
By: Fabian Nicieza (writer), Marcus To (penciller), Ray McCarthy (inker), Guy Major (colorist)
The Story: I’m telling you, Tim, she wants you to put a baby inside her!
The Review: When people see a tightly woven, layered plot, they tend to wonder how the writer manages to foresee how little, early details can wind up playing a huge role in the final outcome of a story. The truth is things usually work the other way around; when it comes time to figure out the big fat middle and ending, a strong writer will usually look to the details they already laid down to help them develop their story.
In this issue, Nicieza takes threads and characters he established from several previous story arcs (Red Robin’s escapade in Russia, his first encounter with Scarab, and most recently the threat on Lucius Fox’s life) and winds them all together into a cohesive storyline, and the twists never stop coming. Crazy as it sounds, the Assassination Tournament merely serves as a cover for an even more intriguing plot, one with ancient, possibly supernatural roots.
Red Robin has largely been more of a down-to-earth kind of comic, with all its emphasis on technology and fighters using their wits, fists, and weapons to get the job done. You’ll run into the occasional metahuman, but mostly Nicieza avoids any flashiness in the action department. When he brings in this apparently otherworldly force to the table, the suspense feels that much tighter as you can’t imagine how Tim’s brains or martial artistry will get him out of this one.
The situation really calls attention to how much fun you get out of seeing Tim think his way through obstacles and enemies. There’s definitely something very satisfying about seeing him take down an entire mob of Scarabs with the press of a well thought-out button. But it’s also rather fun to how Tim can be a little too clever by half. His own foresight winds up losing his target, as the flash mob he sets up to cover his escape actually covers Scarab’s instead.
It reminds us that Tim, for all his experience and prodigiousness, still hasn’t reached the peak of his prowess just yet. With Batman, it takes a fairly substantial challenge to put him within believable danger, but almost every issue you feel Tim getting in just over his head. It does credit to his opponents. These are, after all, trained assassins; you wouldn’t take them too seriously if they can be taken down that easily by a kid whose martial artistry isn’t all there yet.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: DC, DC Comics, Fabian Nicieza, Guy Major, Marcus To, Promise, Ray McCarthy, Red Robin, Red Robin #24, Red Robin #24 review, Scarab, Tim Drake, Timothy Drake | Leave a comment »