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Detective Comics #766
Bridget Haines |
| Title: |
|
Procedure |
| Cover Date: |
March 2002 |
| Story: |
Greg Rucka |
| Pencils: |
Scott McDaniel |
| Inks: |
Jesse Delperdang |
| Colors and Separations: |
Jason Wright / Wildstorm |
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Synopsis: (WARNING! SPOILERS!)
This is the second installment
in the ongoing
"Bruce Wayne: Murderer?"
story
arc, which will become the "Bruce
Wayne:
Fugitive!" storyline for
some months
to come. The police descend on
Wayne Manor,
to take Bruce Wayne and his bodyguard,
Sasha
Bordeaux into custody after finding
them
hovering over the body of a dead
woman. Lieutenant
Maggie Sawyer and Detectives
Renee Montoya
and Cris Allen report to the
scene and inspect
the body of Vesper Fairchild,
determining
the cause of death to be four
gunshot wounds.
It appeared Vesper was there
for non-business
reasons, dressed up, and that
the confrontation
began in the bedroom, where her
shoes and
some clothing were found, amid
signs of a
struggle. Vesper's car was at
the manor,
but there were no clues as to
whether she
had driven it herself, or someone
had driven
her there.
On the ride back to interrogate
the suspects,
Renee asks to work on Sasha,
as she received
flowers from Bruce over her situation
with
Harvey Dent/Two-Face. Allen reveals
he already
believes Wayne murdered Vesper,
and that
Bordeaux may have helped. Renee
reveals her
doubts, indicating a possible
setup as though
the bedroom made things look
passionate,
the bed had never been used.
The interrogation procedure proceeds,
with
Allen taking on a very dour and
tense Bruce.
Miranda Rights are read and initialed
by
both Bruce and Sasha, before
the questions
begin. Renee tries to catch the
bodyguard
right off the bat, by asking
flat out why
Bruce killed Vesper. Sasha reacts
negatively,
and begins to speak further,
but clams up,
refusing to say more than "He
didn't
do it". Even Renee's attempts
to frighten
Sasha into talking, by saying
Wayne would
let her take the fall for him,
did not budge
the woman.
In the break room the two detectives
discuss
their progress, or lack thereof,
in the questioning.
Renee voices her belief that
Sasha is covering
for Bruce, and Allen adds that
it could be
the other way around, that Bordeaux
killed
Vesper in a fit of jealousy.
Renee reminds
Allen that Vesper and Bruce split
up a few
months back but Allen retorts
that Vesper
was at the manor, and that maybe
the two
were trying to rekindle. Any
further debate
is stopped by the arrival of
the 911 tape,
and confirmation that the gun
hadn't been
found yet.
The 911 tape of Vesper's desperate
call to
the police is played back for
Bruce and Sasha
in their separate rooms, with
an intense
picture of the emotional distress
of the
night being shown for both characters.
The
tape indicates a male attacker,
pursuing
Vesper with a gun. Sounds of
a struggle ensue,
and the woman begs for her life,
before 7
gunshots are heard, then nothing
but dispatch
trying to contact her, then calling
to notify
homicide.
Renee tries again to get Sasha
to talk while
she is in such a shaken state
from the tape,
but Sasha only responds that
she can't tell
her. Renee loses her temper,
screaming at
Bordeaux, and then leveling her
with the
guilt that if she was a bodyguard,
it was
too bad Vesper didn't need protection.
For a moment it looks as if Bruce
might break
down and talk, but he only asks
for his lawyer.
Allen informs him the DA will
be charging
both him and Bordeaux with First
Degree Murder.
At Brentwood Academy, amid the
news story
about the murder, Alfred packs
up his things,
and leaves Tim a note reading
"Tim,
He needs me. -Alfred" before
departing
for Gotham.
Analysis:
Cover:    (4 of 5cowls)
This cover by John McCrea and
Nathan Eyring
is not the sort of thing I normally
like,
due to it being so stark, plain,
and rough
feeling. However, in the case
of the story
involved, it is extremely effective,
and
a good indicator of the edgy,
gritty feel
of the issue. A simple black
and white mug
shot of Bruce Wayne, looking
scruffy, ragged,
and very much like he COULD have
killed someone,
is set on a pure white background
with the
'TEC logo in grey. The only splash
of color
on the cover is the yellow cowl
logo on all
the batbooks, drawing the eye
and making
it fit in well with the other
titles. My
only complaint is the dot-style
shading.
I thought it detracted from an
otherwise
very striking image. Smooth shading
in grayscale
would have been a better compliment
to the
blocky harsh outline image.
Story:     (5 of 5 cowls)
This is, perhaps, the finest
comic issue
I have ever read. Last year,
Action Comics
#775, "What's so Funny about
Truth,
Justice, and the American Way?"
by Joe
Kelly blew me away, gave me chills,
and re-ignited
the meaning of Superman for me.
This month,
Greg Rucka has introduced me
to the absolute
horror of murder, and the intricate,
frustrating,
and emotional procedure of a
police investigation.
He has gripped me so deeply as
a reader,
I cannot possibly turn away from
the "Bruce
Wayne: Murderer?" and "Bruce
Wayne:
Fugitive!" storylines no
matter how
poorly other writers may contribute
to them.
Rucka has left a very big impression
on me
ever since I started reading
Detective Comics,
but this is his best work here.
From the
opening scenes of chaos at Wayne
manor, to
the investigative thoughts, suspicions,
and
hunches of detectives Montoya
and Allen,
the GCPD takes center stage and
literally
shines. Batman never appears
in this entire
issue, and he is not missed at
all, that
is how well this is written.
There are two
exceptional standouts in the
story. The first
is the 911 call. Here words,
simple words
handled with creative emphasis
by letterer
Todd Klein and complemented by
McDaniel's
images, are able to move the
reader to feeling
that clench in the pit of their
stomach,
hearing the pleading tone of
a voice we have
never heard in life, feeling
the absolute
chill menace of Vesper being
stalked down
the upstairs hallway of Wayne
Manor, and
sensing the terror of the struggle
at hand.
The other is the wordless, simple,
utterly
effective departure of Alfred
from Brentwood.
Bravo Greg, you really outdid
yourself here.
Artwork:     (5 of 5 cowls)
Although I am quite used to and
charmed by
the work of Martinbrough and
Mitchell on
'Tec, and the monochrome color
scheme, I
think DC was very wise to place
McDaniel
and Delperdang on this issue.
The story was
too powerful, too emotional,
and too complex
to be handled by the effective
but simpler
cartoon-ish style of the monthly
crew. I
was pleased that although the
issue was full
color, the colors remained muted,
out of
respect for the monochrome trademark
of 'Tec,
and the heaviness of the story.
McDaniel
is brilliant in this issue, and
I cannot
possibly place any improvements
on his handling
of Rucka's story here. Many multiple
small
panels make up the first page,
carrying us
from the arrival of the police
at the manor,
to the removal of the suspects
with little
ado on a single page, yet show
every step
of the procedure with an incredible
sense
of feeling derived from Bruce's
and Sasha's
facial expressions and postures.
There is
a sense of speed and urgency
in the book,
derived from the uniquely overlapping
page
layouts and numerous frames on
the early
pages. The stark graphicness
of the murder
scene is tamed only by the muted
colors,
but no less effective for it.
(Note to movie
makers: I don't need to see entrails,
blood
clots, and fingers blown off
to really understand
the horrors of war!) Here too,
the standout
is the 911 call scene. There
is absolute
brilliance in the two-page panel,
showing
alternating views of Bruce and
Sasha reacting
to Vesper's words, screams, struggles,
and
the gunshots. We watch Bruce
go from sad
and resigned, to tense, to struggling
with
himself, to all out horror. Sasha
goes from
withdrawn, to unsettled, to pained,
to tortured
in a beautiful use of increasingly
closer
perspectives. McDaniel's ability
to show
us expression and Delpardang's
ability to
not lose an ounce of that expressiveness
when inking his work, made this
issue a true
masterpiece.
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