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The KGBeast comes to Gotham. A top-secret cell in the KGB called "The Hammer" that had grown too powerful and fearsome for the tolerance of the Russian government, sends its top assassin on one last unapproved mission before being dismantled by [[W

Batman: Ten Nights of the Beast is a four part storyline written by Jim Starlin and illustrated by Jim Aparo. It was published in 1988 on the Batman Title, almost a year after the epic revamp of Batman's canon history in Batman: Year One and it was shortly afterwards followed by the shocking storyline Batman: A Death in the Family, also by Starling and Aparo.

Synopsis

The KGBeast comes to Gotham. A top-secret cell in the KGB called "The Hammer" that had grown too powerful and fearsome for the tolerance of the Russian government, sends its top assassin on one last unapproved mission before being dismantled by Gorbachev's reforms. The "KGBeast" is sent to Gotham City to kill nine people crucial to America's Strategic Defense Initiative (the "Star Wars" program), who will each be there within the course of a ten day period. A KGB agent is sent to Gotham to work with the American government in apprehending the Beast, and a team is formed composed of agents from the CIA, the FBI, the GCPD, and unofficially Batman, to determine and prevent the Beast's agenda.

Despite the best efforts of Batman and the others, the Beast, teamed up with a Shi'ite terrorist "Nabih Salari," manages to kill nearly everybody on his list. The Beast uses various creative methods in his hits. He kills one man who commutes on a motorcycle by decapitating him with a wire strung across the highway at neck height. He replaces the bottle of orange juice in a woman's fridge with an identical canister of toxic gas and he lethally poisons an entire banquet of 80 people, just to kill a single attending target. Although Batman does manage to briefly detain him at one point, the Beast actually chops off his own hand with an axe to escape. He gets it replaced with a multipurpose weapon attached to his forearm, in enough time for his last hit, on President Ronald Reagan.

Batman does manage to save the president's life once by kidnapping him from a public area, and Robin saves him again when Nabih Salari attempts to suicide bomb his helipad with a hang-glider. Eventually, after a fight through the sewers, Batman manages to corner the KGBeast in an old underground compartment. The KGBeast invites him to a final battle, to test who is really the better fighter, but Batman remembers an earlier conversation with Ralph Bundy. Despite having killed over 100 people in less than a fortnight, if captured, the KGBeast would never be brought to justice for his crimes. He would be delivered to the Russian embassy, and would probably end up killing more for the russian government. Batman walks away from the Beast, and locks him in the chamber, apparently leaving him to die. He gets into the limo with Alfred, who had been posing as Ronald Reagan, and drives home unsatisfied.

Issues

Notes

KGBeast not dead

Murder isn't cool, kids

  • During the "Batman: Year Three" story arc, Batman does remark to Nightwing that afterward he called the police and alerted them to the Beast's location. This is highlighted as an example of a decision he would only make while under extreme duress.

Trivia

Recommended Reading

Links and References

Batman Blind Justice TP
Batman Family Storyline
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This event or storyline is specifically related to Batman, or to members of the Batman Family. This template will automatically categorize articles that include it into the Batman Storylines category.

Ten Nights of the Beast
Batman #417 Batman #418 Batman #419 Batman #420
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