Detective Comics #30 (August 1939)

“THE RETURN OF DOCTOR DEATH”

The first issue featuring the assistance of Sheldon Moldoff, and I’m fascinated by how the art has taken on a strange gravitas. This issue has a sparse everyone’s-asleep night coziness to it, in both style and pacing.

Much of the issue has Bruce engineering a plot to lure Dr. Death out of hiding, but it also features a lot of creeping around at night. The best parts are panels like these with their densely hatched lines making them look like old woodcuts.

Last issue (#29) featured the first use of the bat-utility bat and here a lot of attention is paid to the mechanics of Batman’s activities. Certain panels frame Batman as a thief and villain himself. And here, Batman actually breaks into a house and steals some diamonds.

Featuring the first in some extremely bizarre characters designs. Dr. Death gets not one, not two, but three different faces in two issues. He’s gone after this issue, but he’ll be back in 43 years.

Love how his face is somehow on? seen through? part of? his bandages.

(A likely nod to Claude Rains’ Invisible Man from six years earlier in 1933, smoking jacket and all!)

An almost quiet issue that hits not only on Batman’s psychological similarity to those he fights, but also his fundamental loneliness and separation from the rest of humanity. He’s alone in an endless night. Where he sometimes seems to boil with rage, here tinges of despair.

Originally tweeted by Weird Batman of the Golden Age (@GoldenAgeBats) on June 7, 2022.

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Detective Comics #29 (July 1939)

“THE BATMAN MEETS DOCTOR DEATH”

YES. We’re gothing out!

God yes, I love this shit. Dr. HELLFERN posts a newspaper ad, Bruce smugly reads said newspaper, Batman goes to the post office, later he deliberates about where to park his car. I live for this.

LOOK. AT. HIS. LITTLE. MITTENS.

Love these. Big thick inks. Big glowing moon. Shadows everywhere. Eerie! Uncanny!

The first issue written by Gardner Fox, ghostwriting for Bob Kane. And for however else Kane sucked, the unique gothic quality of the art did rule. This is Batman in line with Black Mask, German expressionism and Universal Horror.

*sigh*
Batman has a gun and he’s threatening to kill again! No rules on Earth-2!

We pause the action for Bruce to go to the doctor.

Batman issues are at their best when they combine eerie gothic nightside atmospherics with Batman doing errands, reading files, etc. Let us celebrate mundane Batman.

The death count is so high, so fast!

Originally tweeted by Weird Batman of the Golden Age (@GoldenAgeBats) on June 6, 2022.

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Detective Comics #28 (June 1939)

“FRENCHY BLAKE’S JEWEL GANG”

We start the issue off with some grade A lurkin’.

Batman spends most of the issue flying around, jumping off buildings, running around on top of buildings, dangling other people from buildings, dangling himself from buildings, etc.

It’s cool!

One of the joys of early Batman is seeing him do totally mundane things, like making phone calls, driving his little car, and breaking into people’s homes.

Also, it REALLY seems like that phone is upside down and that Batman has absolutely no idea what a phone is.

He’s such a smug dick in this issue.. Also also, he took his gloves off for this one, because he’s a total freak.

Neato panel, but also you know he’s loving this scaring the hell out of people shit. Also, boo to the issues where Batman is not fighting vampires and werewolves and instead defending people’s property (jewels). At least no one dies this time. But seriously, Batman, go to therapy!

The first of many occasions where Batman dangles someone from a high place to elicit a confession. Apparently he is disregarding 1936’s Brown v. Mississippi which ruled this sort of thing unconstitutional! Batman, this will not be admissible in court!

Detective Comics #27 (May 1939)

“THE CASE OF THE CHEMICAL SYNDICATE”

Depicting the OG bats look, probably by Bob Kane, complete with awkward bat-pose and doofy ears. Early but characteristic fullmoon drenched gothic nightscape imagery which is a HUGE part of what I love abt the 30s and 40s bats.

Cool to see the whole Bat-Bod, which has the squat character that I and probably no-one else associate with the completely unrelated art of the Fiend Folio. Also demonstrating Batman’s heroic superpowers, including “stuffing handkerchiefs into tubes.”

You know I love the doofy ears which make Batman look like a grumpy kitty.

In which Batman MURDERS someone by punching them into a vat of acid, an act which has absolutely NO karmic implications for the future and which certainly does not foreshadow any future calamity! This will NOT come back to haunt him!

Jesus Christ, Batman!

Batman would never spend his first issue passing on his trauma to other people by doing murder and even if he did, it wouldn’t matter because THEY’RE CRIMINALS not people!

More dope gothic imagery and HEAVY ink which is sick af. How can Batman be a brutal sociopath cop if he’s SO COOL?

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