Catwoman: Lonely
City
by Cliff Chang takes place in one of the many Elseworld Universes. It is set ten
years after Batman and Joker died in an event that killed many others. Catwoman,
Selina Kyle, was sent to prison and Two Face used that event to become Mayor.
Catwoman is now out and seeking to figure out what Orpheus is as that was the
last thing Bruce Wayne, Batman, said to her before he died. Because she believes
that the answer might be in the Batcave, she is planning a break in to the Batcave.
In doing several
things before the break in, she becomes a symbol for the people of Gotham who
wish to fight back against the tyranny of Two Face who is ruling the city through
fear and police brutality.
Featuring
legendary artist Cliff Chang who is writing this four-issue book, this read is pretty
good despite the fact it is a short series. Cliff Chang’s art is excellent as usual, even
though some of his faces could use a little work since some of them look very
similar to each other.
One wishes more
time could have been spent exploring the actual events of Batman’s death. Some
of it is explained through flashbacks, but they come across as rushed parts of
the book. There is an interesting wrinkle that is not really explored in this
book as the Joker remained his usual vicious self, but several of the other
villains in Gotham were less bloodthirsty and kinder in this universe. Riddler
is claimed to have never killed anyone. In this book, Riddler is clean now
after having a cocaine addiction that caused him to battle wits with Batman. He
also was married and had a kid. Things like this are not explored enough.
I did like how they
compensated for Selina being older and how things would be physically harder
for her. The art was also very good, as mentioned previously.
I enjoyed Catwoman:
Lonely City, but it is very rushed. Four issues were not long enough to
give this storyline to breathe. This is a Black Label book, so that means that
there are darker issues at work here than the normal books. One should graphic death,
graphic violence, and a somewhat graphic sex scene. This is not a book for kids
and that includes a pretty gruesome death scene that might disturb some adult readers.
My reading came
from the White Rock Hills Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.
Scott A. Tipple ©2023
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