Giant Batman Album #28
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeIn "The Crimes of Two-Face," a courtroom tragedy turns a district attorney into a twisted criminal obsessed with duality, as a single acid attack leaves him scarred and driven to commit crimes dictated by the flip of a two-headed silver dollar. Written by Bill Finger and Bob Kane, with art by Bob Kane and inks by Jerry Robinson and George Roussos, this 1974 tale explores the psychological unraveling of Harvey Kent with chilling precision. The cover by Nick Cardy captures the eerie symmetry of the villain’s new identity, a fitting visual for a story where every choice hinges on a single, fateful flip.
In "The Crimes of Two-Face," a courtroom tragedy transforms District Attorney Harvey Kent into a criminal obsessed with duality, his face scarred and his mind twisted by a single, fateful act of violence. Now wielding a two-headed silver dollar to decide fate—keep the loot or abandon it—his crimes unfold with chilling symmetry, each one a twisted reflection of his fractured psyche.
In "The End of Two-Face," the infamous criminal Two-Face escapes custody during his trial, reigniting his violent spree—only to nearly kill Gilda in a moment of unintended consequence. After turning himself in, he undergoes plastic surgery to reclaim his appearance, setting the stage for a reckoning that remains unresolved.
In a quiet moment before his final shift, veteran Gotham cop Jo is surprised by a rare visit from Batman, who proposes an unexpected role: guardian of the Bat-Signal. With a mix of pride and disbelief, Jo steps into a new kind of duty—one that keeps the city’s greatest symbol lit, even after the Dark Knight’s nightly patrols end.
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↩ Reprints Detective Comics #66 (1942), Detective Comics #68 (1942), Detective Comics #80 (1943), Batman #85 (1954), Detective Comics #340 (1965), 100-Page Super Spectacular #DC-20 (1973), The Unexpected #156 (1974)
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