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Scott Snyder's Batman run: Why Court of Owls is the best Batman story of the 21st century

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:

  1. 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).

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 2:23 AM

4 Comments

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.

Capullo does not get enough credit. Snyder's scripts were excellent but Capullo's visual storytelling elevated them to classic status. The two-page spread of Batman fighting the Court in issue #7 is poster-worthy.

Death of the Family is the scariest Joker story ever written. The imagery of the Joker wearing his own severed face as a mask is burned into my brain. Snyder understood that the Joker is horror, not comedy.

Batman #5's labyrinth sequence is one of the greatest single issues of the 2010s. Reading it for the first time and physically rotating the book as the panels shifted was a visceral reading experience that digital cannot replicate.