The Penguin stars in his own ongoing comic series written by Tom King and illustrated by Rafael de Latorre. Three issues into his run, the Penguin is probably not the Batman villain that most DC readers expected to headline his own comic book. Surely, the Dark Knight’s rogues gallery is full of foes who deserve the spotlight more.While the Joker also stars in his own ongoing comics, The Man Who Stopped Laughing, and alongside Batman in Deadly Duo, DC villains like Clayface and Two-Face can provide compelling tragic narratives that could easily carry an ongoing comic or miniseries at the very least. Even more obscure villains like Professor Pyg could star in a comic that would only ultimately compliment Batman’s world.Clayface is one of Batman’s most tragic villains. Much like the Hulk or Jekyll and Hyde, various forms of Clayface represent the “man within a monster” trope. Additionally, Clayface is one of Batman’s strongest foes and his powers and shapeshifting abilities create so many visually creative possibilities for comic artists. A Clayface miniseries could explore the man beneath the clay, what drove him to heroism in Detective Comics, and his potential search for a cure.RELATED: Batman’s Best Shapeshifting Villain Deserves His Own Comic After Penguin
The Penguin stars in his own ongoing comic series written by Tom King and illustrated by Rafael de Latorre. Three issues into his run, the Penguin is probably not the Batman villain that most DC readers expected to headline his own comic book. Surely, the Dark Knight’s rogues gallery is full of foes who deserve the spotlight more.
While the Joker also stars in his own ongoing comics, The Man Who Stopped Laughing, and alongside Batman in Deadly Duo, DC villains like Clayface and Two-Face can provide compelling tragic narratives that could easily carry an ongoing comic or miniseries at the very least. Even more obscure villains like Professor Pyg could star in a comic that would only ultimately compliment Batman’s world.
Clayface is one of Batman’s most tragic villains. Much like the Hulk or Jekyll and Hyde, various forms of Clayface represent the “man within a monster” trope. Additionally, Clayface is one of Batman’s strongest foes and his powers and shapeshifting abilities create so many visually creative possibilities for comic artists. A Clayface miniseries could explore the man beneath the clay, what drove him to heroism in Detective Comics, and his potential search for a cure.
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