Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo's Batman run (The New 52, 2011-2016) revitalized the character in a way that few creative teams have ever achieved. The Court of Owls arc (Batman #1-11) is the crown jewel.
Why Court of Owls works:
-
It made Gotham scary again. Batman knows every inch of Gotham City. The Court of Owls reveals a secret society that has controlled Gotham for centuries — and Batman never knew. For the first time, Gotham is a place that frightens the Batman. Source: Batman #1-7 (2011-2012, DC Comics).
-
The labyrinth sequence (Batman #5). Snyder trapped Batman in the Court's underground maze for days. As Batman loses his grip on reality, Capullo rotated the page layouts — literally turning panels sideways and upside down — so the reader feels the same disorientation. It is the most innovative use of the comic book format since Watchmen's symmetry in issue #5.
-
The Talon mythology. The Court's assassins, the Talons, are resurrected soldiers from across Gotham's history. The "Night of the Owls" crossover (Batman #8-11) saw every Bat-family member defending Gotham simultaneously. It is the best Bat-family event since No Man's Land.
-
Capullo's art. Greg Capullo's Batman is definitive for a generation. His architectural detail in Gotham's buildings, his dynamic action layouts, and his character expressions elevated every script Snyder wrote.
The full Snyder/Capullo run:
- Court of Owls (#1-11)
- Death of the Family (#13-17) — Joker returns with his face cut off
- Zero Year (#21-33) — Batman's origin retold for the modern era
- Endgame (#35-40) — The Joker's most terrifying plan
- Superheavy (#41-50) — Jim Gordon as Batman
- Last Knight on Earth (#51) — The epic finale
Sources: DC Comics, Batman issues cited, CBR/IGN reviews for critical reception
This run is what got me back into comics after a 10-year break. Court of Owls proved that superhero comics can still surprise you even after 80 years of Batman stories.