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Future State Batman: Dark Detective
Future State Batman: Dark Detective | Mariko Tamaki
5 posts | 2 read
New York Times bestselling and Eisner-winning author Mariko Tamaki reveals a potential future state of Gotham, a militaristic reality that rivals 1984. Welcome to the possible future state of Gotham. The Magistrate, a freelance military and surveillance corporation, has been hired by Gotham's leadership to turn the old city into a futuristic surveillance state free of vigilante-based crime/heroics. Batman, horrified to see what his city was becoming, fought tooth and nail against Magistrate--and they killed him for it. Or did they? Bruce Wayne survived this assassination attempt, and has been laying low for years now trying to sort out how to beat Magistrate. The only problem? He doesn't think he can anymore. They're too big, they're too powerful. And the latest horrific revelation? They have EYES EVERYWHERE. It's left to Batman for one last mission. Destroy their command center, expose the drones, and free the city. Whatever the cost. Collects Future State: Dark Detective #1-4; Future State: Catwoman #1-2; Future State: Harley Quinn #1-2; Future State: Robin Eternal #1-2; Future State: Batman/Superman #1-2 DC Future State spotlights the World's Greatest Super Heroes in fresh new roles, with all-new characters taking up their iconic mantles. DC Future State features an incredible array of creative talent, combining award-winning writers and artists with new voices from the worlds of TV, movies and animation. Discover the DC Universe like never before!
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Robotswithpersonality
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Pickpick

Yep, turns out I did read this before, but I only actually remembered the first story, so here are my expanded thoughts, since I didn't say much the first time 'round. One day I will stop being surprised by how dark a book with the word dark in the title can be. 🙄
Honestly, in that all the characters are still in a state where they believe in fighting the (nigh insurmountable, omnipresent) bad guys, as opposed to grimly resigned 1/?

Robotswithpersonality 2/? to their fate and struggling to go on, this isn't as dark a read as it could be.
Nevertheless, all the stories feature cyber agents of an oppressive surveillance police state represented by The Magistrate, a threat that is not truly defeated in any of the stories.
I picked this collection up because the first story was, as usual, flawlessly, illustrated by Dan Mora.
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Robotswithpersonality 3/? In any case, the whole 'not actually resolving the threat' kind of made the story with Batman as the lead, the story with Jason Todd as the lead, the story with Batman and Superman teaming up, and even the one with Tim Drake hopped up on Lazarus resin less satisfying than they might have been.
It's conclusive at this point: I'm not the kind of superhero comics fan that loves a story arc spread over more than one set of issues collected in a
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Robotswithpersonality 4/? single graphic novel.
That being said, the stories featuring female protagonists, Catwoman (and Talia!) and the Great Train Robbery, and Future State: Harley Quinn were fantastic. They just appeared to me to have had a much clearer arc, an end goal accomplished with sass. Cat Woman as a figure in the resistance, inspired by Batman to join when it's not her first instinct;
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Robotswithpersonality 5/5 Harley Quinn using the smarts so many underestimate to play those who tried to use her, I think the writers and artists tapped into key points in their characters to make more resonant tales. 1d
6 likes4 comments
review
Robotswithpersonality
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Pickpick

Wasn't sure what to expect given the cover, but this was actually a very good time. Turns out I love seeing how various members of the Bat family and associated rogues gallery act and appear in a futuristic dystopian Gotham. Any collection where Catwoman and Harley Quinn each get to lead a story arc, and Bruce gets to be scruffy and undercover works for me!

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Robotswithpersonality
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Kitty face knee details! 😺

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JLaurenceCohen
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Catwoman leading an old-school train robbery? Yes, please. Ram V and Otto Schmidt nail the pacing.

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JLaurenceCohen
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"Batman is dead. Long live Batman." Mariko Tamaki and Dan Mora (one of my favorite artists) make an awesome team. Declared dead, Bruce Wayne goes underground to try to unravel the secrets of the Magistrate controlling Gotham with its Peacekeeper program. This is a stripped down, fugitive Batman cut off even from his allies. Jordie Bellaire's colors give the city a very Blade Runner feel.

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