Popular Culture Review Vol. 22, No. 1, Winter 2011 | Page 34

30 Popular Culture Review deeper, more convincing character by underlining the psychological trauma caused by his parents’ murder, and what used to be a simple narrative paradigm—the logical cause for Bruce Wayne to become Batman in order to fight crime—has become a thematic leitmotiv in the more recent installments of his adventures. The “dark” side of the Dark Knight has also been accentuated, allowing a simple manichean conflict to lead towards deeper considerations upon the nature of the law by opposition to the concept of justice, and ultimately upon the very notions of Good and Evil. And thus, some specific instances of Batman’s adventures are worth of scholarly attention, as is, for instance, Frank Miller’s treatment of the character in The Dark Knight Returns, which introduces an aging Batman evolving in a hostile environment, where the police and public opinion are no longer on his side, and who is struggling to defeat the younger generation of hoodlums; this particular interpretation of Batman could indeed be considered as a “good,” canonically viable work, for not only does it contain a very perceptive critique of the mass media’s power of manipulation, but it also questions the actual function of superheroes in modem society. In an attempt to accommodate the diverse simultaneous narrative threads of superhero comic books within a coherent architecture, DC has established the “multiverse,” and hence. The Dark Knight Returns and its sequel. The Dark Knight Strikes Again are supposed to take place on a parallel Earth (Earth-31). However, being a self-content, independent narration. Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns is naturally separated from what we could be considered as the official Batman series, that is from the typical adventures of the Dark Knight in the serialized format, and therefore, one of the most culturally convincing concretizations of Batman has been automatically alienated from the series as a logical consequence of the factory-style production to which the medium is submitted, as if the very nature of the comic book industry instinctively rejected any type of originality by severely limiting any possibility for independent artistic creation. The existence of works such as the aforementioned The Dark Night or of Alan Moore’s and Dave Gibbons’s Watchmen demonstrates that the superhero comic book genre is indeed capable of p roducing noteworthy artifacts; however, it also reveals its capacity to regulate true creativity within the industry, for both. Watchmen and The Dark Knight, remain somewhat isolated works; they were conceived outside—and up to a certain extent, against—the industry’s commercial trend and did not directly affect either the evolution of Batman, in the case of Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight, or the future of superheroes at large in Watchmen. The concept of multiverse, albeit diegetically interesting, functions most of all as a marketing tool, allowing to establish some type of logical connection between different narrative products but unable to organize them in a coherent narrative structure, and so, the influence of Moore’s and Gibbons’s Watchmen and Miller’s The Dark Knight upon the genre remains mostly indirect. Both works occupy, therefore, a paradoxical place in the still hazy canon of comic books, for they are generally recognized as important