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Batman Post-Crisis #42

Batman: Ten Nights of the Beast

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During the waning days of the Soviet Empire, a renegade Russian agent known only as the KGBeast comes to Gotham. His mission: assassinate ten people vital to the success of the star wars system. Can even the Dark Knight stop this inhuman killing machine?

96 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1988

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321 people want to read

About the author

Jim Starlin

1,336 books444 followers
James P. "Jim" Starlin is an American comic book writer and artist. With a career dating back to the early 1970s, he is best known for "cosmic" tales and space opera; for revamping the Marvel Comics characters Captain Marvel and Adam Warlock; and for creating or co-creating the Marvel characters Thanos and Shang-Chi, Master of Kung Fu. Death and suicide are recurring themes in Starlin's work: Personifications of Death appeared in his Captain Marvel series and in a fill-in story for Ghost Rider; Warlock commits suicide by killing his future self; and suicide is a theme in a story he plotted and drew for The Rampaging Hulk magazine.

In the mid-1970s, Starlin contributed a cache of stories to the independently published science-fiction anthology Star Reach. Here he developed his ideas of God, death, and infinity, free of the restrictions of mainstream comics publishers' self-censorship arm, the Comics Code Authority. Starlin also drew "The Secret of Skull River", inked by frequent collaborator Al Milgrom, for Savage Tales #5 (July 1974).

When Marvel Comics wished to use the name of Captain Marvel for a new, different character,[citation needed] Starlin was given the rare opportunity to produce a one-shot story in which to kill off a main character. The Death of Captain Marvel became the first graphic novel published by the company itself. (

In the late 1980s, Starlin began working more for DC Comics, writing a number of Batman stories, including the four-issue miniseries Batman: The Cult (Aug.-Nov. 1988), and the storyline "Batman: A Death in the Family", in Batman #426-429 (Dec. 1988 – Jan. 1989), in which Jason Todd, the second of Batman's Robin sidekicks, was killed. The death was decided by fans, as DC Comics set up a hotline for readers to vote on as to whether or not Jason Todd should survive a potentially fatal situation. For DC he created Hardcore Station.

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5 stars
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191 (33%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 55 reviews
Profile Image for Sr3yas.
223 reviews1,036 followers
February 7, 2018
★★✬☆☆ 2.5 Stars

This is another crazy 80s Batman story filled with WTF moments, appalling plotting, the boy wonder and PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN?!


Witness as writer Jim Starlin introduce two villains from two nations every US citizens despised during the 80s: A resourceful terrorist from Iran and a Russian killing machine who will stop at nothing: KGBeast, A master assassin who took leather fetish to a whole new level!


*Spits water*

Together with his terrorist buddy, he will wreak havoc in Gotham city to assassinate ten personals connected to a high profile weapons program. And everyone in KGBeast hit list comes to Gotham even though they know they are being targeted. screw self-preservation, right!

I got to admit that the story started out really good even with all this craziness. The action was spectacular and KGBeast's assassinations were ruthless. It reminded me of Joker's assassinations in both movies and comics, where Batman and the law enforcement knew who the targets were, but still, they were unable to stop the killings.

But then it all goes to hell starting from the third issue, with weird moments like:

(1) KGBeast, while used a nice little ROCKET LAUNCHER to take out a target, decides to stand on top of an elevator shaft and throw concrete blocks one after another to kill another target, instead of throwing a bomb!


(2) KGBeast cuts off his hand instead of cutting the rope. Because that's what macho men do!

(3) Let me remind you again: Batman.Kidnaps.The.President.Of.America.


I'm gonna just stop here. The art is fun, but Starlin's writing is not so fun, even with his controversial last act.
Profile Image for Logan.
1,022 reviews38 followers
August 1, 2017
Good! Jim Starlin honestly wrote some great batman stuff during the 80s, and this one was no exception being the first appearance of KGBeast! My only real complaint is the design of KGBeast, I understand it looked cool in the 80s but now it kind of looks like a bondage outfit Haha. But otherwise very good!
Profile Image for Rodrigo Tello.
343 reviews24 followers
July 21, 2020
Una maravilla. Todo lo que tiene que tener un buen Comic de Batman, condensado en cuatro issues de lujo. Y como además este arco argumental tiene un significado especial para mí, va una estrella extra.
Profile Image for Gabriel Llagostera.
418 reviews46 followers
January 19, 2021
3.5

Historia entretenida que se lee rápido. Tiene el toque justo de seriedad y bizarrez que tanto me gusta de los cómics de los 70-80. La KGBestia es un villano imposible con un traje estilo BDSM maravilloso. Ya DC y Marvel no hacen cómics así. Una lástima.
Profile Image for DaViD´82.
792 reviews89 followers
August 8, 2017
Půvabný brak, který v sobě mísí vážný přístup drsné školy (zapadlé uličky, děvky, násilí, vraždy, drogy), špionážního fláku (CIA a KGB spolupracující na chycení ze řetězu se utrhnuvšího elitního zabijáka KGB), hrdinného přesdržkování se bez superschopností či batmanovských gadgetů a to ruku v ruce s Robinem vyloženě do počtu, Reaganem na pokecu s Batmanem či nevyrovnaně napsanými dialogy v překvapivě solidní dějové linii.

Je to typ komiksu, který má nutkavou potřebu každé okénko vyplnit bublinou s textem. Ať již rozhovorem či vnitřním očividné stejně na plnou hubu čtenáři osvětlujícím monologem. Což znamená, že se tu tlachá čistě pro tlachání, postavy sice mluví a mluví, ale nic neříkají a narušuje se tím plynulost. Ovšem to tak nějak patří k osmdesátkovému mainstreamovému komiksu; jakkoli jsou Batmanovy myšlenky (ten tu o svém civilním já přemýšlí jako by to byla jiná postava a forenzní pracovníky tituluje jako šprty!) během městských parkourů dnes již úsměvné. Ovšem má to spád i atmosféru, je to sympaticky nekompromisní a zábavné to je nemálo. A speciálně o finálních dvou číslech bych se nebál říci, že jde přesně o tu podobu Batmana, jak mi sedne ze všech nejvíce.

Velká škoda je odbarvení. Jakkoli miluji černobílou kresbu, tak ne takto uměle vytvořenou. Navíc když je oproti sytými diskotékovými barvami oplývajícího originálu především (zdaleka však nejen) v akci nepřehledná a to až do té míry, že mnohdy nejde vůbec rozeznat, na co se to sakra díváte.
Profile Image for Your_Average_Magical_Girls_Fan.
281 reviews17 followers
March 5, 2019
Batman as a quiet and silent puppet in the hands of the government amidst a cold war delirium. Did I accidentaly discovered the worst output by Jim Starlin ever? I worship his cosmic and LSD-inspired works in Marvel as the best cosmic sagas ever written together with Star Wars as well as an accomplishment of maturity (without the sucky, overplayed DARRRRRRRKKKKKK AND GRITTYYYYYYY!11!!!1111!!!!!!11 stuff) in both art and philosophical introspection for the medium, but this is unacceptable, an exercise in painful and absurd conformism from one of the masters if not the master of non-conformism and free thinking assertion in the superhero genre (Alan Moore go to hell). I'll take the Anarchic and Libertarian way of life by Warlock and the tearful rejection of war by Captain Marvel over this any day for the rest of my life. No, Thanks. Only if you can stomach 80's ham-fisted propaganda in form of comic medium.
Profile Image for Chelsea 🏳️‍🌈.
2,048 reviews6 followers
January 5, 2021
Not my favorite Batman story. It wasn't terrible, but it wasn't something I'd recommend.

Not a lot of character moments and Jason doesn't really do much in the story. A comic mostly focused on plot over character.
Profile Image for Evan Leach.
466 reviews165 followers
June 5, 2016
Ten Nights of the Beast is a four part storyline that ran in 1988, one year after Frank Miller’s famous “Year One” saga helped reboot Batman. This collection can be a bit tough to track down today, but it’s worth the effort as it’s one of the better post Year One storylines out there. As the Soviet Union begins to break down in the last few years of the Cold War, a Soviet super-soldier known as the “KGBeast” appears on the streets of Gotham. The Soviets claim that he’s gone rogue and is acting without orders, although whether they are being truthful is unclear. What is clear is that the KGBeast is a guest on his absolute worst behavior, as he goes on a killing spree intended to weaken America’s “Star Wars” program, targeting U.S. officials up to and including the President of the United States himself.

img: KGBeast

Despite the fact that he chooses to dress like Ivan Drago in a piecemeal gimp suit, the KGBeast turns out to be a formidable opponent, testing Batman’s limits over their 10 day showdown across Gotham City. Readers who like their Batman stories a bit on the darker side (like yours truly) will particularly enjoy this tale; while it’s by no means as dark as Batman tales can get, the Beast’s rampage takes a heavy toll on Gotham City. The story is extremely well structured and paced, and the final showdown does not disappoint. My only quibble would be with the artwork, which is par for the course with other comics from its era but is simply not my style of choice.

That said, this is a sneaky good Batman story, and one well worth seeking out for fans of the Dark Knight. 4.5 stars, highly recommended!
Profile Image for Vicente Ribes.
911 reviews170 followers
April 2, 2022
Muy buena historia con un terrorista ruso y despiadado y un batman muy humano. Jason todd comienza a descontrolarse y a preocupar a Batman y vemos como tristemente acabará.
Profile Image for Tom Selley.
12 reviews
November 25, 2024
The story had a lot of potential that I feel was ultimately lived up to more in the character of Bane during knightfall.

The KGBeast was an imposing villain for a time in Batman's career when he had yet to deal with world-class assassins every other day, and there was a lot of fun in the back-and-fourth between them. In particular, the focus on their similar levels of experience gave a good dimension to the conflict, making it feel more like a clash between master tacticians.

The problem is with the story itself. The stakes just weren't there for me. As opposed to an ever escalating plan that unravels as Batman pursues the villain, it's a series of assassinations targeting Americsn intelligence operatives. And if that's the angle, you'd at least hope for a murder mystery? Maybe an inside job? A double agent? Sadly, no. The battle lines are made clear from the start of the story.

What's worse is that Batman is only getting in KGBeast's way, he never feels like a major consideration for the villain so there's no interesting dynamic between them. And nothing is learned about who the KGBeast is. We're never given much more reason to care about stopping him beyond saving the lives of nine guys who I honestly couldn't care less about. Oh and Ronald Reagan. Batman saves Ronald Reagan.

Batman is given more to do in the form of an incompitently run taskforce set up to stop the killings and who don't much care for him, but since Gordon is in his corner all the way, it didn't seem to affect him. It was all a bit of manufactured drama to act as filler since the main villain's presence was only really felt in the admittedly explosive action sequences.

To be fully transparent, I was looking forward to the ending. I knew it was one of the few stories in which Batman can be seen killing someone, so as long as it stuck the landing, I'd be satisfied. I was hoping for more deliberation. More guilt. Batman facing a villain so ruthless that it was either their life or his, and he would forever live with the choice he made. But it kind of just happens. An agent implies it may be necessary beforehand, and apparently, that's all it took. It's a bit chilling, actually. The ruthlessness with which he traps the man with no intention of letting him escape, paired with Jim Aparo's art giving us a sequence of Batman slowly closing the door from KGBeast's perspective is all very potent in a weird way. It'd almost be humanising for the beast if he hadn't cut off his own hand and replaced it with a Canon in cartoonishly evil fashion at the start of the issue.

At the end of the day, no one's ever claimed this to be the greatest Batman story ever told, and I think it's partly on me for building in up in my head so much before hand. But my disappointment is real. So Starlin, Aparo, the Jims, take my two stars and I'll see you after you've exploded me a Robin.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
5,870 reviews146 followers
October 5, 2019
Ten Nights of the Beast is a storyline published by DC Comics and introduces Anatoli Knyazev as KGBeast. This story is sandwiched between two bigger storylines in Batman: Year One and Batman: A Death in the Family. Batman: Ten Nights of the Beast collects all four issues of the 1988 storyline of the 1940 ongoing Batman series (Batman #417–420).

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 each will 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.

Jim Starlin penned the entire mini-series. For the most part, it is written rather well, it took aspirations from world events and merged them into a comic book story. While merging real events into a comic book storyline severely dates the narrative – especially when using the real current sitting president (at the time) in Ronald Reagan. Notably, it has Jason Todd as Robin, which is one of the few stories we have with him in that role.

Jim Aparo penciled the entire trade paperback. Since he was the main penciler, the artistic flow of the trade paperback flowed exceptionally well. For the most part, I enjoyed his penciling style – it's a tad dated, but done well nevertheless as Aparo is one of my favorite pencilers of that era.

All in all, Batman: Ten Nights of the Beast is well written storyline, which serves as a decent, albeit dated, storyline for KGBeast.
Profile Image for James DeSantis.
Author 17 books1,203 followers
January 21, 2023
Batman vs The Beast.

KG Beast that is.

The super villain from Russia comes over to destroy the system, the AMERICAN system, and Batman has GOT to put a stop to it. This leads to some really interesting moments of Batman failing to stop a villain, no matter how much he tries, eventually having to use his "Well I'm too old for this shit so here..." that I kind of loved. Not perfect, but a real solid 80's adventure for Batty. A 3.5 out of 5.
Profile Image for Jose Granados.
434 reviews3 followers
September 27, 2020
Una relectura de un clásico de Batman en mi nostalgia, es de los títulos con los que inicié en el mundo de la lectura de Cómics, donde vemos a Batman enfrentando a agentes de ex KGB de la Antigua Unión Soviética donde conocemos a la KGBestia. Si es un cómic que recomiendo para iniciar con el personaje
Profile Image for Lost Planet Airman.
1,283 reviews90 followers
March 6, 2011
Groundbreaking work -- I only go as low as I do because I found some of the attempts at hiding "the big reveal" to be a tad heavy-handed, and because I have become addicted to modern, glossy-paper full-spectrum palette color work, and this is still in the format of a generation back.
Profile Image for John Yelverton.
4,438 reviews38 followers
July 28, 2012
A great collection of Batman stories that is one part mystery and the other part adventure.
Profile Image for Shannon Appelcline.
Author 30 books167 followers
April 23, 2019
Ten Nights of the Beast (#417-420). If you've read the stories of the KGBeast from the '90s and beyond, you probably have the impression of a dull, lumbering oaf, who's just not that interesting. He's totally different here, in his debut appearance. That's because "Ten Nights of the Beast" is the most '80s Batman comic ever. The KGBeast is a premier assassin of the Soviet Union come to kill the prime actors in the Star Wars (SDI) program, including President Reagan. It was likely a shockingly topical story in the '80s, but today it's a wonderful time capsule to a time and place long gone.

Beyond that "Ten Nights of the Beast" is just a good story. It's a tense espionage-adjacent piece, full of CIA and FBI agents and Russian operatives. KGBeast spends the whole comic staying ahead of Batman, who recognizes the Beast as his superior. And then there's the wackiness of bringing Reagan straight into the narrative. Starlin's run remains strong today, but this was a highlight [5/5].
Profile Image for Brian Rogers.
836 reviews8 followers
August 30, 2021
Oh, 1980s, you were such a thing.

This collection of the 4 issue series is some solid Batman of the era. The core premise - a soviet super-agent who is potentially better than Batman in the area of being an assassin - has a list of the people he needs to eliminate to cripple the SDI "Star Wars" program, culminating with Ronald Reagan. Now, this is a child's presentation of geopolitics, but it is engaging with the world in the way that the Silver Age comics didn't (as per the post crisis mandate) that fits in a world of Super Heroes lensed through Tom Clancy novels. Plus Starlin is a fair and open handed writer in both a 5000 foot high, loosely sketched 'sides of the debate' and in presenting the mystery aspects that make it a proper "oh yeah, Batman is a detective... AND YOU COULD BE TOO IF YOU SPOT THE CLUES" Batman tale. Plus, Jim Aparo's artwork is a gorgeous and distinctive as always. That man provided such clarity to his panel layouts and story flow.
Profile Image for Pavel Pravda.
605 reviews9 followers
December 16, 2021
Kniha obsahuje dva příběhy s Batmanem, jakého jsem dosud neznal. Batman zde zcela otevřeně spolupracuje s policií a skoro všichni jsou s tím v pohodě. Je zde občas unáhlený, nedůsledný a nediskrétní. Nemá problém civilistům říct, že kousek dál našli policajti v popelnici mrtvou ženskou. A co mě pobavilo nejvíc, když odchází z místa činu, tak se musí prodírat davem. Ale jinak je to moc povedená kniha. Jeden příběh je detektivní a druhý špionážní. Oba jsou napínavé a pěkně drsné. Mrtvých je tu více, než bývá u Batmana zvykem. Dokonce dojde i na prezidenta Ronalda Reagana. Sice se v knize najde pár nelogických situací, ale je to přece jenom takové milé retro, ve kterém jsem to moc neřešil. I když u nás vyšel tento komiks nevybarvený, tak má moc pěknou kresbu a možná mu ta černobílá podoba naopak prospěla. Za mě spokojenost.
Profile Image for Sean.
239 reviews6 followers
February 5, 2021
Batman may have met his match in the KGBeast, a rogue Soviet super-assassin with a 10-man Gotham hitlist and a death-arsenal of every move, counter-move, and weapon there is. Originally released as a landmark "series within a series" when the Cold War was in its death throes, "Ten Nights of the Beast" is an admittedly retro thriller, but one no less--and perhaps even more--suspenseful for it. Writer Jim Starlin infuses this fast-moving "black game" (the Beast's own words) with some great set pieces and enough daredevil drama to satisfy any Bat-fan, while veteran Batman illustrator Jim Aparo's drawings bring the excellent script to life. Jason Todd is still Batman's sidekick in this late 80s saga, and he's a good enough Robin that it's hard to remember just why everyone wanted him to bite the bullet so bad. And even though the KGBeast himself is off-scene most of the time, Starlin's mastery of dialogue and detail infuse the killer with more life than decades of writers have been able to do with some other villains from the Caped Crusader's rogues' gallery. The denouement may not be quite as shocking to today's bloodthirstier comics fans as it was when it first hit the bookstores, but it's still a satisfying and surprising conclusion to one of the most exciting Batman stories ever. "Ten Nights of the Beast" is currently out of print, but will surely be re-available in a future best-of collection of Batman classics. A classic by any standard of comic excellence.
Profile Image for Chan.
2 reviews
May 11, 2024
What a comic, reading this felt like reading a Batman version of Naked Gun. It's a cold war thriller that's very much of it's time. The plot focuses on president Reagan's Star Wars program and a rogue Soviet agent (clad in BDSM gear) trying to shut it down and kill Ronald Reagan. He's also working with an Iranian suicide bomber.

It's absolutely bonkers and cheesy but enjoyable. KGBeast kills a couple with "a canister of poison gas disguised as orange juice." It's a funny read but I can't say it's held up, especially compared to some other stories that came out around the same time like The Cult.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Trae Stratton.
Author 3 books55 followers
February 27, 2023
Always heard this one referred to as a Modern Classic so I picked up an aging multi pack with all 4 parts in a collectibles store.

The best way I can think to describe this, is as a 1980s blockbuster movie. There are fiendish plots, rugged set piece battles, outlandish moments and a guest appearance by Ronald Reagan himself.

Sadly, despite words by Jim Starlin, this Cold War era story hasn’t aged well, so you might want to grab something with more modern scripting unless you still have a fondness for 80s style movies.
Profile Image for Cristhian.
Author 1 book54 followers
September 18, 2017
Septiembre es el mes de Batman, con su día el 23 de este mismo mes. Para celebrar, intentaré releer al menos 23 historias fundamentales de él.
01.
Un clásico entre clásicos. KGBeast en la mejor historia que jamás tendrá, escrito por un Kim Starlin fenomenal.

Este tipo de historias hicieron grande a Batman después del Silver Age fijándolo como el icono todo-lo-puede que es ahora.

Imperdible, lo deben leer sí o sí.
5/5
Profile Image for Sean.
4,189 reviews25 followers
June 12, 2019
While this story was supposed to be late 80s gritty it was comically gritty. The KGBeast could be a very cool character but when you bill him as master assassin and dress him like a bondage professional something doesn't click. Added to that is the fact that Batman looks like an amateur for 75% of the story and its a miss for me. Jim Aparo's art is as always, classic. Overall, the book doesn't hold up well.
170 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2020
Not the greatest storytelling. Definitely shows that there were some misses as Batman Year One began influencing comics and stories to make them more grounded. Such a mixed bag here. KGBeast just isn't a good character, definitely not as cool as he is on Arrow where he is an actual human Bratva member and is both ally and enemy of Oliver Queen. He's terrible here.
3 reviews
March 21, 2022
I thought they were taking inspiration from the 120 Days of Sodom when they thought up this title, Batman and KGBeast frolick in a sewer, legs quivering, their safe word's respectively on each other's lips ready to break this forbidden tryst. Mills and Boom! The content of this book is generally a lot less titillating than the saucy cover.
Profile Image for Sotofunkdamental.
683 reviews4 followers
May 25, 2022
Una obra de Jim Starlin y Jim Aparo, en la que Batman y Robin tendrán que intentar detener a la KGBestia (un agente ruso renegado), que tiene como objetivo asesinar a 10 personas de importancia crucial para el éxito del sistema denominado "la guerra de las galaxias". La historia tiene momentos muy impactantes que han quedado para el recuerdo.

Profile Image for Charles Chapman.
19 reviews
January 27, 2024
I thought it was a perfect “realistic” Batman story. I could imagine this being the basis or at least part inspiration for a Nolan Batman movie. The action was good and I like KGBeast as an antagonist, if not for kinky leather costume I think he would be a more popular villain. Seeing Ronald Reagan in the story was interesting. A nice time capsule reading this in the year ‘24.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 55 reviews

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