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What most forget about the story, however, is that it wasn’t the only major Batman story that debuted that same year. “Batman: Year Two” ran from June through September 1987 and while the story is just as key to the modern era of Batman, it’s something that no one really talks about. Whether most forgot about it or just completely ignore it, the story is often overlooked, despite it heavily inspiring the iconic Batman: The Mask of the Phantasm animated feature film.
So what went wrong with “Year Two”? The truth is, the story’s lack of prominence is merely a matter of timing and title — but it remains a story that deserves way more credit in the overall Batman mythos. To put it directly, we’ve all been wrong about “Year Two” for a long time.
โYear Twoโ Makes Some Controversial Choices That Ultimately Help Define the Hero

This time focusing on Bruce as Batman, newly appointed Commissioner Gordon, along with Dr. Leslie Thompkins, “Year Two” introduces Judson Caspian, and his daughter Rachel, our villain and Bruce’s love interest respectively. Batman has become a household name in the Gotham and is stopping crime as much as he can, it gets the attention of Judson, formerly known as The Reaper, a dual-scythe hand wielding vigilante that would murder anyone he saw unfit engaging in crime. Having disappeared for decades, he returns upon seeing Batman and goes about murdering criminals, cops, and prostitutes alike. In doing so, he catches the eye of the Bat. When Batman realizes he’s at a disadvantage, he ends up turning to a weapon that has previously been antithetical to the idea of Batman as a crime fighter: a gun. Returning to the Batcave, Bruce decides to even the odds by using the gun that belonged to Joe Chill, the man the murdered his parents, as a weapon of good.
It’s a bold move from writer Mike W. Barr, and while it’s a choice that doesn’t necessarily sit well with many readers, it prompts a very important question about the nature of justice and what Batman does by asking if Batman uses the weapon that made him who he is, is he any better than Joe Chill? The answer to that question is what is explored across the arc.








