus his plan is a suitably warped one. Don't kill Batman, kill Robin whilst Batman watches! That way Ravek gets his murerous jollies, and Batman goes nuts. A win win for the bad guy!

(I like Batman’s fingering of his own throat there, nice bit of empathising the point, so to speak.)



A neatly timed bit of platter tossing (probably learned from Alfred) saves our Teen Wonder, but Ravek again shows his dedication to a plab by continuing trying to cut Robins head off, this time with a handy axe (always nice to see a villain with a backup plan)



A brief fight ensures, and Batman stops him, throwing him into a display and essentially stopping him cold with a heavy dose of poetic justice.



Dick wakes up in Batman’s arms in one of the slashiest images since the 1940’s. I mean c’mon… it just screams “Mmmmmmmwah!” Batman appears to be straddling him!

Note that in the next panel, Robin appears to be about four foot three for no reason, but we overlook that as despite having been tied up and rendered unconscious for nearly a week, despite probably needing to pee like a racehorse, he manages to make a lame joke.

See Dick, that's why we love ya so much (aside from the fact you continue to wear those gloriously tight briefs past the onset of puberty) , you take a licking (and in Batman's case, that's probably literal by this point) and keep on ticking!



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[info]icon_uk
2009-04-29 04:51 pm UTC (link)
A lot of this is pretty much directly stolen from the Vincent Price classic 'House of Wax'. Wax museum devoted to horrible deaths - check.

There are a worryingly large number of those around, Madame Tussauds Chamber of Horrors being the most famous.

Guillotine display with dummy replaced with REAL person? Check. Corpses masquerading as dummies underneath a skin of wax? Er, no, but we have a bunch of dummies pretending to be corpses, so it's the old switcheroo, really - still counts as a reference, I'd say.

Meh, I'd argue that since it is SUCH a complete switcheroo, but what the heck.

There are more parallels, but it's a good movie, and I don't want to ruin it for anyone who hasn't seen it.

Yup, Vincent Price is always fun. Heck, I even saw the remake with Paris Hilton (Who is more plastic than the wax). The best thing was that the only character we actually see being waxified is a studly young male second lead (I won't mention who) though alas, no decent tying up first. Sigh... horror movies these days... no sense of peril for the male cast members, just hack 'em up and be done with it (And the one real exception, Hostel, well, the less said about THAT ghastly thing the better)

And I would imagine that Robin's *ahem* personal needs were taken care of in the same way that people in comas are cared for in the hospital - a bedpan.

Those work best when the patient is drugged up and unconscious, otherwise we're looking at Robin with his briefs around his ankles all the time, or a catheter... and I really don't want to imagine my poor little Robin in that sort of position. (I'm weird with my turn-ons, I'm not THAT weird)

Also, I'm guessing that Ravek shaved Robin, too - I think the idea was that he was trying to make sure that THIS Robin looked as identical to the dummy versions as possible, so that there would be that one, lingering doubt in Batman's mind as to whether THIS one was real or not until finally - CHOP!

Good point, I wonder if he considered having ALL the tableaux posed with fake Robin's in them, so Batman wouldn't be sure which might be the real one.

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-29 06:06 pm UTC (link)
Well, he IS drugged up and unconscious, isn't he? Ravek strikes me as a canny fella - I doubt he'd give Robin a chance to escape.
And that would be interesting - a whole wax museum full of dead Robins! Robin being killed by Jack the Ripper, Robin being beheaded in place of Marie Antoinette, Robin's head on Salome's plate, Robin being thrown to a pack of hungry dogs - Robin-murders everywhere! Better yet, he could rig it up so that some of the murder tableaus depict already murdered Robins, and some depict him as about to die, and those are all rigged to stab/behead/whatever at the push of a button! And then Ravek could not show up in person at all, just talk to Batman over a loudspeaker: 'Look at all the Robins, Batman! One of them is real - one out of dozens - and all of them are about to be murdered! Which one is the real one, Batman? Which one shall you save? Choose quickly, Batman - you have five seconds, starting NOW!' Now THAT would have been cool.

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]icon_uk
2009-04-29 06:25 pm UTC (link)
I LIKE the way you think!

These days Ravek would probably be shown kidnapping random kids off the street to dress up as Robin and then murder, because it all has to be about murderdeathkill, whereas the "lifelike dummy" idea manages the same thing without the excess bloodshed, and keeps the focus on Batman and Robin themselves.

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-29 07:05 pm UTC (link)
*shrugs modestly* It's a gift. Anyway, I'm trying to break into the writing biz - gotta keep in practice.

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]icon_uk
2009-04-29 07:10 pm UTC (link)
Indeed. Creative writing never hurts.

And I've found it very useful in coming up with concepts for commissions too.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]mysteryfan
2009-04-29 08:38 pm UTC (link)
This is kind of an awesome story idea. Are you going to write it? Because it is awesome and someone should.

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[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-29 08:44 pm UTC (link)
If I'm ever in the position of writing one of the Batman comics, I'm sure I'll use it somewhere. Glad you like it.

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]mysteryfan
2009-04-29 08:48 pm UTC (link)
Well, I love a wax museum story, yours is Robintastic, and I'm actually a fan of Lady from Shanghai? It's my husband's favorite movie and I got to see it on the big screen a couple of years ago and it has a great noir scene in a house of mirrors. Which one do you shoot, Orson Welles as Michael O'Hara? Which one?

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[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-29 09:32 pm UTC (link)
Right, the old house of mirrors plot. Those are always fun, and yeah, Lady from Shanghai is a pretty good movie.
Incidentally, on a related note, did you know that Orson Welles was at one point planning on making a Batman movie? Wouldn't that have been awesome?

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]icon_uk
2009-04-30 02:00 am UTC (link)
Sadly, IIRC the "Orson Welles wants to make Batman" story was an April Fools joke made up a few years ago. It would have been awesome though!

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-30 05:11 am UTC (link)
Really? Dammit. I kinda thought it might be something like that, although I hadn't seen anything to contradict it. Someone ought to make a Batman fan-film in the Orson Welles style.
You know what? I just had a related thought. Warner Brothers has been milking DC for plenty of money with all these superhero flicks, right? Well, here's what they should do - they should start releasing 'Elseworlds' pictures. And you know who'd make these pictures? We would - the fans. 'Elseworlds' productions would be feature-length films made FOR fans, BY fans, depicting DC characters in ways that do not quite fit with DC movie continuity, which wouldn't be difficult, as the movies have made some pretty large changes at times (look at 'Dark Knight'). It's not all that far-fetched, either - people make incredibly elaborate fan films from scratch, some of which are close to feature-length; you can watch them all over the 'net. These things are purely a labor of love; they put huge amounts of time and energy into costumes and cameras and whatnot, and they don't make a dime. Think of what they could make if they thought their stuff would get into theaters!
It'd work like this - WB would basically act as the distributor, and nothing more. They'd basically say 'if you manage to get these films made, we will put them in theaters and give them that 'professional touch', so they won't embarrass us. You'll have to take care of making it and funding it, but you WILL get a chunk of the royalties when the film is released.' The fans would go wild! I mean, how many times have you walked out of the movie theater and said to yourself 'man, even I could've made a better movie than that!' Well, this would allow you to. Think 'The Spirit' stunk? Make your own version. Think you could make a great Blue Beetle movie? Here's your chance to prove it. And you could experiment - you could mess around with the characters in all kinds of ways, and in all kinds of styles. You could make a Batman film in a 'Dr. Caligari' style, all stripped-down German expressionism, or a recreation of the old 'Spy Smasher' serial, or a Question movie as film noir. You could make superhero art films if you wanted to! And WB would be making money hand over fist, since all they'd have to pay for would be the distribution, instead of the actual making of the movies - they'd save millions.
What's more, if it WORKED - if any of these films made any money at the box office - fans could probably get producers interested enough so that they could get something close to professional funding! And that could possibly get some big-name actors interested, and from there, the sky's the limit! Even if these only worked as collections of short films, that could lead to bigger and better things. Hell, 'The Blair Witch Project' was a huge success, and that was basically made by nobodies - why couldn't something a little more ambitious work?
I mean, OK, it'll never happen, because movie producers are stupid. But wouldn't it be cool?

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]icon_uk
2009-04-30 09:05 am UTC (link)
That would indeed be a whole lot of fun, though a licensing NIGHTMARE! :)

Have you ever seen the fanfilm "Grayson"? Terrific little fanfilm "trailer" and a brilliant "Making of" too. See it here

Also more than worth your time is "Bat in the Sun Productions". Their "Patient J" is exceptional. See them <a href="http://web.mac.com/batinthesun/Bat_in_the_Sun_Productions/BITS_FILMS.html>here</a>

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-30 04:04 pm UTC (link)
Precisely! That's exactly the sort of stuff I mean. 'Grayson' is brilliant; thanks for showing it to me. (Unfortunately, the 'making of' is a bit too large for me - dial-up is a bitch sometimes. I'll watch 'Patient J' later when I have more time.)
Now imagine if they could put all that energy into making a full-length 'Grayson' that they'd actually get paid for. It'd be AWESOME!
What exactly do you mean by 'a licensing nightmare'? Because these versions of the characters are different from the standard ones, and the marketing would have to reflect that? I don't see how that would be a problem - at various times, there have been multiple different versions of DC characters out there. You can currently watch something like ten to fifteen different interpretations each of Batman or Superman (and I'm probably missing a few), and these are the 'official' versions. I don't see how marketing 'alternate' versions would make any difference.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]mysteryfan
2009-04-30 11:40 am UTC (link)
It would have been. I love the Third Man a lot. But I like Lady from Shanghai better, even though the mirror scene is not my favorite part. I like the main character's reflections as he narrates and the great Glenn Anders' bizarre performance.

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[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-30 04:09 pm UTC (link)
Well, as it turns out, the Orson Welles Batman thing was an April Fools prank that I fell for, so never mind that. Which character is Glenn Anders? Is he the lawyer with the paralyzed legs, or the guy who keeps spouting on about "TAR-get practice", or someone else that I've forgotten?

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]mysteryfan
2009-04-30 06:12 pm UTC (link)
Too bad about the Batman thing.

Glenn Anders is the creepy, distortedly photographed "TAR-get practice guy". I was looking for my fave quote of him but can't find it. It's the '5000 dollars, fella/just might give you the chance' bit.


This is also nice:
Orson Welles watching the three horrible other players in the drama:
Do you know, once off the hump of Brazil, I saw the ocean so darkened with blood it was black, and the sun fadin' away over the lip of the sky. We put in at Fortaleza. A few of us had lines out for a bit of idle fishin'. It was me had the first strike. A shark it was, and then there was another, and another shark again, till all about the sea was made of sharks, and more sharks still, and the water tall. My shark had torn himself from the hook, and the scent, or maybe the stain it was, and him bleedin' his life away, drove the rest of 'em mad. Then the beasts took to eatin' each other; in their frenzy, they ate at themselves. You could feel the lust and murder like a wind stingin' your eyes. And you could smell the death reeking up out of the sea.

I never saw anything worse until this little picnic tonight.

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[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-30 06:25 pm UTC (link)
Yeah, that's a great quote. Back in the days when symbolism didn't need to be subtle...

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[info]mysteryfan
2009-04-30 06:30 pm UTC (link)
Well, it is noir. And also a put down of the people he's foolishly thrown himself in with.

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[info]psychop_rex
2009-04-30 06:35 pm UTC (link)
Well, I wasn't saying it was a bad thing, necessarily - directness is one of the things that makes a quote quotable.

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[info]mysteryfan
2009-04-30 06:37 pm UTC (link)
Okay, I got you! And it made me think about symbolism now, and how it's certainly not always so subtle, either.

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[info]icon_uk
2009-04-30 02:05 am UTC (link)
I confess I love a waxwork scenario too. (I had half a Hardy Boys fic set in one, which was sadly lost in a harddrive crash) plus I sort of had an idea for a backstory to this piece, where the Joker kidnaps Robin at a fairground (natch) and takes him on a tied up tour through a Joker-twisted the Tunnel of Love (With some grisly Bats and Robin waxworks posed along the way) before dropping him in the prize machine as Bat-Bait

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]mysteryfan
2009-04-30 11:43 am UTC (link)
How frustrating about losing fic in hd crash! I like the idea for the commission. Greg did a good job with that one.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


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