Oh, Maaaaaary... (Why you should be watching The Batman)
Okay, so
monkeycrackmary is going to want to see this (and sit down), but it's of likely interest to other Bat-folks, too.
I've been watching the new cartoon series The Batman. I know, I know. I have issues with it myself (a Bruce Wayne who talks like Tuxedo Mask? a Bruce Wayne with a face like a foot? a Wayne "Manor" and Bat "Cave" in the middle of Gotham City?!) but watch it anyway, largely because the new best friend* they invented for their oddly revamped Bruce is OMG PRETTEH and a detective with the GCPD and as gay for Bruce as Bruce is for him -- ie, very. But I'm getting off point.
Pretty much everything about the Bat-mythos has been re-imagined for this show, mainly with an eye to pleasing the little boys of its target audience. Some of the re-inventions work better than others. Okay, drifting again.
The thing is, they haven't forgotten the fanboys (and fangirls and fan-dancing-bears) who are all grown up. Case in point: the new episode that premiered on Kids' WB yesterday morning. (It's episode 8, titled "Q & A," for those looking for it in schedules or torrents.)
I keep bringing Mary up because my own reaction to this episode was, "Oh wow, Mary is going to SCREAM."
Thing one: Midway through the episode, Bruce is fighting some henchmen. Little people. Barely over knee-height to him. He pauses mid-melee to observe that they are "scrappy little fellas."
Mary, take a breath. Anyone else, you may or may not be thinking of this page, from the (retconned, post-Crisis) first meeting of Batman and Jason Todd, the boy who would become Robin II.
Thing two: Hm. Actually, this is a spoiler for the episode, and while I think it's unlikely anyone would care about being spoiled for an episode of this show, ( I'm putting this behind a cut. )
Well, again, pretty much everyone and everything in Gotham has been re-imagined for this series, to one degree or another. The Joker now has a fondness for straitjackets in fashion colours, and sports hair reminiscent of The Simpsons' Sideshow Bob -- strangely, this redesign works, for me at least.
The point of all this extra crack being pumped into the show (and much of what little logical underpinning comics-Gotham has had being stripped out) was to create a show little boys would love. The WB finally has the kids' show about Batman they've long wanted -- let's face it, Batman: The Animated Series, The New Gotham Adventures, Batman Beyond and even (pre-Unlimitedness) Justice League may have been cartoons, and may have been enjoyable for kids to watch, but taken as whole series, none of them were what I'd call a kids' show.
The Batman is definitely a kids' show. And yet -- because there are in fact still enough people involved with the show, apparently, who know both that grown-up comics fans will also watch and how to please us. It's candy-coated crack, to be sure, even more so than the Teen Titans cartoon, but it's still our regular brand of Delicious Crack Comics.
*Note: the pretty detective, alas, does not appear in this episode. If you want incentive to watch more and see him for yourself... picture Cris Allen, clean-shaven and with aqua-blue eyes. Then picture him playing one-on-one b-ball with Bruce, both of them in shorts and tanks. Or picture them in crisp business suits... hugging. Yeah. Tell yourself you have an excuse not to be watching this.
**This space intentionally left blank. Information on rebroadcast times for this episode, for North America, and/or where a torrented copy might be available for download for those on other continents, will be added as it becomes available.
I've been watching the new cartoon series The Batman. I know, I know. I have issues with it myself (a Bruce Wayne who talks like Tuxedo Mask? a Bruce Wayne with a face like a foot? a Wayne "Manor" and Bat "Cave" in the middle of Gotham City?!) but watch it anyway, largely because the new best friend* they invented for their oddly revamped Bruce is OMG PRETTEH and a detective with the GCPD and as gay for Bruce as Bruce is for him -- ie, very. But I'm getting off point.
Pretty much everything about the Bat-mythos has been re-imagined for this show, mainly with an eye to pleasing the little boys of its target audience. Some of the re-inventions work better than others. Okay, drifting again.
The thing is, they haven't forgotten the fanboys (and fangirls and fan-dancing-bears) who are all grown up. Case in point: the new episode that premiered on Kids' WB yesterday morning. (It's episode 8, titled "Q & A," for those looking for it in schedules or torrents.)
I keep bringing Mary up because my own reaction to this episode was, "Oh wow, Mary is going to SCREAM."
Thing one: Midway through the episode, Bruce is fighting some henchmen. Little people. Barely over knee-height to him. He pauses mid-melee to observe that they are "scrappy little fellas."
Mary, take a breath. Anyone else, you may or may not be thinking of this page, from the (retconned, post-Crisis) first meeting of Batman and Jason Todd, the boy who would become Robin II.
Thing two: Hm. Actually, this is a spoiler for the episode, and while I think it's unlikely anyone would care about being spoiled for an episode of this show, ( I'm putting this behind a cut. )
Well, again, pretty much everyone and everything in Gotham has been re-imagined for this series, to one degree or another. The Joker now has a fondness for straitjackets in fashion colours, and sports hair reminiscent of The Simpsons' Sideshow Bob -- strangely, this redesign works, for me at least.
The point of all this extra crack being pumped into the show (and much of what little logical underpinning comics-Gotham has had being stripped out) was to create a show little boys would love. The WB finally has the kids' show about Batman they've long wanted -- let's face it, Batman: The Animated Series, The New Gotham Adventures, Batman Beyond and even (pre-Unlimitedness) Justice League may have been cartoons, and may have been enjoyable for kids to watch, but taken as whole series, none of them were what I'd call a kids' show.
The Batman is definitely a kids' show. And yet -- because there are in fact still enough people involved with the show, apparently, who know both that grown-up comics fans will also watch and how to please us. It's candy-coated crack, to be sure, even more so than the Teen Titans cartoon, but it's still our regular brand of Delicious Crack Comics.
*Note: the pretty detective, alas, does not appear in this episode. If you want incentive to watch more and see him for yourself... picture Cris Allen, clean-shaven and with aqua-blue eyes. Then picture him playing one-on-one b-ball with Bruce, both of them in shorts and tanks. Or picture them in crisp business suits... hugging. Yeah. Tell yourself you have an excuse not to be watching this.
**This space intentionally left blank. Information on rebroadcast times for this episode, for North America, and/or where a torrented copy might be available for download for those on other continents, will be added as it becomes available.