Nightwing #66 (REVIEW)

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Nightwing #66
DC Comics

Written by: Dan Jurgens
Art by: Ronan Cliquet
Colors by: Nick Filardi
Letters by: AndWorld Design

(WARNING: Spoilers for Nightwing #66 ahead)

As painful as the Ric Grayson era has been, powering through that period is starting to pay off.

In Nightwing Annual #2, we learned the Court of Owls was responsible for Ric’s memory loss. He doesn’t have real amnesia, his memories as Robin are suppressed. Of course, the Court has been going at this forever, but they didn’t have a real chance at winning Ric over until he was shot in the head.

Now, one thing we’ve noticed from Ric is the further we get away from his injury, the more he acts like his old self. He cares about helping others and can’t help but continue to fight crime. He’s not the same person he was before, but he’s not much different.

In the past, I would think, “No way Dick gets brainwashed.” Nightwing is too good for that. Between his heart and his training with Batman, there was no shot the Court’s plan would work — which they know. Although a lot of his training with Batman is rooting in the fabric of Ric’s being, I think he’s going full Talon.

Clearly, at the end of Nightwing #66, we see Rich is ready to take on his first job as a Talon. I’m convinced he’s gone. He is now a weapon for the Court of Owls. Batman and company will have to step in to save him. No pleading from the Nightwings or Beatrice can stop Ric now.

The only reason any of this is possible is the groundwork put in to establish Ric by Dan Jurgens and those before him. Again, if this was regular old Dick Grayson, I would think he’s playing the Court instead of being putty in their hands like he is now.

By Nick Friar

Nick reviews comics for GWW, mainly DC Comics. Sometimes he'll review a show, too. Nick also likes to share his opinions on the stories within the stories — sometimes in written form, sometimes on his podcasts, TLDR, which is part of GWW Radio.

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