Batman: 7 Coolest Features Of The Batsuit

5. The Cape

Batman Cape In the story King Tut€™s Tomb, Batman is forced to team up with his enemy The Riddler in order to bring down the titular Mr. Tut. After Batman saves Riddler from an explosion by wrapping the villain in his cape, Riddler wryly remarks, €œThe cape is flameproof. Important to note for future reference€. ...And flameproof it is. With more than one insane arsonist in his rogue€™s gallery (as well as the hero's irritating predilection for being blown up at the end of every other issue), Batman€™s cape needs to be fireproof. It is an absolute must. In a chapter of the classic 90€™s story Knightfall, he even employs a fireproof variant of his costume in order to do battle with The Firefly. The cape has other uses as well and has saved Batman€™s hands from being frayed by steel cable (Destroyer, Shaman), as well as providing a confusing target for bullets (Year One), knives (Destroyer) and other projectile weapons. On another note, the cape is so well insulated, that during the events of The Last Arkham, Batman is able to use the inner aluminum lining of his cape in order to escape capture by deflecting the attention of a microwave motion detector. The cape can also be used as a parachute/short-range glider (Batman Reborn/Court of Owls), which helps Batman to move from building to building. In a few late 80€™s/early 90€™s stories (Year One, Prey, Death in the Family), Batman used a hang-glider to get around, but the €˜para-cape€™ has essentially supplanted this in more recent stories.
In this post: 
Batman
 
Posted On: 
Contributor
Contributor

I am a professional author and lifelong comic books/pro wrestling fan. I also work as a journalist as well as writing comic books (I also draw), screenplays, stage plays, songs and prose fiction. I don't generally read or reply to comments here on What Culture (too many trolls!), but if you follow my Twitter (@heyquicksilver), I'll talk to you all day long! If you are interested in reading more of my stuff, you can find it on http://quicksilverstories.weebly.com/ (my personal site, which has other wrestling/comics/pop culture stuff on it). I also write for FLiCK http://www.flickonline.co.uk/flicktion, which is the best place to read my fiction work. Oh yeah - I'm about to become a Dad for the first time, so if my stuff seems more sentimental than usual - blame it on that! Finally, I sincerely appreciate every single read I get. So if you're reading this, thank you, you've made me feel like Shakespeare for a day! (see what I mean?) Latcho Drom, - CQ