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Gotham Knights #31
J. Corey Butler
Title: Clean
Cover Date: September 2002
Story: Devin Grayson
Pencils: Roger Robinson
Inks: John Floyd
Colors and Separations: Gloria Vasquez / Wildstorm FX


Synopsis: (WARNING! SPOILERS!)

A secret government agent by the name of Amherst sits in his hotel room talking to his superiors. He is paranoid that a counter agent has been sent after him, to "clean the cleaner," but it quickly becomes apparent that the Bat is the one who is stalking him while he finishes his work in Gotham City. The scene shifts to a flashback of Batman's continuing investigation into the death of Vesper Fairchild. He searches for clues in an abandoned office building and follows the trail to the special forces commandos who have been working with Amherst. In an impressive fight scene, he takes on the whole unit and then intimidates them into giving up the agent's hiding place. This leads to the end of the story, where we see Amherst finally confronted by Batman. He admits that the President authorized a character assassination of Bruce Wayne, and that he was the one who paid "Mr. Smith" to carried out the plan.


Analysis:

Cover
: (3 of 5 cowls)

This month, Gibbons takes Bolland's place (temporarily?) on the cover. Nice color scheme, but not terribly inspired. And the face under the cowl seems wrong. Too much like Superman some have commented, and I'm inclined to agree. The abs need work too.



Story: (4 of 5 cowls)

This was a nice, self contained story, and the suspense builds well to the climax. It's an important issue because it names Lex Luthor as the villain behind the Fugitive story, though we still don't know who actually killed Vesper. My only complaint is that it seems a little unrealistic that this agent and his men would still be hanging around in Gotham waiting to get pinched by the Batman. They should be gone and virtually untraceable by now. This is a minor quibble though, as it was still very enjoyable reading.


Artwork: (4 of 5 cowls)

A solid job, though some of the poses in the big fight scene looked a bit unnatural, particularly the kick at the top of page 10. I think Robinson's strength is in quiet, spooky depictions of the Dark Knight. I liked Bats' facial expressions throughout the issue, and the standoff scene on page 12 was very cool.


Backup Story by Alexander and Haynes:

3.5 out of 5. I really liked the charcoal drawing style of the art. That's the nice thing about these Black and White backups-- the different kinds of creativity we get a chance to see. The story was OK, but I don't think the ending worked all that well.


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