Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 50 Gold Foil Comic
Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 50 Gold Foil Comic
Original price was: $25.00.$21.25Current price is: $21.25.
or four interest-free payments with Pay Later.
Item specifics:
Publishers: DC Comics
Publication Date: 1993
Product Type: Comic
Product Condition: Very Fine + (Please See Scans)
UPC: None Stated
Batman Legends of the Dark Knight 50 Gold Foil Comic
Original price was: $25.00.$21.25Current price is: $21.25.
or four interest-free payments with Klarna.
Item specifics:
Publishers: DC Comics
Publication Date: 1993
Product Type: Comic
Product Condition: Very Fine + (Please See Scans)
UPC: None Stated
Item specifics:
Publishers: DC Comics
Publication Date: 1993
Product Type: Comic
Product Condition: Very Fine + (Please See Scans)
UPC: None Stated
Description
Batman Legends of the Dark Knight #50 Comic
Features an Embossed Gold Foil Cover. Awesome!!
Writer: Dennis O’Neil
Artist: Bret Blevins
Colorist: Digital Chameleon
Letterer: Willie Schubert
Editors: Dick Giordano, Archie Goodwin & Bill Kaplan
Cover by: Brian Bolland & Rachel Birkett
It’s Batman’s first encounter with the Joker (sort of), and the Joker’s cousin Melvin is also along for the ride, in “Images,” a 40-page tale.
Stories/Spoilers
In a derelict diner on Gotham City’s outskirts, several gangsters are convened by a bizarrely discolored man styled the Joker, who boasts of a new extortion scheme on the city’s rich and powerful. Before the scheme can be explained, Batman raids the diner and beats the gangsters senseless; watching in amusement, the Joker claims to be a kidnapped circus clown when questioned and is allowed to leave. Only afterward does one of the reviving gangsters reveal the truth, mocking Batman for overlooking Gotham’s newest criminal. Meanwhile, the Joker rejoins his main accomplice: a brilliant but emotionally arrested chemist named Melvin Reipan. By playing on a number of childhood insecurities (and their bond as cousins), the Joker has manipulated Melvin into creating a highly potent nerve toxin, which forces victims to literally die laughing. After testing the toxin on Melvin’s cat, the Joker sends out a tape threatening the life of banker Henry Haight. The threat is intercepted by the police, with Captain James Gordon quickly connecting it to the same “Joker” who had threatened the city reservoir months ago; Batman, in turn, connects both with the man he had freed during the diner raid. Nevertheless, Haight refuses protective custody and insists on speaking at a state fundraiser, forcing the police to comb every inch of site while Batman discreetly attends as Bruce Wayne. Despite these precautions, Haight dies laughing only a few seconds into his speech; too late, it is discovered that his speech-paper had been coated with the Joker’s toxin, stirred into his pores through body heat. Chemical analysis of the toxin reveals many unusual compounds, which several Wayne Enterprises personnel are sent to further investigate. This lead, however, does little to improve Batman’s spirits; against Alfred’s advice, he continues to blame himself for being so easily tricked by the Joker. For his part, the Joker finds himself a rising star in the Gotham underworld, and soon announces his next victim to be businessman George Partridge. Unlike Haight, Partridge immediately accepts protective custody, allowing himself to be locked inside a bank vault guarded by dozens of SWAT officers; even this, however, fails to prevent his appointed death. Only belatedly does Batman deduce that Partridge had been killed by a delayed-action toxin, injected long before the threat. Giddy with success, the Joker has Melvin move their operations into the city proper. By sheer chance, their vehicle is spotted by Bruce Wayne, who – having learned of Melvin’s existence and background from his personnel – gives chase as Batman. In the ensuing chaos, the Joker and Melvin plunge off a bridge; a search of the waters below recovers what seems to be the Joker’s corpse, but Batman identifies it as Melvin’s, crudely disguised with makeup and dye. Thinking his trail covered, the Joker assembles several new accomplices and begins his first proper extortion, covertly demanding a quarter-million dollars from tycoon Otto Drexel. This backfires, however, when Drexel starts selling his most valuable possessions in a blind panic, piquing Batman’s suspicions. After confirming the situation with Drexel, Batman apprehends and impersonates one of the Joker’s accomplices, infiltrates the carefully planned exchange, and corners the Joker on a rooftop. At first unfazed – even cheerfully admitting his former identity as the “Red Hood” robber Batman had pursued through a chemical refinery several months ago – the Joker flies into a rage when mocked for his lack of technique. In response, Batman lays him flat with one blow and leaves him to the police. Sometime later, Bruce Wayne arranges a lavish burial for Melvin Reipan, solemnly (and naively) believing that the Joker’s threat has been ended for good.
Also features:
Dark Knight pin-ups by Jim Lee (see 11th scan), Howard Chaykin, Phil Winslade, Kevin Maguire, P. Craig Russell, Ed Hannigan & John Beatty, Bob Wiacek & Walt Simonson, Sandy Plunkett, Tim Bradstreet, Brian Stelfreeze, Mark Schultz & Al Williamson, Kevin Nowlan, Michael W. Kaluta, & Mike Zeck.
An awesome macabre “Joker” cover art by Brian Bolland with gold-embossed logo and title lettering.
Comic is bagged & double boarded and will be carefully / securely packaged then shipped via USPS Priority Mail to ensure that it arrives to you perfectly and quickly.
First Printing
Publisher: DC Comics
Publication Date: 1993
Format: FC, 40 pages, Comic, 10.25″ x 6.65″
UPC: None Stated
Collectible Entertainment note: Comic is in Very Fine + condition. Beautiful! Please See Scans!! A must have for any serious Batman collector and/or enthusiast. A fun & entertaining read. Recommended.
Please read return policy.
Batman Legends of the Dark Knight #50 Comic
Features an Embossed Gold Foil Cover. Awesome!!
Writer: Dennis O’Neil
Artist: Bret Blevins
Colorist: Digital Chameleon
Letterer: Willie Schubert
Editors: Dick Giordano, Archie Goodwin & Bill Kaplan
Cover by: Brian Bolland & Rachel Birkett
It’s Batman’s first encounter with the Joker (sort of), and the Joker’s cousin Melvin is also along for the ride, in “Images,” a 40-page tale.
Stories/Spoilers
In a derelict diner on Gotham City’s outskirts, several gangsters are convened by a bizarrely discolored man styled the Joker, who boasts of a new extortion scheme on the city’s rich and powerful. Before the scheme can be explained, Batman raids the diner and beats the gangsters senseless; watching in amusement, the Joker claims to be a kidnapped circus clown when questioned and is allowed to leave. Only afterward does one of the reviving gangsters reveal the truth, mocking Batman for overlooking Gotham’s newest criminal. Meanwhile, the Joker rejoins his main accomplice: a brilliant but emotionally arrested chemist named Melvin Reipan. By playing on a number of childhood insecurities (and their bond as cousins), the Joker has manipulated Melvin into creating a highly potent nerve toxin, which forces victims to literally die laughing. After testing the toxin on Melvin’s cat, the Joker sends out a tape threatening the life of banker Henry Haight. The threat is intercepted by the police, with Captain James Gordon quickly connecting it to the same “Joker” who had threatened the city reservoir months ago; Batman, in turn, connects both with the man he had freed during the diner raid. Nevertheless, Haight refuses protective custody and insists on speaking at a state fundraiser, forcing the police to comb every inch of site while Batman discreetly attends as Bruce Wayne. Despite these precautions, Haight dies laughing only a few seconds into his speech; too late, it is discovered that his speech-paper had been coated with the Joker’s toxin, stirred into his pores through body heat. Chemical analysis of the toxin reveals many unusual compounds, which several Wayne Enterprises personnel are sent to further investigate. This lead, however, does little to improve Batman’s spirits; against Alfred’s advice, he continues to blame himself for being so easily tricked by the Joker. For his part, the Joker finds himself a rising star in the Gotham underworld, and soon announces his next victim to be businessman George Partridge. Unlike Haight, Partridge immediately accepts protective custody, allowing himself to be locked inside a bank vault guarded by dozens of SWAT officers; even this, however, fails to prevent his appointed death. Only belatedly does Batman deduce that Partridge had been killed by a delayed-action toxin, injected long before the threat. Giddy with success, the Joker has Melvin move their operations into the city proper. By sheer chance, their vehicle is spotted by Bruce Wayne, who – having learned of Melvin’s existence and background from his personnel – gives chase as Batman. In the ensuing chaos, the Joker and Melvin plunge off a bridge; a search of the waters below recovers what seems to be the Joker’s corpse, but Batman identifies it as Melvin’s, crudely disguised with makeup and dye. Thinking his trail covered, the Joker assembles several new accomplices and begins his first proper extortion, covertly demanding a quarter-million dollars from tycoon Otto Drexel. This backfires, however, when Drexel starts selling his most valuable possessions in a blind panic, piquing Batman’s suspicions. After confirming the situation with Drexel, Batman apprehends and impersonates one of the Joker’s accomplices, infiltrates the carefully planned exchange, and corners the Joker on a rooftop. At first unfazed – even cheerfully admitting his former identity as the “Red Hood” robber Batman had pursued through a chemical refinery several months ago – the Joker flies into a rage when mocked for his lack of technique. In response, Batman lays him flat with one blow and leaves him to the police. Sometime later, Bruce Wayne arranges a lavish burial for Melvin Reipan, solemnly (and naively) believing that the Joker’s threat has been ended for good.
Also features:
Dark Knight pin-ups by Jim Lee (see 11th scan), Howard Chaykin, Phil Winslade, Kevin Maguire, P. Craig Russell, Ed Hannigan & John Beatty, Bob Wiacek & Walt Simonson, Sandy Plunkett, Tim Bradstreet, Brian Stelfreeze, Mark Schultz & Al Williamson, Kevin Nowlan, Michael W. Kaluta, & Mike Zeck.
An awesome macabre “Joker” cover art by Brian Bolland with gold-embossed logo and title lettering.
Comic is bagged & double boarded and will be carefully / securely packaged then shipped via USPS Priority Mail to ensure that it arrives to you perfectly and quickly.
First Printing
Publisher: DC Comics
Publication Date: 1993
Format: FC, 40 pages, Comic, 10.25″ x 6.65″
UPC: None Stated
Collectible Entertainment note: Comic is in Very Fine + condition. Beautiful! Please See Scans!! A must have for any serious Batman collector and/or enthusiast. A fun & entertaining read. Recommended.
Please read return policy.
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