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Article currently states that Miller "announced the graphic novel during a panel ... in 2006." However, in the book Eisner/Miller -- published May 2005 -- Miller briefly mentions a new superhero project, which a footnote then refers to as Batman: Holy Terror. (See page 49.) No real specifics are given, but the mere fact that Miller was working on a graphic novel called "Holy Terror" was apparently made public no later than that. H3G3M0N ( talk) 13:44, 2 August 2013 (UTC)
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In the past, a Stan Lee-quote on the subject has been deleted on the grounds that it's “useless“, because Lee is neither a Batman-artist or connected to DC in any way (at the time, Holy Terror was still a “Batman“-project). Yes, Lee is neither connected to Legendary Comics nor Frank Miller, also.
But barring Stan Lee from commenting anything comic-related is just preposterous. Of course, if somebody speaks about something he is not involved in or has any expertise, that's probably irrelevant. But when the Pope speaks about the Islam, when Bob Dillon talks about death metal, when Pele talks about Manchester United - that's always relevant.
The same goes for Stan Lee commenting a work from Frank Miller.
I re-inserted the quote.
--
Gott (
talk)
22:50, 1 January 2019 (UTC)
P.S.: I also removed the category Islamophobia in the United States.
Regardless of what some critics feel the book may or may not be about, the protagonist of “Holy Terror“ fights explicitly against (islamic) terrorists, not the Islam or muslims.
Regards, --
Gott (
talk)
00:15, 2 January 2019 (UTC)