Showing posts with label Bruce Timm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bruce Timm. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Book Review: Batman Adventures: Batgirl: A League of Her Own by B. Timm et al.

Batman Adventures: Batgirl: A League of Her Own by Bruce Timm with Richard and Tanya Horie

Based on the characters as seen in Batman: The Animated Series, this set of tales is taken from the Batman Adventures comic book series from the early 1990s. Barbara Gordon is Batgirl. Here, she has some solo adventures, a team-up with Batman, and a team-up with Robin. She's her plucky and adventurous self, as willing to talk her way out of a situation as fight her way. She also does research and other detective work when necessary to solve a mystery and bring a case to closure. She's a great role model in this book. I liked the stories quite a bit.

Recommended, even if you aren't a Bat-fan.

Friday, May 19, 2023

Movie Review: Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993)

Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993) directed by Bruce Timm and Eric Radomski

With the popularity of Batman: The Animated Series, the creative crew were able to make a feature-length story that was released theatrically. A new villain, The Phantasm, is killing some of Gotham's crime bosses. The Phantasm's outfit is close enough to Batman's that some witnesses think it is the Dark Knight offing the bad guys. Bruce Wayne has some problems, too. An old flame, Andrea Beaumont (Dana Delaney), has returned to town, though she is more interested in her father's accountant than in going back to Bruce. Flashbacks show how close a college-aged Bruce was to giving up on avenging his parents. He even proposed to Andrea. She abruptly broke off the engagement and went to Europe with her father, leaving a note with the engagement ring asking him to forget her forever. In the current day story, Bruce has perfected his "playboy who is never serious" persona when dealing with women. He does remember and still feel the connection he had with Andrea. A third problem comes up since the Joker (Mark Hamill) is causing mayhem in his usual style, though his presence turns out to be less random than it initially seems.

The movie gives a solid Batman story. It delves a bit into his origin, adding in the doomed romance to raise the pathos. There's plenty of action and the mystery is well-crafted. The movie follows the noir stylings of the TV show, giving Batman a dark landscape that suits him so well. The actors do a good job with their roles. Watching is a very satisfying experience even if you haven't seen the television show.

Recommended, especially for Batman fans.

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

TV Review: Batman: The Animated Series (1992-1995)

Batman: The Animated Series (1992-1995) series developed by Eric Radomski and Bruce Timm and based on the comic created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger 

This thirty-year old series is one of the more influential incarnations of Batman. After the big success of Tim Burton's Batman movie, a new television incarnation seemed like a logical next step. The series producers, Eric Radomski and Bruce Timm, used more than the Burton film for inspiration. Life-long superhero fans, they wanted to imitate the style of the Max Fleischer Superman cartoons from the 1940s. The show is a fascinating blend of the score and darker aesthetic from the movie with the art deco style of the cartoons. Since it's Batman, the shiny brilliance of art deco is toned down by the film noir depiction of Gotham (most of the scenes are set at night, so little sunshine on display). As a creature of the night, Batman has plenty of shadows to hide in and to cast on overconfident villains. The Japanese animation studio the producers worked with was on board with the style choices and worked hard to make the show look very good, which it does.

The real gem is the writing. The creators made a show that's okay for kids to watch but does not dumb down things or leave things at a superficial level. The stories include normal criminals, like the organized crime figures that show up in corrupt cities (not something you'd see in Saturday morning fare). They also include classic villains like The Joker and Catwoman. The Joker is brilliantly written and played by Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker!). He has the sinister malevolence of a dangerous killer, the wicked sense of humor, and a disturbing laugh. Catwoman is a more sympathetic robber who still has romantic flirtations with Batman, not something you'd see in kids' cartoons. In the commentaries, the producers explain that they told everyone (the writers, the actors, the animators) to think that they were making short movies in an animated style, not kids cartoons to watch after coming home from school.

A lot of the secondary villains are given more backstory and pathos, they aren't just cackling fiends with crazy plans. Mister Freeze is made into more than an ice-gadgety Otto Preminger. He becomes a scientist working in cryogenics (partly to try and save his dying wife) who is horribly altered when his company breaks up his research literally. Mister Freeze is more interested in revenge against the company than in fighting Batman or causing random mayhem. Harvey Dent's transformation into Two-Face has much better depth than any other version of his character (yes, even The Dark Knight depiction). Harley Quinn was invented during the series as a more colorful henchgal for The Joker. She is at turns comic and brutal without the silly hypersexualization of her later incarnations. The attention to characters is good, the show isn't just a vehicle for action and jokes (or to sell a line of toys).

With the good writing and the animation style and tone from the 1940s (they have black and white TV and dirigibles), the show has a timeless quality that makes it still enjoyable even three decades after it originally aired on television.

Highly recommended.