Batman: Haunted Gotham is a four-issue Elseworlds miniseries that has a very human Batman fighting against his supernatural villains who are blends of classic horror characters and Batman's Rouge Gallery. It is written by Doug Moench and penciled by Kelley Jones and is inspired by Batman fighting a hybrid of classical monsters with his Rouge Gallery. The trade paperback collects all four issues of the 2000 miniseries.
Gotham City is one of the last bastions of human civilization as the rest of the world is overrun by evil, unearthly beings that prey on humanity. Train from birth to combat the dark forces, only the Waynes can hope to prevail against an army of twisted creatures that includes classical supernatural monsters as werewolves, ghosts, demons, and zombies. In addition, there is a patchwork Joker that has the face of his father – Thomas Wayne.
Doug Moench penned the entire series and for the most part, it was written somewhat well – I think. It was an odd and weird series so I am not sure how to rate it. The plot was rather confusing with many threads that seemed to be unconnected or unresolved. However, Bruce Wayne's depiction bothered me, he has the body and fighting techniques of Batman, we all know, because he has been training since a child to fight these supernatural forces. However, he whines like a pre-adolescent, which seems disingenuous with his age and talents.
Kelley Jones penciled to the entire trade paperback and because he was the main penciler, the artistic flow of the trade paperback flowed exceptionally well. I just wished that the penciling were better, for the most part, it was much to be desired. Actually, it was rather dated and not the date it was published, but a couple decades earlier. However, I do like the coloring that gave the series a Gothic atmosphere, but the penciling style was too dated.
All in all, Batman: Haunted Gotham is written and conceived moderately well. It had so much promise mixing Batman's Rouge Gallery with the classical film monsters. However, the promise had failed to be realized and what was produced was a mediocre story with equally mediocre art.