Holy plot lines! Big changes ahead in the Bat-universe?

It's been a long, strange Bat-trip, which nobody knows better than writer Grant Morrison.
The Scottish scribe has been writing "Batman" off and on since fall of 2006, and all of his stories came together in October in the final issue of the mega-story "Batman R.I.P." I won't spoil the ending, but take it as a given that for now and the foreseeable future Bruce Wayne will not be wearing any Bat-suits.
What will happen next is important for the character, but just as important is what has come before. The past is prologue, as they say, and Morrison considers every Caped Crusader story going back to 1939 true in its own way:
"'Batman R.I.P.' incorporates the sum total of the experiences that made (Batman) the character we're familiar with today. Of course, he's had too many adventures to reasonably fit into one man's life, but many of them have covered the same ground and can be considered (ital) en masse (end ital).
"I divided various decades into the years of a roughly 35-ish Batman's life and found that the whole story considered as a 70-year-long publishing 'arc' has all the highs and lows of someone's real life story, with appropriate emotional markers along the way. The whole obsessive backstory with the three Robins is amazing to consider just on its own.
"Seen this way, Batman's entire life becomes a crazed plunge downwards into increasingly more difficult, bleaker scenarios. He's really had a hell of a time and most of that within the last 20 years. There are so many different strands to follow when you take the approach that it all happened."
"All" meaning every story, no matter how goofy, weird or laughable. Morrison has incorporated absurd science-fiction Bat-stories from the '50s, ridiculous Bat-spinoffs like Batwoman and Bat-Mite, even a throwaway bit about a temporary police commissioner from 1947 ("Detective" No. 121). Most significant, though, are the many stories of Batman's brain on drugs. Morrison continues:
"In 'Batman' Nos. 682-683, for instance, you'll see some interesting theories about Batman's regular and repetitive contact with chemicals of various kinds -- poisons, hallucinogens, sedatives and stimulants -- which has been a recurring feature of his adventures since the very first published exploit, 'The Case of the Chemical Syndicate' (in 'Detective' No. 27, 1939). That's an aspect of the overall mythos I didn't think had been examined a great deal, so I staked the territory for myself and used it to help build and deepen Batman's character, and to explain certain anomalies in plots or behavior."
And at the end, we'll see why Bruce Wayne is Batman -- just as he stops being Batman.
"Everything else plays directly into Bruce's state of mind," Morrison said. "As the conclusion to 'R.I.P.' demonstrates, however, Bruce Wayne's mind is a thing of tempered steel. ... I think it's important to show just how differently someone with Batman's training might think. His way of framing the world is so unusual, as we'll see, that it's almost a disease, or a superpower."
Which we actually won't see for a while, as other writers take on the Bat-books for a while. December shows Commissioner Gordon coping without a Batman in "Last Days of Gotham," by Denny O'Neil. January pits Hush vs. Catwoman as part of the "Faces of Evil" crossover, by Paul Dini. Neil Gaiman writes the two-part "Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?" in February, playing off Alan Moore's famous "Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?" from 1986. Then the Bat-books will feature the hunt for a replacement Batman in a long-running story called "Battle for the Cowl," by diverse hands. After that, the return of Morrison -- and perhaps the Caped Crusader?
"I'm taking a few months off during the 'Battle for the Cowl' story line to recharge my batteries," he said, "but I'll be coming back to 'Batman' next year with a very big announcement. I've already written the first of the post-'R.I.P.' issues as a kind of 'pilot' to get myself into the mindset.
"Coming up, as you know, there will be big changes to the Batman family of books ..."
Morrison says he has plotted Bat-stories through 2010. Given what he's already done to the Dark Knight, it appears Batman's long, strange trip has just begun.

(Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics(at)aol.com or visit www.captaincomics.us.)

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