Publication date: November 9, 2016
Published by: IDW (publisher) and DC Comics
(co-publisher)
Writer: Matthew K. Manning
Artist: Jon Sommariva
Inker: Sean Parsons
Colorist: Leonard Ito
Letterer: Shawn Lee
Editor: Bobby Curnow
Publisher: Ted Adams
"The Face of Two Worlds"
"The Face of Two Worlds"
Summary:
New York City. A
thief runs through an alley with a sack of loot, but is stopped by Michelangelo
who tries to openly play superhero.
After the thief faints, Leonardo tells Michelangelo that they’ll have a talk
about his conduct later.
Gotham City.
Batman creeps into a two-tone tenement, fights off some henchmen and
finds Two-Face absentmindedly watching televisions. Batman asks Two-Face where all the Arkham inmates
disappeared to, but Two-Face’s mind seems fractured. Two-Face draws a triangle and mentions
something about two worlds before giving up without a struggle.
New York. In the
lair, Leo tries to lecture Mikey about keeping to the shadows, but Mikey just
wants to be a superhero so bad.
Donatello and April, meanwhile, pick up a reading on their sensors that
a Kraang dimensional portal has been opened.
Mikey is surprised, since they recently defeated the Kraang for good,
but the Turtles have no choice but to investigate.
Arkham Asylum.
Batman investigates the empty cells and in each of them he finds a
triangle pattern on the wall. He takes a
scraping before Security Office Aaron Cash walks by, having just locked
Two-Face back up.
The sewers. The
Turtles and April follow the signal to an open Kraang portal
(triangle-shaped). Mikey is suddenly
attacked from below the water and is pulled down. He resurfaces and everyone relaxes, at least
until he transforms into Clayface!
Clayface pummels the Turtles until Mikey shows back up and distracts him
with name-calling. That gives Donnie
time to blast Clayface with water from a drainage pipe, the force sending him
back through the portal. The portal then
closes and the Turtles are left with lots of questions.
The Batcave.
Batman looks over the list of missing Arkham inmates (the Joker, Harley
Quinn, Scarecrow, Mad Hatter, Clayface, Poison Ivy) while analyzing the energy
residue he scraped off. The source
appears to be otherworldly, but he was able to program the Batcomputer to alert
him to any energy spikes similar to the one that happened before the inmates
escaped. The alarm goes off and Batman
rushes to the Batmobile, telling Alfred to call Robin.
Chinatown. A unit
of Footbots investigate an alley and find several of their robot kin
dismantled. They’re greeted by the Joker
and Harley Quinn, who are new in town and wish to be taken “to their leader”.
Turtle Tips:
*This Nickelodeon-based TMNT miniseries was preceded by
TMNT Amazing Adventures #14. The story
continues in Batman/TMNT Adventures #2.
*In February, 2017, a Director's Cut edition of this issue was released by IDW.
*In February, 2017, a Director's Cut edition of this issue was released by IDW.
*Although the previous Batman/TMNT miniseries featured
versions of the characters “inspired by” the New 52 Batman and IDW TMNT, this
miniseries features the Batman: The Animated Series and 2012 Nickelodeon TMNT
cartoon versions of the characters.
*In an interview, Manning and Somariva explained that from Batman's POV, the series takes place between Batman: The Animated Series and The New Batman Adventures. For the Turtles, it takes place before they went into outer space at the start of season 4.
*However, that placement creates a continuity error regarding the presence of Clayface. He was disincorporated in the Batman: The Animated Series episode "Mudslide" and was not restored until The New Batman Adventures episode "Growing Pains". He did appear in an earlier New Batman Adventures episode, "Holiday Knights", but that one was broadcast out of order.
*In an interview, Manning and Somariva explained that from Batman's POV, the series takes place between Batman: The Animated Series and The New Batman Adventures. For the Turtles, it takes place before they went into outer space at the start of season 4.
*However, that placement creates a continuity error regarding the presence of Clayface. He was disincorporated in the Batman: The Animated Series episode "Mudslide" and was not restored until The New Batman Adventures episode "Growing Pains". He did appear in an earlier New Batman Adventures episode, "Holiday Knights", but that one was broadcast out of order.
*The show Two-Face is watching is “Pretty Pretty Pegasus”,
a cartoon series featured in Teen Titans Go! (and obviously a spoof on My
Little Pony).
*The Turtles defeated the Kraang (seemingly for good) in the season 3 episode "Battle for New York".
*Aaron Cash originated from the mainstream Batman comics,
specifically the Arkham Asylum: Living Hell miniseries. He’s more famous for appearing in the Batman:
Arkham Asylum video game. He never
actually appeared in the Batman: The Animated Series cartoon (as its run
predates his existence).
*This issue was originally published with 21 variant
covers. Get ready for a big block of
text: Regular Cover by Sommariva, Subscription cover by Kevin Eastman and Tomi
Varga, Subscription Cover by Ciro Nieli, Sketch Cover, Incentive Cover by
Hilary Barta and Jason Millet, Incentive Cover by Ty Templeton, Amazing
Fatasy/Bishart.net Exclusive by Ben Bishop, Anastasia Exclusive by Alex Kotkin
(2 versions), Dynamic Forces Exclusive by Ken Haeser (2 versions), Coast City
Comics Exclusive by Steve Lavigne, Peter Laird and Ben Bishop, Fried Pie
Exclusive by Tony Fleecs, Nerd Block Exclusive by J. Bone Zing EB Games
Exclusive by Ben Bishop, New England Comics Exclusive by Ian Nichols,
Yesteryear Exclusive by Dario Brizuela (3 versions), Heroes & Fantasies
Exclusive by Eddie Nunez, and Knowhere Comics & Games Exclusive by Derek
Fridolfs and Heather Breckel.
Review:
Hey, we’ve got another Batman/TMNT miniseries on our
hands. Rather than go with a sequel to
the previous one, IDW and DC opted to team up two DIFFERENT incarnations of the
characters for a new "first" encounter.
My hopes are that we don’t retread too much ground from
the first miniseries, as now the characters will have to meet each other “for
the first time” all over again. We’ve
already witnessed a bit of rehashing in this first issue alone, as the Turtles
encounter one of Batman’s second string villains in the sewers and defeat him
handily. They did that in Batman/TMNT #1, albeit their opponent was Killer Croc, not Clayface. It’s a good warmup act, but you might be
feeling some deja vu.
Such reservations aside, I loved Batman: The Animated
Series back when it first aired and it’s one of those rare cartoons from my
childhood that has aged gracefully to the point of being just as enjoyable now
as it was then. So this is an
incarnation of Batman that I’m much more familiar with (I hadn’t read enough of
the New 52 era to really call myself an expert on that Batman). Manning gets the beats and voices of the
characters down nicely, from Alfred’s goofing on his master to Batman’s
coddling of Two-Face (his strained friendship with Harvey Dent being an angle
The Animated Series regularly played up).
Where exactly this miniseries falls into place regarding
the Batman cartoon timeline, I don’t know yet. Batman is dressed in his Animated Series
costume, but the Batmobile is the New Batman Adventures design. Likewise, this Two-Face looks more like the
New Batman Adventures design, but Clayface looks more like the Animated Series
design. So which is it? Eh, I’m sure it’ll be clearer when we see
Robin next issue; if it’s Dick Grayson or Tim Drake. (EDIT: Turns out it takes place between the two shows, hence the overlap in aesthetics.)
Sommariva’s pencils have a very elastic look about them
and the characters do appear extremely animated.
I’ll confess that Chad Thomas was my favorite penciller from IDW’s Nick-based
TMNT comics, but Sommariva was never far behind. His style is very expressive and the
characters stay on-model between their various universes. Batman looks like he stepped out of his
cartoon and the Turtles look like they stepped out of theirs. The aesthetics don’t clash as much as you’d
think.
He does resort to some cheap time-savers that aren’t so
appealing, though. He draws characters that
are prominently in the midground as crudely as if they were specs in the
background. Oftentimes there isn’t that
much distance between a detailed character standing in the foreground and a
vaguely shaped color blob in the midground, yet the disparity in effort would
have you believe that they’re miles apart.
He also does the ole “cut and paste the same art between multiple
panels, but only change one figure” trick that I’ve never liked. C’mon, artists of the world. You’re better than that.
While we’re perhaps tempered to the expectation of
diminishing returns (this is the second Batman/TMNT crossover; not as exciting
as a first), there’s still plenty of potential for fun in seeing these cartoon
versions of the characters interact. We’ve
already hit some rerun moments from the first miniseries, but hopefully that
won’t be too frequent an encounter.