Cue the Charlie Brown music. |
If you were ever wondering what it would take to get Batman
to wear one of those veterinary cones they give to injured dogs to keep ‘em
from biting at their stitches, I’ve got your answer for you – but I’m afraid it’s
gonna take a lot of preparation.
In Detective Comics vol.1 No.163 (September 1950), Batman
and Robin find themselves on the trail of “Slippery Jim” Elgin, the so-called “Man
of 1,000 Faces” and winner of Gotham City’s “Worst Criminal Pseudonym” awards
for 1946, 1948 and honorable mention 1949. Chasing the appearance-changing crook
past what appears to be a suburban experimental laboratory inside a gated
community, both the dynamic duo and Slippery Jim’s entire gang are caught when
the front of the lab explodes, showering all involved with debris. Enh, it
happens.
Batman and Robin check out their "Sexy Slippery Jim Disguise Of The Month" calendar. Don't look at July 15, Robin. |
Slippery Jim comes out of it the worst – for one thing, he’s
no longer slippery! Blew the slippery right off him, poor guy. More problematic,
though, is that a sliver of highly magnetized metal has lodged itself in Jim’s
brain, and will kill him if it’s moved so much as half an inch. Getting closer
than then feet to any sizable piece of metal will do the crook in, including
but not limited to handsaws, dental fillings (which aren’t magnetic, I don’t
think, or I hope not anyway, except in cases of hilarity) or collapsible top
hats (spoiler: He dies after donning a collapsible top hat. Let that be his
epitaph).
Slippery Jim creates an anti-magnetic helmet, some sort of
completely non-metal piece of electronics which creates a field wherein
magnetism stops working. I’ve already looked up a few scientific things for
this article, so I didn’t feel like checking if there was some sort of plastic
machine that cancels magnetism, but if there is color me impressed that a crook
whose primary gimmick was makeup and fake beards invented it. It doesn’t matter
anyway, because he loses the helmet almost immediately and has to fall back on
plan B: Make Batman wear a nitroglycerine dinner plate as a bow tie.
Capturing Batman and Robin, Slippery Jim’s men force the
Caped Crusader to don a plastic ring, packed with explosives, around his neck. Rigging
the collar with the same metal-sensitive trigger which threatens Slippery Jim’s
life, the dang thing will BLOW UP if Batman tries to remove it, gets too close
to metal, or tries to approach Robin in his cage of iron bars. Little known
fact: Same rules were in effect in the frilled ruffs of the Elizabethan era.
Shakespeare actually died from getting his neck too close to a lead pitcher.
In the end, Batman is able to switch out the high explosive collar
for a duplicate which he apparently happened to have handy, and which is filled
with knockout gas. This allows him to effect possibly my favorite panel in the
history of Batman, which is the panel where his head explodes. Let that stand
as my epitaph.
"For the kicks, Robin!" |
The Dark Knight Detective managed to remove his
booby-trapped necktie by slipping wax paper between his neck and the inside of
the collar, and then using hydrofluoric acid to eat away at the metal clasps.
Apparently hydrofluoric acid doesn’t eat through wax – I even Googled it, and
they’re right, it doesn’t eat through mineral wax! Congrats old school Batman
writers! You got one thing not completely berserkly wrong about science. For once.
2 comments:
Do you know if Pow-Wow Smith - Indian Lawman did any radio commercials to drum up business?
Those Slippery Jim disguises look like the worst Village People tribute act, EVER!
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