Sign in  |  Register

The New Criterion

The New Criterion is probably more consistently worth reading than any other magazine in English.
- The Times Literary Supplement
Subscribe Now and get unlimited access

Weblog


A bat hits the caves

by Stefan Beck

Posted: Feb 17, 2006 05:21 PM

Well, it’s Friday afternoon, ladies and gentlemen--and that means it’s time for some lowbrow fun. I’ve got one foot out the door, but I thought I’d take a moment to salute a real American hero: Batman artist Frank Miller. Bear with me. Just recently, Douglas Murray wrote:

We’re now five years into a war, and no major Western studio has yet made a film in which a Muslim is a bad guy. In fact they’ve yet to even give us a film in which the good guys win and the bad guys get beaten up. The present war’s movies range from Kingdom of Heaven ("there are a lot of fundamentalists about, Christians are the worst") to Munich ("if someone hits you and you’re a Jew, stay perfectly still") and Flightplan ("if you’re on a hijacked plane, odds are these days that the flight-crew, not Islamists, are to blame").
Frank Miller has had enough of this shilly-shallying--and so his Batman is taking the fight to our real enemies.
"Not to put too fine a point on it, it’s a piece of propaganda," he said. "Superman punched out Hitler. So did Captain America. That’s one of the things they’re there for.

"These are our folk heroes. I just think it’s silly to have Batman out chasing the Riddler when you’ve got al-Qaida out there."

Comparing Batman to Clint Eastwood’s Dirty Harry character - a lone urban hero fighting a crime wave - Miller said: "Batman kicks al-Qaida’s ass ... I wish the entertainers of our time had the spine and the focus of the ones who faced down Hitler."

In the book, Holy Terror, Batman is "a reminder to people who seem to have forgotten who we’re up against", the author said.

Batman v. Osama? That’s a cartoon fight to look forward to.

E-mail to friend

add a comment

Name:
Email:
Website:
Verification:

The New Criterion

About ArmaVirumque


( AHR-mah wih-ROOM-kweh)


In the Aeneid, the Roman poet Virgil sang of "arms and a man" (Arma virumque cano). Month in and month out, The New Criterion expounds with great clarity and wit on the art, culture, and political controversies of our times. With postings of reviews, essays, links, recs, and news, Armavirumque seeks to continue this mission in accordance with the timetable of the digital age.


 

Shortcut

www.armavirumque.org

 

To contact The New Criterion by email, write to:

  Contact

 

download
first delivery

The New Criterion is now optimized for Mobile Devices

New from The New Criterion:
40 page special issue
on our conference

"Free speech in
an age of Jihad"

Events

November 09, 2009

YOUNG FRIENDS: Tour of an important contemporary art collection


November 24, 2009

OPEN EVENT: Laura Jacobs reading


December 02, 2009

Friends Event: The Swallow Anthology Reading

More events >