Batman: Arkham City | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Limited series |
Genre | |
Publication date | July – October 2011 |
No. of issues | 5 |
Main character(s) | Batman Hugo Strange Joker |
Creative team | |
Written by | Paul Dini |
Artist(s) | Carlos D'Anda |
Letterer(s) | Travis Lanham |
Colorist(s) | Gabriel Eltaeb |
Editor(s) | Jim Chadwick Chynna Clugston |
Batman: Arkham City is a five-issue American comic book limited series written by Paul Dini, drawn by Carlos D'Anda and published by DC Comics. It bridges the storylines of Batman: Arkham Asylum and Batman: Arkham City.
Plot synopsis[]
The Arkham City comic book tie-in series is set six months before the events of Batman: Arkham City: A riot orchestrated by the villainous Joker had occurred at the asylum, which served as a mental institute for the criminally insane housing Batman's worst enemies. The Dark Knight was able to bring it under control, but not before Arkham was left in ruins following a final showdown with his nemesis, who had injected himself and numerous other test subjects with Titan, a Venom super-steroid derivative which had the ability to turn men into maddened monsters. A mutated, beastly, Joker attempted to destroy Batman during the chaos, but after his eventual defeat was left sickly and weakened.[1]
Meanwhile, Arkham Asylum administrator Quincy Sharp takes the credit for bringing his charges back under control that night, using this false pretense to successfully become the elected mayor of Gotham City. His attempts to make elaborate public gestures and construct a new city hall are subsequently targeted by a terrorist duo named "T&T", superpowered thugs who were addicted to the Titan formula. In their ensuing murder spree, three hundred Gotham civilians are killed. This gives Mayor Sharp the pretext he needs to declare martial law and give himself almost unlimited legal powers under an imposed state of emergency.
Batman, wary of Sharp's secret new plans for Gotham, proceeds to investigate his records, discovering that the mayor is obsessed with him and that he is bordering on being declared a public enemy. Around this same time, the Caped Crusader also comes to the conclusion that someone has been manipulating Quincy behind the scenes; he is merely a puppet in a much larger game. The concept of "Arkham City" is then unveiled shortly afterwards: Arkham Asylum and the local penitentiary are closed - permanently. Arrangements are then made for their respective inmates to be moved to a new location. The result is Sharp's most ambitious and controversial project yet: to wall off half of the city as an open-air detention area reserved only for society's criminal elements. Prisoners housed inside will not be kept in cells but allowed to degenerate into warring factions reveling in anarchy; these lawbreakers will be segregated from the rest of Gotham by heavily fortified defences diligently monitored by a private military company under Sharp's direction: Tyger Security.
Batman, realizing that the mayor's dreadful "solution" to the rising crime rate will light the fuse to a powder keg, infiltrates Arkham City to observe the atmosphere inside. His three greatest enemies, the Joker, Two-Face and Penguin, are already busily carving up the greater share of Arkham's turf for themselves. The former, having realized that he has only six months to live due to an overexposure to Titan, is planning to cause as much chaos as possible before his demise, while the latter is stockpiling enough smuggled arms to start a small war. To further complicate matters, shady psychiatrist Hugo Strange comes out of the shadows as the outside influence who has been sowing the seeds of the prison city project all along; he issues orders directing Tyger's highly trained operators to hunt down and kill Batman on sight.[2]
Mayor Sharp's thugs succeed in rounding up every last remaining citizen with even a minor criminal record, along with numerous "political" prisoners who know too much about the mysterious Professor Strange. The gates swing shut on Arkham City for the final time, trapping hundreds of innocents inside with the world's worst freaks, gangsters, and madmen. Hugo Strange is openly announced as the absolute authority in charge of the project, and Bruce Wayne's attempts to derail this by exposing some of the doctor's unethical past are to little avail.[3]
Strange emerges as the key antagonist behind the scenes: He currently wields absolute power in local politics and the criminal underworld. Even the most powerful villains must now submit to his authority or forge an uneasy alliance, and the ruthless Tyger troops are prepared to deal swiftly with those who refuse. Everyone, friend and foe, has become a pawn to be moved about on the chessboard, and the stakes Hugo is playing for could not be higher. Armed with the deduced knowledge of Batman's secret identity as Bruce Wayne, he intends to seize everything his opponent has, crush his spirit, and take his place as a legend, thus achieving for himself twisted immortality.[4]
Collected editions[]
- Batman: Arkham City (collects Batman: Arkham City #1–5, 168 pages; hardcover, October 2011, ISBN 978-1401232559; paperback, September 2012, ISBN 978-1401234935)
See also[]
References[]
External links[]
- Batman: Arkham City at the Grand Comics Database
- Batman: Arkham City at the Comic Book DB
Batman publications and storylines | |
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Current series | Batgirl • Batman • Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight • Batman: The Dark Knight • Batman and Robin • Batman Beyond Unlimited • Batman Incorporated • Batwing • Batwoman • Birds of Prey • Catwoman • Detective Comics • Nightwing • Red Hood and the Outlaws |
Former ongoing series | Azrael • Batman: Gotham Knights • Batman: Shadow of the Bat • Batman: Streets of Gotham • The Batman Adventures • The Batman Chronicles • Batman Confidential • Batman Family • The Brave and the Bold • Gotham Central • Gotham City Sirens • Red Robin • Robin • Superman/Batman • World's Finest Comics |
Completed limited series | Anarky • Batgirl: Year One • Batman: Battle for the Cowl • Batman: Cacophony • Batman: The Cult • Batman: The Dark Knight Returns • Batman: Dark Victory • Batman: Gates of Gotham • Batman: GCPD • Batman: Gotham County Line • Batman: The Long Halloween • Batman: The Return of Bruce Wayne • Batman: Turning Points • Batman: The Widening Gyre • Batman: Year 100 • Batman/Superman/Wonder Woman: Trinity • Batman and the Mad Monk • Batman and the Monster Men • Batman Black and White • The Dark Knight Strikes Again • First Wave • Gotham Underground • Robin: Year One • Superman & Batman: Generations • Trinity • The Untold Legend of the Batman |
One-shots | Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth • The 12 Cent Adventure • Castle of the Bat • Dark Knight Dynasty • Digital Justice • Batman: Earth One • Holy Terror • In Darkest Knight • The Killing Joke • Knight Gallery • The Man Who Laughs • Nine Lives • Noël • Son of the Demon • Two Faces • Batman/Houdini: The Devil's Workshop • The Batman Adventures: Mad Love • Batman & Dracula: Red Rain • Gotham by Gaslight • Joker |
Storylines | "The Case of the Chemical Syndicate" • "The Man Behind the Red Hood!" • "Joker's Millions" • "Year One" • "Year Two" • "A Death in the Family" • "Year Three" • "The Man Who Falls" • "Anarky in Gotham City" • "Gothic" • "The Return of the Joker" • "Prey" • "The Last Arkham" • "Knightfall" • "Leatherwing" • "Contagion" • "Legacy" • "Cataclysm" • "The Berlin Batman" • "No Man's Land" • "Bruce Wayne: Fugitive" • "Hush" • "Broken City" • "As the Crow Flies" • "War Games" • "Under the Hood" • "War Crimes" • "Face the Face" • "Batman & Son" • "Dark Moon Rising" • "The Resurrection of Ra's al Ghul" • "Batman R.I.P." • "Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?" • "Batwoman: Elegy" • "Bruce Wayne: The Road Home" • "Night of the Owls" • "Death of the Family" |
Intercompany crossovers | Batman/Aliens • Batman/Hellboy/Starman • Batman/Daredevil: King of New York • Batman/Judge Dredd: Judgment on Gotham • Batman & Spider-Man: New Age Dawning • Batman/Tarzan: Claws of the Cat-woman • Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles • Batman/The Spirit • Batman versus Predator • Daredevil/Batman: Eye for an Eye • Spawn/Batman • Batman-Spawn: War Devil • Superman and Batman versus Aliens and Predator • Spider-Man and Batman: Disordered Minds • Joker/Mask |
Incomplete or planned | All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder |
Related topics | Batman: Anarky | Batman: Child of Dreams | Batman: Haunted Knight | The Batman Chronicles | Batman Legends |
Batman: Arkham | ||
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Games | Asylum • City (Lockdown) • Origins (mobile • Blackgate) • Knight • VR • Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League | |
Comics | City • Unhinged | |
Film | Assault on Arkham | |
Key people | Paul Dini • Corey May • Dooma Wendschuh • Adam Beechen • Ron Fish • Christopher Drake | |
Characters | Batman • Robin • Catwoman • Joker • Arkham Knight | |
Developers | Rocksteady Studios • WB Games Montréal • NetherRealm Studios • Armature Studio • WB Games Boston | |
Related | Batman in other media • Joker in other media • Batman franchise media (video games) • Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth |