Batman: The Last Arkham
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Batman: The Last Arkham was a four-part Batman story arc that started the Shadow of the Bat comic book series in mid-1992. The storyline began in Shadow of the Bat #1 (Jun, 1992), and finished in Shadow of the Bat #4 (Sept, 1992). DC Comics later compiled the four issues into a trade paperback in 1996. The comic was written by Alan Grant and drawn by Norm Breyfogle and was responsible for the introduction of several new characters into the Batman universe.
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[edit] Storyline
Batman: The Last Arkham begins with the destruction of the old Arkham Asylum at the hands of its new administrator, Jeremiah Arkham who inherited it from his deceased uncle, Amadaeus Arkham. The asylum was being revamped and fitted with numerous new security measures, but unknown to Jeremiah, one of the building contractors created a series of underground tunnels and escape routes from the building in order to sell them and cover his gambling debts. This however, was not revealed until the last issue.[1]
When Batman stumbles upon a series of murders, resembling the serial killer Zsasz's MO, Batman begins to investigate only to find Zsasz has been imprisoned in Arkham Asylum during the course of the murders. Determined to prove Zsasz guilty, Batman and Commissioner Gordon stage Batman's insanity in order to get him committed to Arkham and further investigate. However, Jeremiah Arkham was unaware of this plot and begins to break down Batman mentally and physically. Learning of Batman's incarceration through private talk with Jeremiah, Zsasz guesses Batman's insanity was obviously a ploy and begins to plant seeds of hatred towards Batman in Jeremiah's mind.[2] This explodes when Jeremiah forces Batman to fight Amygdala and other inmates from the asylum. [3]
Whilst this continues, Zsasz escapes through the tunnels which he had purchased and kills the builder and another inmate in order to cover his tracks. Batman defeats all the inmates and begins to wonder about Jeremiah Arkham's mental health, as Amadaeus Arkham was in fact the asylum's first inmate.[3] Batman is put back into holding, but is freed by Nightwing who had come to investigate. The pair split up and Nightwing encounters Zsasz in the tunnels below the building. Zsasz collapses the tunnel in on Nightwing, but is stopped by Batman who had made the agonising journey through a microwave sensor to stop him. The pair fight in the sewer and Commissioner Gordon arrives in time to arrest Zsasz.[4]
[edit] Character introductions
Batman: The Last Arkham launched three new characters into the Batman universe; Zsasz, Jeremiah Arkham, and Amygdala, who were reunited in a story arc during the Knightfall crossover.
Zsasz was originally created by Alan Grant and was named after psychiatrist Thomas Szasz when Grant saw the name whilst visiting his girlfriend in her university library. Despite getting complaints that the character was similar to Hannibal Lecter of Silence of the Lambs, Grant thought that Zsasz and Arkham Asylum would be able to start off a successful comic book series.[5]
Alan Grant drew Jeremiah Arkham's personality from another book he read whilst at his girlfriend's library; the biology book "Superstition in the Common Pigeon" by B. F. Skinner. Throughout the comic book, Jeremiah Arkham states that if you "Change the behaviour, the mind will follow". This line was drawn from that book and gives light to Jeremiah's somewhat sadistic personality when dealing with inmates. In the Last Arkham, Jeremiah's background is touched upon during a flashback and explains that his understanding of the human mind comes from one instance when he was 16 and a store was being held up by a maniac from Arkham Asylum. Jeremiah coolly calmed the gunman when he went to shoot him as he had done with the store owners, and Jeremiah watched him commit suicide.[1]
[edit] In other media
An episode of Batman: The Animated Series entitled "Dreams of Darkness", also about Batman in Arkham, seems to have been a very loose adaptation of this storyline, replacing Zsasz with the Scarecrow and replacing Jeremiah Arkham with a more nondescript administrator, who is portrayed as clueless and naive rather than sinister.
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b Shadow of the Bat #1.
- ^ Shadow of the Bat #2.
- ^ a b Shadow of the Bat #3.
- ^ Shadow of the Bat #4.
- ^ Breyfogle, N. & Grant, A. (1996). Batman: The Last Arkham. DC comics. ISBN 1563891905.
[edit] References
- Breyfogle, N. & Grant, A. (1996). Batman: The Last Arkham. DC comics. ISBN 1563891905.
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