Welcome to the 924th installment of Comic Book Legends Revealed, a column where we examine three comic book myths, rumors and legends and confirm or debunk them. In the first legend, let’s take a look at how Chris Burnham redrew over 20 pages of his run on Batman Inc. for its Absolute Edition. One of the strangest comic book series of the past 15 years or so was Grant Morrison’s Batman Incorporated, not because of its content, but because the series was designed as the conclusion of Morrison’s long and brilliant run as the main Batman writer, but before it could finish, the New 52 happened, and suddenly Morrison’s series was not only cut short (with a Leviathan Strikes one-shot to wrap up the dirst series by sort of packaging a couple of issues together), but since it was interrupted by the New 52, DC’s entire continuity rebooted!Once Chris Burnham made it clear that he wanted to do some changes to his issues of Batman Incorporated, I suppose DC made the same offer to Yanick Paquette, the artist on the first three issues of the first volume, and Paquette did, indeed, decide to redraw two pages. Paquette had drawn the first two issues of the series by himself (with inker Michel Lancombe), but two pages of the third issue of the series were drawn by Pere Perez, and so Paquette returned to redraw those two pages so that the full first three pages of the series in the Absolute Edition were drawn by Paquette…
Welcome to the 924th installment of Comic Book Legends Revealed, a column where we examine three comic book myths, rumors and legends and confirm or debunk them. In the first legend, let’s take a look at how Chris Burnham redrew over 20 pages of his run on Batman Inc. for its Absolute Edition.
One of the strangest comic book series of the past 15 years or so was Grant Morrison’s Batman Incorporated, not because of its content, but because the series was designed as the conclusion of Morrison’s long and brilliant run as the main Batman writer, but before it could finish, the New 52 happened, and suddenly Morrison’s series was not only cut short (with a Leviathan Strikes one-shot to wrap up the dirst series by sort of packaging a couple of issues together), but since it was interrupted by the New 52, DC’s entire continuity rebooted!
Once Chris Burnham made it clear that he wanted to do some changes to his issues of Batman Incorporated, I suppose DC made the same offer to Yanick Paquette, the artist on the first three issues of the first volume, and Paquette did, indeed, decide to redraw two pages. Paquette had drawn the first two issues of the series by himself (with inker Michel Lancombe), but two pages of the third issue of the series were drawn by Pere Perez, and so Paquette returned to redraw those two pages so that the full first three pages of the series in the Absolute Edition were drawn by Paquette…
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