Must .... fight ... nerd urge ... to correct ... factual misstatements .... about Catwoman.
Must .... fight ... nerd urge ... to correct ... factual misstatements .... about Catwoman.
I would like to know more. I'm no expert, I've just never found the character to be anything but slop and pollution.
I don't really know how to respond to this because I don't know what people are basing their opinions on.
So when LG says she's never added anything, I have no idea which version of the character he's talking about or even if he's aware of the variation involved. I do know that she's beloved by a certain fanbase and had a very successful (and usually pretty good) comic book all her own in the 90s.
In my experience her interactions with Batman in his books are generally less than satisfying, in large part because since she's a woman and he's a man there seems to be a pathological need to get them together, but that she can be handled well by the right author. The Nolan films have tended to draw from a wide-range of Batman-based source material so it's very difficult to tell what the character will be or how she will function in the film.
I stopped reading Batman-related comics in the 80's. I read most of what I could get my hands on during the 80's, which included a collection of my friend's from the mid-60's. I just never liked the character in any iteration. I never felt it as particularly well-developed or doing anything but diluting the Batman story. So I guess your point above on bold is what I was basing my opinion on.
Sirkickyass, I will now defer to you in any comic book related topics.
So let's be clear here: you're basing this on a lot of books that are totally divorced from anything resembling modern comic book writing standards. Batman probably referred to Robin as his "chum" a lot, there were lots of goofy and recycled plot lines involving very gimmicky crimes, and the dialogue was very expositional. Many comics likely included a break in the action when Batman announced he had solved the case along the lines of "Dear reader, you have seen everything the Detective has? Can you identify the killer?" Batman probably spent an inordinate amount of time chasing down jewel thieves as well. Given all that, I would posit that very few things about the Batman mythos were at that point what you would consider "well-develooped" today. In some ways, those comics could be styled "Hardy Boys in Tights."
Some of this may be off depending on how far into the 1980s you were reading. But if you read the entire decade I'm sure you're well aware there are extreme qualitative differences between where the character was in 1980 and where he was by 1988. In many ways, Catwoman is no different. You might be surprised by her portrayals today. Or not. If you stopped reading before 1986 then the catwoman you are familiar with is, and I mean this quite literally, not even in the same fictional universe as the present one.