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"Face the Face" is an eight-issue Batman story arc written by James Robinson with art by Leonard Kirk, Andy Clarke, Don Kramer, Keith Champagne, Michael Bair, and Wayne Faucher. It was originally published in Detective Comics #817-820 and Batman #651-654 by DC Comics from May through August 2006.
Bob Kane — concept, creator and artist. Co-created several secondary characters including junior partner/protege Dick Grayson/Robin, Alfred Pennyworth (as Alfred Beagle), Jim Gordon, the Joker, Selina Kyle/Catwoman, the Penguin, Two-Face, Mr. Freeze (as Mr. Zero), Scarecrow, Basil Karlo/Clayface, Mad Hatter, Hugo Strange, Deadshot, Cavalier, The Monk, gangsters Sal Maroni, Tony Zucco, and ...
Angel Rojas (voiced initially by Edward James Olmos and subsequently by Jesse Corti) is a police officer who believes Batman to be a criminal and wants to capture him. Ellen Yin (voiced by Ming-Na Wen) is a police officer who initially antagonizes Batman before becoming his ally. In a potential future depicted in the episode "Artifacts", Yin ...
Black Mask as depicted in Batman Villains Secret Files & Origins #1 (October 1998). Art by Tom Mandrake. Black Mask's origin story was established in his first appearance. . Roman Sionis was born to wealthy and self-absorbed parents, who cared more about their social status than their own
Daredevil/Batman: Eye for an Eye is an Elseworlds graphic novel published by Marvel Comics in 1997, written by D. G. Chichester, with art by Scott McDaniel. It is a standalone, non-canon crossover between Marvel's Daredevil and DC Comics' Batman.
However, Batman programs the Batmobile to chase her, and he used the opportunity to escape. Two-Face recounts how he had staged a robbery at a mint for $2 million in two dollar bills and had managed to take away Batman's utility belt and strap him onto a giant penny that he planned to catapult. However, Two-Face realized that Batman had stolen ...
Two-Face: Year One is a two-part miniseries released by DC Comics. [1] It was released in July 2008 to coincide with The Dark Knight , although it is set in the comics' continuity and not the film's.
Batman vs. Two-Face holds a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on eight reviews. [11] IGN awarded the film a score of 8.4 out of 10: "Batman vs. Two-Face is a worthy entry in the 1966 canon and a fine send-off for the late Adam West". [12] Writing for Starburst Magazine, Nick Blackshaw awarded the film a score of 8 out of 10, saying "Batman Vs.