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Robin, Vol. 3 by Chuck Dixon
Robin, Vol. 3 by Chuck Dixon












Robin, Vol. 3 by Chuck Dixon

Villagr án’s gritty approach to action pages, beautiful landscapes and magnificently detailed, chunky samurai warriors are a visual treat, while Dixon displays an enthusiasm for what he’s telling not always present in his regular series work.

Robin, Vol. 3 by Chuck Dixon Robin, Vol. 3 by Chuck Dixon

Dixon channels samurai comics for a Robin in feudal Japan who sees his sensei murdered. In addition to Wieringo there’s impressive art from Mike Parobeck and from Phil Jimenez, but the artistic highlight is pages from Enrique Villagr án illustrating the story of a Robin from another world. He has a patchy relationship with girlfriend Ariana, there’s Batman on hand to help and be helped, and he has to fit school into his crimefighting schedule. What Dixon does well over War of the Dragons is establish that Robin’s crimefighting career isn’t the only aspect of his life. Again, though, there’s possibly a good reason no-one previously used Dixon’s idea of a ninja summer camp to train the robbers of the future. It’s nicely drawn by Mike Wieringo, though, whose work on the follow-up story about criminal ninjas is even better. Who knows what Dixon was on when he came up with his idea of military obsessed child Hadrian Armstrong as a serious threat over two chapters, but let’s hope he’s stayed clear of it since. Over three chapters the tension and violence is escalated, and the outcome is nice, but Steve Lieber (sample art right) isn’t yet quite the polished artist he’d become, looking too much at earlier Batman artists rather than developing his own style.īeyond that, the content is patchy. It’s Chuck Dixon working hard, with Tom Grummett (sample art left) accentuating all the right moments, and the same team also deliver with a two part mystery about a series of robberies.Ī turf war breaking out in Gotham’s Chinatown area with another Asian gang wanting to muscle in forms the basis of the title story, and that’s not quite as successful because it reduces the previously untouchable King Snake to also ran to serve the bigger plot. Another of those begins War of the Dragons, yet it’s one of the best chapters, the catch-up simple, Robin in a desperate situation facing a foe well above his power grade and providing a superb solution to the greatest danger. The previous Turning Point was a volume beset by the problem of too many Robin stories where he either barely featured, or which connected to other stories in other titles that weren’t included.














Robin, Vol. 3 by Chuck Dixon