Tuesday, June 2, 2015

BATMAN LEADS AN INTERESTING LIFE : THE ADVENTURES OF BATBOY!

He's shocked because he just saw the Bob Kane signature and he knows there's no way he had anything to do with this comic.
The Batman Family has spent the last seventy-plus years relentlessly expanding, to the point where the seams on their bat-shorts are in danger of busting at the stitches. Between a couple of Batwomen, a gaggle of Batgirls, more Robins than I can count, not to mention a couple of Batmen and a Man-Bat or two, there's a genuine risk of running out of paper plates at the Bat-Family Reunion, which is possibly why they've never bothered to call on one of their earliest associated spin-offs, Batboy!

Debuting in Batman vol.1 No.90 (March 1955, "The Adventures of Batboy!"), the Dynamic Duo meet this diminutive daredevil while getting their asses handed to them at a factory which makes baseball bats. I don't know if it's superior numbers or mere irony which overcomes the Caped Crusaders, but Batman and Robin are in dire need of rescuing after an assault by the henchmen of notorious crook and star of a famous beer-pouring game, Tapper Nolan.

It's corked like a motherfucker.
Displaying a canny sort of sensibility lacking in the Dark Knight Detective and his youthful ward, the at-this-point anonymous figure figures out that you can hit people with bats, and so makes short (haha, see below) work of the gangsters, leaving them tied up for Batman and Robin to discover when their senses return to them. In the meantime, he makes an important realization: "I've used bats from this bat factory as weapons," he muses to himself, "It's like an omen!" Retreading that familiar ground, he adds "From now on, I'll fight my war against crooks with a fitting name and costume!" And with bats, little fella, don't forget bats.

In short order (haha again, see below), Bat-Boy has managed to outfit himself with a snazzy costume (catcher's mask, baseball uniform and a cape, for flair!), an underground headquarters dubbed The Dugout, and a small armory of trick baseball bats: A Baseball Bat-arang, a Parachute-Bat, a Porcupine-Bat which shoots quills (let's take a moment and let that one sink in), and a Web-Bat which is a bat with a net in it, and probably it would have been easier just to throw a net on someone. The genuine takeaway from this is that it apparently doesn't take a millionaire's resources to build yourself a crimefighting base. Any little kid with a Louisville Slugger and a burning hatred for crime can do it!

Robin and Bat-Boy find an opportunity to pursue Tapper Nolan's gang together (thanks to an improvised Baseball Bat Signal), and Robin's keen detective skills assist the boy crimefighter in deducing Bat-Boy's weird secret: He's not a boy, he's a circus midget! Formerly a performing acrobat in an ill-fated circus, the other two members of Bat-Boy's (aka Midge Merrill, and I'm assuming "Midge" is a nickname and not his parents rubbing it in) tumbling trio are murdered when Tapper Nolan, then a roustabout, sets fire to the big top and leaves everyone inside to burn while he swipes the gate receipts. That is ... that is genuinely horrible to think about.

And you're judgmental!
Robin and Bat-Boy scuttle Tapper's plans to murder a baseball player with a gimmicked bat full of nitroglycerin, making off with the game's receipts during the resulting confusion and rain of creatine-soaked body parts. This is good news because that would be the second really gross murder in this story and I'm still not over everyone dying in a circus fire.

Midge gives up his crimefighting identity once Nolan is put away, for possibly the best reason in comics history. "Now that I've caught up with Tapper, the ambition to go on as Batboy is gone!" he tells the Boy Wonder, adding "Besides, a guy my age gets tired too easily!" You and me both, brother.

Robin arranges for Midge to pick up a second career as an actual bat-boy for the very team whose hitter was endangered by the explosive baseball bat, which can't possibly pull in a living wage for a middle-aged man. Never mind merely making ends meet, he still has to pay off the presumably massive loan he took out to afford an underground crime-fighting HQ and an arsenal of gimmicked bats. Luckily he's working in professional baseball now, so there's always a little money to be made in acting as a drug mule.

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