"SQUID"
Writer Gerry Conway | Artists: Don Newton & Alfredo Alcala
Letterer: Ben Oda | Colorist: Adrienne Roy | Editor: Len Wein
Writer Gerry Conway | Artists: Don Newton & Alfredo Alcala
Letterer: Ben Oda | Colorist: Adrienne Roy | Editor: Len Wein
The Plot: Batman takes down a gang of drug dealers and asks them who is taking over Gotham's mobs. The leader of the delears says that it's the Squid. Later, a mobster named Joey Taylor is cornered by a motorcycle gang looking to take over the mobs as well, but the Squid and his henchmen appear and save Taylor, sending the bikers into retreat. Meanwhile, Batman and Commissioner Gordon discuss the Squid's incursion.
At the Squid's aquarium hideout, he demonstrates to Gotham's assembled mob brass the price for failure to serve him by executing a gangster named Eddie Colson in a squid tank. Late that night, Batman meets with reporter Olivia Ortega to hatch a plan to save Gotham's former top gangster, Tony Falco, from assassination at the Squid's hands. The next day, Ortega interviews Falco, who is subsequently sentenced to eighteen years in prison. But as soon as Falco is placed in a paddy wagon, the Squid breaks him out and takes him via speedboat to his hideout. But there, the Squid reveals he has deduced "Falco" is actually Batman in disguise. Squid's men gang up on Batman and knock him out, and when the Caped Crusader comes around, he is thrown into the squid tank.
Continuity Notes: Commissioner Gordon undergoes a physical exam at City Hall following his first thirty days back on the police force. The doctor orders Gordon to quit smoking and puts him on a diet, reminding him that he's not a young man anymore -- indeed, she lets us know that the commissioner is sixty years old. Dick Grayson visits the circus again, following an adventure with the Teen Titans (footnoted to issue 28 of their title; the team's first encounter with Terra). Also at the circus is the mysterious Croc, who shakes down the owner for protection money. Meanwhile, Dick takes in the acrobatic show of the Todds, a father/mother/son team of trapeze artists. Croc is also in attendance at the Squid's gang meeting, though he lurks in the crowd and does not speak.
My Thoughts: Everyone loves a good bookend, and Gerry Conway delivers one here, in the twilight of his two-and-a-half year run on BATMAN and DETECTIVE comics. Back in his very first issue, DETECTIVE #497, he introduced the Squid as a lisping spy, selling U.S. government secrets to foriegn powers. Now here, in the third-to-last month of his run, he brings the character back to match wits with Batman again. And where originally the Squid was played mostly for comic effect, here he's quite menacing and astute. He seizes control of Gotham's mob, executes a rival, sees through Batman's disguise, and even captures the Dark Knight! Not bad. My only issue is that thorughout the entire story, everyone is talking about Tony Falco like he's someone we're supposed to know. We're told that the Gotham mobs are falling apart without Falco's uniting leadership, and that Batman recently brought Falco down. This feels like something we maybe should've seen happen. Even if it was just as a done-in-one story where Batman dethroned the reigning gangster a few months back, just to set the stage for this. As it is, a reader (or at least this reader) feels like they've missed something!
But I can see why Conway might not have wanted to do that, having just told the story of the fall of Rupert Thorne. Nonetheless, some sort of acknowledgment of this apparently major event in Gotham's underworld might've been nice to see!
ReplyDeleteI don’t think I’ve ever seen a green prescription slip before. Maybe Gotham was cracking down on photocopied counterfeits?
The circus’ owner, Sloan, reminds me of the generic, Not Quite Gene Wilder Because Likeness Rights version of Willy Wonka you’d see on the late ’70s / early ’80s candy, but I have no idea what’s up with him repeating the first line of all his dialogue.
I’m not enamored of the Squid myself, at least not beyond the done-in-one Eisner homage that introduced him, but I agree with you on Falco. Heck, I want to know more about Eddie the Nose-Biter Colson!
ReplyDeletePS: The above is the first blog comment I’ve left since the absolutely devastating election results. (Very few of my favorite blogs even update anymore, of course…) I’m not trying to start a conversation about that but I just needed to acknowledge it for myself because engaging in largely frivolous activity feels so antithetical to the almost literally visible dark clouds of oppression I feel descending; you can delete this if you want.
PPS: Here’s NQGWBLR.
I get it... in addition to all the other things he's said, done, and been convicted of, the president-elect has, more than once, vowed personal vengeance on my state -- so I'm more than a little bummed right now.
DeleteWith regards to commenting on blogs and so many of them being defunct, I'm kind of afraid the same thing is about to happen here. These Batman posts end exactly one month from tomorrow, and I have nothing written to go up next.
I had the entire series of Conway posts finished and ready to go last fall -- September or October, I think. At that point I decided to take brief sabbatical for the rest of the year before starting on whatever would come next, in 2025. It wouldn't be the first time; I had completed all the Harras/Epting AVENGERS posts before the first one went up, so I took a couple months off then as well, before moving on. And there were several occasions like that over the years.
But when January rolled around, I wasn't quite ready to start on anything yet -- so I figured I'd take a bit longer; with basically a full year's cushion, it would be fine. Then before I knew it, it was May! So I said, "No biggie -- I'll take the rest of May and June off, then get started again at the halfway point of the year in early July."
As you may have guessed, that didn't happen either. Before I knew it, it was nearly September. But I still wasn't concerned; I can typically put together several months', or even a year's, worth of posts in just a few months of reading and writing, so I decided that I had a full quarter left to get a pretty good lead for 2025. Only... I didn't do it. And now here we are a week into November, and I still have nothing.
I'm beginning to think I retired from blogging last year after I finished these Batman posts, and just never bothered to tell myself. Don't get me wrong; there's still tons of stuff I want to write about here -- but I just don't feel like doing it. The above may sound like procrastination, but it's not exactly that. It's more of a lack of motivation. I hit ten years on the blog last year, and maybe I'm burnt out. In the past whenever I took a behind-the-scenes break from this, I always eventually felt refreshed and ready to get back at it. That just hasn't happened yet at any point over this past year-plus.
So, who knows -- I might suddenly feel that spark and get going again at the eleventh hour here, or you could be re-reading a lot of the above as part of a farewell post around New Year's. Which would sincerely bum me out, but if I can't find the excitement I used to have for doing this, I don't want to phone it in!
Anyway, that's my self-analysis for the day.
ReplyDeleteI’ve been waiting to give this comment the kind of reply it deserves but, I suppose appropriately, that clearly hasn’t happened yet. Not that you were asking for my thoughts or that anything I’d say would change the situation. Although I hope you find the spark you need to keep going, if only because you sound like you want to rediscover it yourself, hey, ten years certainly is a good run, you still have plenty of stuff on the blog for visitors to explore, and I’m just sorry that you didn’t get to wrap it up more intentionally for your own sake.
How the living f— do I keep missing the proper reply link?
Delete