I first published this serie of articles in August 2014 in my first blog,
Campo de Zinias. I decided to republished it now but with some alterations.
Hope you can enjoy it.
Go to Batman Timeline: the Silver Age.
Go to Batman Timeline: the Bronze Age.
Go to Batman Timeline: the Modern Age.
Go to Batman Timeline: the Bronze Age.
Go to Batman Timeline: the Modern Age.
Batman
appeared for the first time in May of 1939 and has completed his 75th birthday but for sure he's not ageing. He's still
full of life and generating high profits to the ones working with him.
Some people says Superman is the best superhero ever created but to me
the first place is for the Big Bad Bat.
Because Batman sells
amazingly he appears in any possible mass media and had turned a cultural icon in the Western civilization. Rival publisher
houses present his characters alongside with him. Batman has been
twisted or amalgamated with other characteres just... to sell more and
more. To me is quite clear that there are so many bat-options around,
much more than necessary but as I said, Batman sells.
I don't like what
they are doing with the character in the comics, especially. Apparently
there is a need to shock and disturb the reader as it was a guarantee of
quality. I think the writers are wrong and to me, the best of Batman
still are his first four stories. They are somber, nearly depressed, but with no need to shock, just tell good, moody stories; so moody that the editors decided to create a Robin to lead Batman to a
juvenile mood just to guarantee the selling - and of course they were
wright. With stories being produced in an industrial scale is quite clear that quantity must be over quality.and if in this ocean of stories you really want good tales, be prepared: it is not easy task. Among few exemples are "Batman: the Dark Knight return" and
"Batman: the killing joke", books where we can find real originality in
the use of the character.
To honor the best of all crime fighters I did
this time line; it's not complete. Many can say his favorite book is not
here, or game, or writer or villain. But I think what I did is enough
to show how deep is Batman rooted in Western culture.
1914, February, 8 – Milton "Bill" Finger is born in Denver, Colorado.
Bill Finger (1914-1974). |
1915, October, 24 - Robert Kahn is born in New York City.
Bob Kane (1915-1998). |
1933 - Robert Kahn changes legally his name to Bob Kane.
1937, March - Detective Comics vol.1 #1 published by the newly formed Detective Comics, Inc.
1938, April, 18 - Superman's first appearance was in Action Comics vol.1 #1, published by National Allied Publications, a corporate predecessor of DC Comics (cover-dated June 1938).
1939, May – Batman comes to light in Detective Comics vol.1 #27
with "The Case of the Chemical Syndicate," by artist Bob Kane and
writer Bill Finger, originally referred to as "the Bat-Man". Alfred
Stryker is the first criminal to face the hero and he do not lives to
tell us his experience.
The original Batman as created by Bob Kane. Was Bill Finger who suggested a different visual.
|
This very first published image of Batman appeared in Action Comic vol.1 # 12 (May, 1939). |
Detective Comics vol.1 #27, DC Comics, May 1939. Pencils: Bob Kane - inks: Bob Kane - unknown collorist. |
excerpt of "The Case of the Chemical Syndicate" - text: Bill Finger - pencils: Bob Kane - inks: Bob Kane - unknown collorist - letters: Bob Kane. Detective Comics vol.1 #27, DC Comics, May 1939. |
July - In Detective Comics vol.1 #29 Gardner Fox and Bob Kane present Batman's characteristic utility belt and his first super-villan, Doctor Karl Hellfern, the Doctor Death.
Doctor Death. Detective Comics vol.1 #29, DC Comics, July 1939. Pencils: Bob Kane - inks: Bob Kane - unknown collorist. |
September - the Batplane and the batarang are introduced in Detective Comics vol.1 #31 by Gardner Fox. Bruce Wayne's first girlfriend Julie Madison also had her first appearance, created by Bob Kane, Gardner Fox, and Bill Finger.
Gardner Fox (1911-1986). |
November – Batman’s origin is revealed in Detective Comics vol.1 #33 in a story written by Bill Finger with art of Bob Kane. First appearances of Thomas and Martha Wayne and Joe Chill.
1940 - New York World's Fair Comics featuring Superman, Batman, and Robin with 96 pages and a cardboard cover.
January - Batman became the main cover feature of the Detective Comics with issue #35.
Detective Comics vol.1 #35, DC Comics, January 1940. Pencils: Bob Kane - inks: Bob Kane - unknown collorist. |
February – First appearance of Professor Hugo Strange in Detective Comics vol.1 #36, created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane.
April – First appearance of Robin in Detective Comics vol.1 #38, created by Bob Kane, Bill Finger and Jerry Robinson.
Detective Comics vol.1 #38, DC Comics, April 1940. Pencils: Bob Kane - inks: Jerry Robinson - unknown collorist. |
Jerry Robinson (1922-2011) by Dan Chusid via Wikipedia. |
Spring -Batman vol.1 #1 introduces two of his most persistent enemies, the Joker and Catwoman, both were created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger.In her first stories Catwoman was known as The Cat. In "The Giants of Hugo Strange"Batman
shoots some monstrous giants to death. That story prompted editor
Whitney Ellsworth to decree that the character could no longer kill or
use a gun.
June – First appearance of Basil Karlo, the first Clayface in Detective Comics vol.1 #40, created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger.
1941, Spring - World's Best Comics #1 teaming Superman, Batman and Robin. Linda Page has her first appearance in Batman vol.1 #5 created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane.
Summer -World's Best Comics #2 have its name changed to World's Finest Comics.
Fall – First appearance of Dr. Jonathan Crane, the Scarecrow in World's Finest Comics vol.1 #3, created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger.
November - Batman is made an honorary member of Gotham City's police department in Batman vol.1 #7 by Bill Finger and Bob Kane.
December – First appearance of the Penguin in Detective Comics vol.1 #58, created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger.
Penguin by Bob Kane. |
1942, August – First appearance of Harvey Kent, the Two-Face in Detective Comics vol.1 #66, created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger.
August/September - In Batman vol.1 #12, Bill Finger mentioned "secret underground hangars" connected with Bruce Wayne’s house.
1943, May– In Batman vol.1 #16 Alfred
arrives at Bruce's and after deducing the Dynamic Duo's secret
identities, joins their service as their butler. Story by Bob Kane, Bill
Finger, and Jerry Robinson.
April - First appearance of Dumfree Tweed and Deever Tweed, the Tweedledum and Tweedledee in Detective Comics vol.1 #74, created by Bob Kane, Jerry Robinson and Don Cameron.
Detective Comics vol.1 #74, DC Comics, April 1943. Pencils: Jerry Robinson - inks: Jerry Robinson - unknown collorist. |
July, 16 –
Columbia Pictures releases the first of fifteen chapters of the serial
“Batman”, directed by Lambert Hillier and with Lewis Wilson as Batman.
In the second chapter entitled "The Bat's Cave" Batman have a complete
underground crime lab whose entrance was via a secret passage through a
grandfather clock and included bats flying around.
Lewis Wilson (1920-2000) as Batman. |
October, 25 – Batman goes to the comic strips drew by Bob Kane and written for Don Cameron, Bill Finger, Jack Schiff and Alvin Schwartz
1944, January – The Batcave is introduced in the comics in Detective Comics vol.1 #83. Story by Don Cameron and Jack Burnley.
August - First appearance of Professor Carter Nichols in Batman vol.1 #24, created by Joe Samachson and Dick Sprang.
1945, February – Alfred’s original last name, Beagle, is revealed in Detective Comics vol.1 #96.
March - Batman and Robin made regular appearances on the radio drama “The Adventures of Superman” on the Mutual Broadcasting System.
1946 – The first series of Batman strips is canceled.
1947, February – Detective Comics, Inc. changes its name to National Comics Publications.
1948, October -First appearance of Edward Nigma, the Riddler in Detective Comics vol.1 #140, created by writer Bill Finger and Dick Sprang .
Detective Comics vol.1 #140, DC Comics, October 1946. Pencils: Win Mortimer - inks: Win Mortimer - unknown collorist. |
Win Mortimer (1919-1998). |
October/November – First appearance of the first Mad Hatter and Vicky Valle in the story "Scoop of the Century!"in Batman vol.1 #49, created by Bob Kane, Bill Finger, and Lew Schwartz.
1949, May, 26 – Columbia
Pictures releases the first of fifteen chapters of “Batman and Robin”
directed by Spencer Gordon Bennet and with Robert Lowery as Batman.
Robert Lowery (1913-1971) as Batman. |
1951, February - First appearance of the prisoner 234026, the Killer Moth in Batman vol.1 #63, created by Bill Finger, Dick Sprang and Lew Schwartz. In the story "The Man Behind The Red Hood!" in Detective Comics vol.1 #168 the Red Hood made his first appearance; he was created by Bill Finger, Lew Schwartz, and Win Mortimer.
Detective Comics vol.1 #168, DC Comics, February 1951. Pencils: Lew Schwartz - inks: George Roussos - unknown collorist. |
1952, June - First appearance of Garfield Lynns, the first Firefly in Detective Comics vol.1 #184 , created by France Herron and Dick Sprang.
1953 - Walter B. Gibson writes a second comic strip for Batman.
Detective Comics vol.1 #184, DC Comics, June 1952. Pencils: Win Mortimer - inks: Win Mortimer - unknown collorist. |
June - In the story "The Mightiest Team in the World" in Superman vol.1 #76,
Batman teams up with Superman for the first time and the pair discovers
each other's secret identity. The team-up of the characters was "a
financial success in an era when those were few and far between"; this
series of stories ran until the book's cancellation in 1986.
1954 - Batman comics were
among those criticized when the comic book industry came under scrutiny
with the publication of psychologist Fredric Wertham's book Seduction of
the Innocent in 1954. Wertham's thesis was that children imitated
crimes committed in comic books, and that these works corrupt the morals
of the youth. Wertham criticized Batman comics for their supposed
homosexual overtones and argued that Batman and Robin were portrayed as
lovers. Wertham's criticisms raised a public outcry during the 1950s,
eventually leading to the establishment of the Comics Code Authority.
The tendency towards a "sunnier Batman" in the postwar years intensified
after the introduction of the Comics Code. Scholars have suggested that
the characters of Batwoman (in 1956) and Bat-Girl (in 1961) were
introduced in part to refute the allegation that Batman and Robin were
gay, and the stories took on a campier, lighter feel. Fredric Wertham
asserted in his Seduction of the Innocent in 1954 that "Batman stories
are psychologically homosexual." He claimed, "The Batman type of story
may stimulate children to homosexual fantasies, of the nature of which
they may be unconscious." Wertham wrote, "Only someone ignorant of the
fundamentals of psychiatry and of the psychopathology of sex can fail to
realize a subtle atmosphere of homoeroticism which pervades the
adventures of the mature 'Batman' and his young friend 'Robin.'"
Frederic Wertham (1895-1981). |
Batman vol.1 #92, DC Comics, June 1955. Pencils: Win Mortimer - inks: Win Mortimer - unknown collorist. |
Sheldon Moldoff (1920-2012). |
August/September – Fist issue of The Brave and the Bold.
1956, April – First appearance of Jervis Tetch, the second Mad Hatter in Detective Comics vol.1 #230, created by Bill Finger and Sheldon Moldoff.
July – First appearance of Batwoman in Detective Comics vol.1 #233.
She was created by Bob Kane and Sheldon Moldoff with writer Edmond
Hamilton under the direction of editor Jack Schiff, as part of an
ongoing effort to expand Batman's cast of supporting characters.
Detective Comics vol.1 #230, DC Comics, April 1956. Pencils: Win Mortimer - inks: George Roussos - unknown collorist. |
Detective Comics vol.1 #233, DC Comics, July 1956. Pencils: Sheldon Moldoff - inks: Sheldon Moldoff - unknown collorist. |
October – The Silver Age of
Comic Books in DC Comics is sometimes held to have begun in 1956 when
the publisher introduced Barry Allen as a new, updated version of The
Flash in Showcase #4. Batman is not significantly changed by the late 1950s for the continuity which would be later referred to as Earth-One.