Batman and Plastic Man battle some super-intelligent apes in Batman: The Brave and the Bold. |
Batman has long been my favourite superhero. And I’m not alone: Hollywood has long favoured the Caped Crusader – giving us a half dozen major motion pictures in the past two decades alone. In five days, the long-awaited conclusion of Christopher Nolan’s brilliantly intense, philosophical Batman trilogy, The Dark Knight Rises, will open in theatres worldwide. But Batman’s life on the small screen has been just as varied. Beginning with the famously campy Adam West series in the mid-sixties, and reaching perhaps its zenith with the classic Batman: The Animated Series (1992-1995), Bruce Wayne and his alter-ego Batman have been a television staple for more than four decades. Last August, the more recent Batman: The Brave and the Bold ended its three-season run on the Cartoon Network – but I confess that it was only over the past few weeks that I finally gave the series a real look. And with Nolan’s sure-to-be blockbuster movie waiting in the wings, this is as good a time as any to let you know why you should check it too.
Based on the long-running DC
comic series of the same name, The Brave and the Bold is unique among
the many Batman titles in that it specifically focuses on Batman teaming up
with other heroes of the DC universe. The animated series follows this same
mandate, bringing Batman together with one or more other costumed heroes in his
famous battle against villainy and evil in all their incarnations. But Batman:
The Brave and the Bold (hereafter BtBatB) was unique in another way,
in that it controversially marked a return to the lighter, more tongue-in-cheek
Batman stories of an earlier generation. It’s brighter in tone, snappier in
dialogue, and unapologetically cartoonish in its animation style. And truth be
told, in 2008 when I dutifully tuned in for its premiere episode, I hated it.
A scene from Batman: The Animated Series, |
In place of
the reality-based stories and innovative Art Deco look of writer Paul Dini and
animator Bruce Timm’s Batman: The Animated Series, BtBatB offered bright colours,
upbeat voices, and (heaven forbid) catchphrases. Back in September 1992, I was
a young graduate student just arriving in Toronto,
and BTAS had just premiered on the Fox Network. BTAS told
classically dark stories (its first season Christmas episode involved the
kidnapping of a child), the writing was terse and economical, and the visuals
were awash in noir motifs and references to art and film. In the era with
Michael Keaton playing the not-so-Dark Knight on the big screen, Dini and
Timm’s take on Batman was beyond refreshing. Set against the reality-denying
films and TV of the Reagan-Bush era, BTAS looked and sounded like a show
out of a different time. Among its innovations was Timm’s choice to break with
the animation industry standard and draw on black paper, instead of white:
every frame was more shadow than light, contributing to the dark mood of the
stories and its characters. Gotham
City had a Depression-era
feel, full of lost men, orphans, and the unemployed. Batman (voiced by Kevin
Conroy) spoke in a deep tone, said little, and smiled less. With its visual gestures
to Hitchcock and classic noir motifs, the show grabbed me immediately. Over the
years, the series would launch the so-called “DC Animated Universe”, and in
collaboration with WB Animation, Dini and Timm would make series after series,
eventually leading to the Justice League/Justice League Unlimited series
of 2001-2004. (This ever-widening universe has since moved on to
include over a dozen feature length direct-to-DVD offerings, including the
2010’s brilliant Batman: Under the Red Hood and Justice League: The
New Frontier from 2008, with new titles coming out every year.) Although
these later efforts were
perhaps less visually ambitious than the carefully produced 85 episodes of BTAS,
their stories were no less compelling, or their characters any less complex. While
certainly not nearly as mature as their characters’ counterparts on the pages
of the comics of the same era, Dini and Timm refused to pander to their
audience and diminish the source material. These shows demonstrated that
despite a televised cartoon’s unavoidably younger demographic – and precisely
at the same time the printed comics were taking advantage of their aging
readership to go to more narratively intricate, emotional, and morally darker
places – they didn’t have to sacrifice rich, entertaining, and satisfying
stories in the process.
All of
which brings me to my initially negative experience of Batman: The Brave and
the Bold. Instead of shadow, there was light. It told sharp, quippy stories,
boasted quick cuts and whiz-bang sound effects, and instead of the familiar
voice of Conroy (whose deep, bass voice, after 15 years, had become for me
synonymous with Batman’s), Batman was voiced by a sitcom actor: Diedrich
Bader, most famous for his role on The Drew Carey Show. (I have nothing
against Bader as such, but I could barely watch that first episode without seeing
his face every time Batman spoke.) The dialogue was
broad, the animated bordered on the surreal, and the jokes were persistent. I
turned it off, and thought I would never look back. For the next couple of
years, my brother would mention it to me (praising a particular episode, or
pointing out a famous guest voice – “Neil Patrick Harris in a musical episode!”), but I’d shrug and explain: “it just wasn’t for
me.” I don’t think I was being snobbish – and I certainly don’t believe that
quality animation means “seriousness” in tone (see, for example, Archer) – but at
the time, I just couldn’t watch it. My reaction was just that: reactive. In
retrospect, I can hardly explain it. After years of immersion in the universe
created by Timm and Dini, I think BtBatB was just too jarring. In the
end, it took me almost 4 years, and a full year after the show ceased
production, before I could begin to appreciate the series for what it is:
something genuinely new, mixed brilliantly with a lot that was genuinely old.
Batman meets the Music Meister (voiced by Neil Patrick Harris) in Batman: The Brave and the Bold. |
Along with its willingness to harness seven decades of Batman history – on the page, on the screen, on television, and in popular culture – the show’s anthology format is a perfect showcase, giving it license to tell practically any kind of story it wishes. Every episode not only brings in new heroes and villains, but also different sides of the many lives of “Batman.” They went from an all-singing all-dancing NPH-starring musical episode to a brief return to Batman’s darker inclinations in an episode written notably by Paul Dini himself, for example. A third season episode even animates “Bat Boy and Ruben,” a classic MAD Magazine parody from 1953, complete with MAD’s signature Yiddish-ish phrases.
True to The
Brave and the Bold comic series, BtBatB is set in a highly populated DC
universe – it could have been titled “Batman and Friends.” The oddness of that
descriptor to most of our eyes might go lot way to explaining just why this
series may be so shocking to the uninitiated, myself included: Batman, almost
by definition, doesn’t have friends. But in this show he does, and many
of them!
Developed by James Tucker and Michael Jelenic, BtBatB is definitely not
Paul Dini’s Batman (though, as mentioned, Dini does eventually show up to write a handful of
episodes for the series – arguably some of the best ones). Sure, Batman still
fights villainy, and has a strong sense of justice, but he isn’t the borderline
personality we’ve come to know and love. This Batman isn’t haunted by his past,
and the stories don’t dwell on Batman’s twisted and broken psyche. In fact,
Bruce Wayne hardly makes an appearance. (Batman doesn’t even appear unmasked
until late in the second season.) Here Batman playfully jibes with his super-friends
and rolls his eyes at Plastic Man’s slapstick goofiness. And he’s more likely
to be seen arbitrating an intergalactic peace treaty than stopping a bank
heist. In fact, very few of the stories are actually set in Gotham City
at all, as Batman finds himself fighting crime overseas, or under the sea, or
in the past or far future. And he dispatches his many enemies with a pair of Nth metal knuckles, and has a
propensity to refer to his fists as “the hammers of justice.” (As in, in a
classic bit of battle banter, “The hammers
of justice will always pound straight the bent nails of evil!”)
It is, in short, a heck of a lot of fun.
So why did
it take me so long to see it? I think, perhaps, because I initially misread the
show’s deliberate irreverence as unintentional disrespect for the source
material. But, as the series taught me with every new episode I watched, I now
realize my misunderstanding followed from how little I really knew about
that very material. The show’s simple format (a self-contained story with
Batman teaming up with another hero) turns out to be ideal for mining DC’s almost 80 year history for the most fun, if not the most famous, of
its catalogue of heroes and villains. Almost every episode opens with a short
standalone teaser, a format which itself harkens back to an earlier era of
short animated films and daily comic strips. You’ll see Batman and Detective
Chimp (who hails from 1952!) take down False-Face, visit the Planet of the Apes-inspired
future of Kamandi the Last Boy on Earth and his dog master, Dr. Canus (both
70s-era Jack Kirby creations), and see Batman join forces with B’wana Beast to
take down the villainous Black Manta. It was actually when I watched the latter
episode that I finally got what the show was. I was trying to parse
B’wana Beast’s bizarre power (in his own words, the power to “merge the best of two different things to create an
unstoppable force” – for example a spider, merged with the size and teeth of a
shark and the wings of a hawk – a power which Batman will rightly describe as
“gross”), when I decided to look it up online. I then discovered B’wana Beast’s
40-year history in comics. Ever since then, an open Wikipedia page has been my
indispensable companion for every episode of The Brave and the Bold! (I
find myself pausing an episode two sometimes three times to do my impromptu
research, which only increases the fun.) What I discovered, to my
increasing pleasure, was that the show’s playfulness disguises a deep and
knowledgeable respect (if not reverence) for the full and complicated history
of Batman and the entire DC universe – a world which doesn't begin with the
comic book's new “maturity” in the 80s but goes gleefully back to the 50s, 60s,
and 70s, comics’ so-called Silver Age. Rather
than a pandering exploitation of a beloved brand, every episode of BtBatB
is like a master class in DC comic history.
BtBatB delves deep into the archives, and brings out
the most colourful personalities of Batman’s rogues gallery: alongside the
usual suspects – The Joker, Bane, and Two-Face – we learn about the lesser-known machinations of The
Gentleman Ghost, Crazy Quilt, Clock King, Shaggy Man, Calendar
Man, and perhaps my current favourite Kite Man. (Kite Man, who first
appeared on the pages of Batman in 1960, is a supervillain whose
misguided Ben Franklin-style experiments lead to a “resulting lightning strike
that caused a psychological trauma forcing him into a life of kite-centric
crime.” Now obsessed with the idea that Franklin
is overrated, Kite Man is committed to becoming “the most famous kite-related
person in history.”)
All three seasons of Batman: The Brave and the Bold
are available on DVD. If the weightiness of the Batman mythos has never been your cup of tea, or if you, like me, were initially turned off by the seeming light-heartedness of this new incarnation, I heartily recommend taking a look. With its raucous sense of humour, the show is a giddy love letter to the comics of our youth, and will take you back to the simple joys of a well-told adventure story. With a wonderful array of guest voices – from actors spanning every decade of film and television – over the show’s 65 episodes: including Tim Conway, Adam West, Dana Delany, R. Lee Ermey, Tippi Hedren, Julie Newmar, Henry Winkler, Jeffrey Tambor, Wil Wheaton, Olivia d'Abo, and William Katt, among dozens of others – and an unabashed sense of fun, BtBatB is like comfort food for the brain. A darker, brooding
Batman (a cutting-edge CGI animated production titled Beware the Batman)
is set to return to the Cartoon Network in 2013, likely to harness the
promotional juggernaut of Nolan’s new movie this summer. But in the meanwhile,
pop yourself some popcorn, and curl up with The Brave and the Bold.
– Mark Clamen is
a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong television enthusiast.
He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and
popular culture.
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