The_Dark_Knight_Strikes_Again The_Dark_Knight_Strikes_Again

The Dark Knight Strikes Again - Definition and Overview

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The Dark Knight Strikes Again is a Batman graphic novel by Frank Miller. It is a sequel to Miller's The Dark Knight Returns.

It was originally published in three issues, and has since been collected into a hardback.

Synopsis

After going underground, Batman (Bruce Wayne) and his young sidekick Catgirl (Kelly Carrie, Robin from The Dark Knight Returns) train an army of "batboys" to save the world from a "police-state" dictatorship.

In a series of raids on government facilities, Batman's soldiers release from captivity ageing superheroes including The Atom, Flash and Elongated Man. Superman, working for the government, is ordered by the "President" (a front for Lex Luthor and Brainiac) to stop Batman. He confronts Bruce at the Batcave, but is again defeated by the Dark Knight.

Meanwhile, Batman's raids have not gone unnoticed by the media. After being banned for years, the freed superheroes have recaptured the public imagination, becoming a fad among youth. At a concert for pop group "The Superchix," Batman and the other heroes make a public appearance, urging their fans to rebel against the oppressive government.

An alien monster lands in Metropolis and begins to destroy the city, but Batman, convinced it is a trap, does not respond. Superman and Captain Marvel come out of hiding to fight it off, but the monster is revealed to be Brainiac, who coerces Superman (using the bottle city of Kandor) into losing the battle in order to crush the people's faith in superheroes. Captain Marvel is killed defending citizens from the carnage, but Superman is saved by his and Wonder Woman's daughter, who has been carefully hidden by the pair until now. She destroys Brainiac's monster body, but now that the government knows she exists they demand she be handed over.

Realizing Batman was right after all, Superman, Wonder Woman, and their daughter join him and assist in his plan, destroying the power source of the dictatorship and inciting revolution.

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