Tag Archives: black bat

Preview: Black Bat Omnibus

Black Bat Omnibus

Brian Buccellato (w)
Ronan Cliquet (a)
J. Scott Campbell (c)
FC • 336 pages • $29.99 • Teen+

The classic pulp vigilante, reimagined for a new generation! Tony Quinn is a brash defense attorney to the mob who compromises his ethics for financial gain. When he refuses to cross the line and commit murder, he is tortured and blinded by his gangster employers. When a fortuitous meeting with a covert agency gives him a chance to make amends, Quinn transforms into the Black Bat and embarks on a redemptive quest to right the wrongs of his past.

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Dynamite Announces Black Bat #1 Creative Team

Dynamite Entertainment proudly announces that Black Bat #1, the first issue of an ongoing series reinventing the classic masked vigilante, will debut in May 2013 and combine the storytelling talents of writer Brian Buccellato and interior artist Ronan Cliquet. Bolstered by the character’s appearance in Masks, one of 2012’s best-selling independent comics, the pulp hero’s solo series debut welcomes a host of superstar artists aboard for cover art duties, including J. Scott Campbell, Joe Benitez, Ardian Syaf, Billy Tan, and in his Dynamite cover artwork debut, award-winning artist Marcos Martin!

Black Bat brings back a classic pulp hero from the 1930s, a seminal character that inspired several well-known comic icons.  Now, Tony Quinn is a brash defense attorney for the mob, one who compromises his ethics for financial gain.  However, when he refuses to cross the line and commit murder, he is tortured and blinded by his gangster employers. But then, a fortuitous meeting with a covert agency gives him a chance to make amends, and Tony dons the dark mantle of the Black Bat in his redemptive quest to right the wrongs of his past.

Brian Buccellato, whose work on the DC speedster title Flash has gained rave reviews from fans and critics alike, was announced at New York Comic-con 2012 as the writer steering the Black Bat revival.  The red-hot writer eagerly shared his excitement about Black Bat‘s atmospheric setting, and the creative opportunities he’ll explore there.  “Anyone familiar with my self-published work, Foster, knows that I enjoy exploring dark worlds, flawed characters, and redemption. Black Bat covers some of that ground.  At the same time, it’s still a superhero book and isn’t a departure from my work on Flash.  Tonally, I’d like to think it merges the gap between those two worlds.”

Furthermore, the highly regarded team of cover artists for Black Bat – including Campbell, Benitez, Syaf, Tan, and Subscription Only Variant” artist Marcos Martin – will ensure that the pulp hero’s new design (as conceived of by Buccellato himself) will best represent the pulp hero’s entry into the modern age of comics.  “We finally have the perfect interior artist, five amazing cover artists, and a firm release date for the first issue,” says Buccellato.  “It’s all coming together!  This book has been a year in the making, so it’s an incredible thrill to see it come to life as the covers and art start to come in.”

Make sure to pick up Black Bat #1 in May 2013!

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Black Bat Returns at Dynamite

The iconic character, Black Bat, makes his return to comics with a Dynamite series, written by Brian Bucccellato, the current acclaimed co-writer of DC Comics’ The Flash.  Black Bat joins a long-line of successful pulp relaunches at Dynamite, and this series guarantees to be just as successful.  Look for Black Bat in 2013!

In July 1939 Ned Pines’ Thrilling Publications (also known as Standard or Better) introduced a new Black Bat in a series called Black Book Detective. Written mainly by Norman Daniels under the house name G. Wayman Jones, the stories describe the crime-fighting career of former District Attorney Anthony Quinn. In a clear departure from most pulp characters and heroes, this Black Bat was actually an origin story, describing how Quinn became the Black Bat after being blinded and disfigured by acid.  DA Tony Quinn is blinded by acid and believes his career is over until Carol Baldwin arrives. She tells him that her father is a small town policeman who is dying from a gangster’s bullet and that a surgeon is willing to perform an operation to graft his corneas onto Tony Quinn’s eyes so that he can see again. The operation is done in secret and when the bandages are removed, Quinn finds that he can not only see normally but can even see perfectly in darkness too. While blind, Quinn had developed the necessary skills of the blind; sharper hearing, more sensitive touch, and a better sense of smell. Like many other crime fighters, Quinn is unhappy about all the dynamite logocriminals who slip through the law’s net on legal technicalities, etc. and decides to work outside the law in another persona to bring them to justice, and so the Black Bat is born, with Quinn deciding to keep the role of a blind man and later acquires the title of “Special District Attorney”. Carol, a “resourceful and intelligent girl” decides to work with Quinn on his secret crusade and next comes Butch O’Leary. None too intelligent but completely loyal and “a hulking giant of a man who was never happier than when his fists were flying in defense of the law and in the aid of the Black Bat”. Last came “Silk” Kirby, a small time crook who had tried to rob Tony Quinn one night and had been persuaded to stay on as “officially” valet to the blind Quinn but in reality a valuable asset to the Black Bat using his underworld skills.  Quinn has a secret underground tunnel to a gatehouse at the rear of his house which leads to a quiet street, which he uses as the Black Bat. This is necessary not just because of criminals who want him dead but because of the police too as he works outside the law. Friend to Quinn, the bulky lieutenant, about ten issue later, Captain McGrath (under Commissioner Warner) is also enemy of the Black Bat. He suspects they are one and the same and often tries to prove it, with tricks, even once having a doctor examine Quinn’s eyes. While Quinn can see perfectly, he can also make his eyes appear like those of a blind person and the doctor is fooled. Quinn usually turns the tables on McGrath, making him look foolish in his attempts to prove he is the Black Bat.