Sales The series' first issue sold over 300,000 copies. The once-monthly series became increasingly delayed over time, to the point where only one issue was published in 2006. When issue #5 was released, the series was placed on a regular bi-monthly schedule, with the exception of issue #10, which was postponed from an April 9, 2008 release to an August 27 release, and then to a September 10 release, which it successfully met, only for the book to be
recalled due to a printing error that left numerous profanities insufficiently censored. That printing error aside,
Jim Lee took full responsibilities for the series' delays, explaining that he was involved with the
DC Universe Online video game, and that Miller's scripts had been written some time earlier. Despite drops in sales since the first issue,
All Star Batman & Robin issues regularly topped DC Comics' highest-selling chart on the months when they came out.
Critical reception Initially released with great fanfare and much anticipation,
All Star Batman has consistently received negative reviews from critics. Nearly all complaints about the series are directed at
Frank Miller's writing, specifically his non-traditional interpretation of the main character. In the series to date,
Batman is consistently displayed as cruel, amoral, and sadistic, eager to torture and kill criminals and indifferent to harming civilians who get in his way. Infamous examples of this include his verbal and physical abuse of
Dick Grayson in an attempt to prevent him from grieving over his parents' deaths, and his throwing a
Molotov cocktail into a crowd during a fight. In issue #2 Miller's gritty style of dialogue led the title character to introduce himself to Grayson as "". The phrase was repeated at least once in nearly every subsequent issue of the comic. According to reviewer Brett Weiss, the line "drew derision from fans and critics alike". Reviewer
Peter Sanderson of
IGN Comics, while acknowledging that the series is "widely reviled", and opining that
DC Comics' publicity for the series was "misleading", suggested that Batman's treatment of Grayson was comparable to a drill sergeant's treatment of a new recruit, but questioned whether this would merely traumatize Grayson further. He nonetheless claimed to be "fascinated" with how this behavior reveals Batman's personality, likening his rough treatment of Grayson to the psychologically frightening experience to which
V subjected
Evey Hammond in
V for Vendetta. Sanderson also pointed out that Miller's view of
All Star Batman & Robin as prequels to his
graphic novels
Batman: The Dark Knight Returns and
Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again suggests that the darker, grittier take on Batman and his more dysfunctional relationship with Robin make sense when taken in context, and that Batman's rough treatment of Dick Grayson reveals a lot about the inner workings of Batman's personality. Comics journalist
Cliff Biggers, in
Comic Shop News #1064 (November 7, 2007), called the series "one of the biggest train wrecks in comics history", saying that Miller disregarded every aspect of Batman's character in order to tell "a
Sin City story in bat-garb". Reviewing issue #7, Biggers excoriated the sequence with Batman and Black Canary as "farcical" and "
Tarantinoesque", arguing that Miller's work could not get worse. Biggers gave the issue a "D", explaining that it would be an "F" if not for Jim Lee's art, and suggested that to salvage the work, DC should reprint the book with blank word balloons and let readers submit their own scripts. Reviewing the first three issues of the series, William Gatevackes of
PopMatters said that "[Jim Lee's art] is beautiful [but] cannot make up for the writing or the holes in the storytelling". Gatevackes criticized the plot as lacking, saying that "it seems like [Miller is] expanding four issues of story over 20 issues of the book". Gatevackes compared
All Star Batman & Robin unfavorably to Miller's previous work: "One is puzzled as to what happened to the Frank Miller who gained his fame on
Daredevil,
Ronin, and
Batman: The Dark Knight Returns. Can he come back? Because until he does,
All Star Batman and Robin should be avoided at all costs". The book also has its defenders. Jon Morris, writing for
The High Hat, named
All Star Batman & Robin one of the best superhero comics of 2006, finding
All Star's take on Batman "an intriguing alternative take on a character long reimagined to the point of incoherence. Surely the readers as a whole have seen Batman the tortured soul, Batman the awkward father figure, Batman the authoritarian and Batman the zillion-other-paternal character archetypes countless times before under the stewardship of a few dozen other authors; why not for a scant twelve issues have a book about a Batman who might just be what a control-obsessed,
Kevlar-suited sadist would be like in real life – which is to say 'distinctly unpleasant'? It's unsavory, sure, but who buys Batman comics because he's warm and cuddly?" ==Unproduced sequel==