Media Review (Klammed) You wouldn’t be blamed if you walked into the middle of this one thinking there was suddenly a new Batman show going on. From Bat-Manga to MAD magazine, and Bat-mite providing the commentary along the way. Sufficient scatological and visual humour starts us off with Batboy and Rubin. If you thought Batman: Brave and the Bold was full of camp, well, let’s just say this takes it further. The backgrounds and environment designs really stood out for me though, with attention to detail including the halftone effects. Panel to panel transitions were a nice touch too. “Awesome sauce!” And we’re taken back to Batmite’s little Bat paraphernalia den. Conversations ensue and one begins to wonder if this whole play with the fourth wall, third (or is it fifth?) space separating the fiction from the audience from the commentator/Bat-mite is going too far. Or not. Best not the think about it and just enjoy the ride, perhaps? Perhaps. Bat-mite’s very keen on letting us know that he’s the fellow in control, which results in a rather different title sequence from the usual. But it’s Bat-mite, nothing’s usual. Zoom off into the world of Bat-manga, and Morrison fans may start jumping in their seats over Lord Death Man. Genius voice-casting here with Grey DeLisle as Robin, mimicking old anime conventions of getting a female to play the boy roles. Bader played a very commendable Lord Death Man here, and the script was hilarious with Corey Burton going all out in lines such as “Augh! Lord Death Man” (you have to hear it to appreciate it). The looping laughter at the end was described by one of my friends as something that will haunt her dreams forever and ever. We leave it up to you decide. That, and the ‘parachuting to safety’ bit completely up for interpretation. Now we know that you can’t trust English dubs. Now, we’ve been told before the airing of this episode that the team up with Scooby Doo was going to be almost an exact replication of the original episode. ‘Almost’ is the right word. Detail right down to the voices and look was once again all brilliant, and they went to the extent of preserving colouring mistakes, which a very disgruntled Bat-mite points out for us, as well as other… ahem… mistakes. Brilliant gags again with Shark repellent and anti-aquatic rays. A typical Brave and the Bold episode is of course incomplete without a little spicing up. So instead of ultra-censored kid friendliness, we get an all out brawl. Even Scooby and Shaggy get in on the action. Brilliance? I’d say so, and made this segment my personal favourite, having grown up on Hanna-Barbera repeats. Very typical odd fan-boy romp that Brave and the Bold usually is, one which definitely confused those who hadn’t been following the series (I’d been asked by friends who saw clips and wondered if the show was for real), which shows how willing the production team was in ensuring faithfulness to their source material. Review (Andrew) One interesting thing to note about this episode is that it’s supposed to be one of the last few season 2 episodes but technically could be regarded as season 3 given its following of the previous episode, “The Battle of the Superheroes!” The reason why The “teaser” for this episode is actually its own unique segment like the rest of the episode, but certainly the most strange. Inspired by Mad Magazine’s parodies of Batman, it has a significantly different tone compared to the other two segments in the episode as is its sense of humor. I’m not previously familiar with any of the Mad Magazine features of its parody so it’s nigh impossible for me to say whether or not they did well at capturing the source material, but at the very least it’s a hilarious segment. It’s certainly one of the last things I would have ever expected them to do, but they pulled it off tastefully and it’s one of the best opening teasers this show has had. The animation and quirkiness takes a little getting used to, but by the end I was wanting more. The following segment, based on Japan’s manga comic book style, is equally well done and yet incredibly different. It’s certainly more laid back, and despite being influenced by manga’s style the plot reminded me of something more out of Super Friends or a similarly aged superhero cartoon. It strikes me as if something such as Speed The final segment takes its influence from a far more notorious source that many are familiar with, but most likely forgot, and new people frequently feel the insatiable urge of hunting it down upon learning of it. Batman meets Scooby-Doo. Though it was made a whole decade prior to my own childhood, I was still quite familiar with it and what they have done here was simply brilliant. It felt like a natural continuation of it as though Hanna-Barbera themselves produced it, and managed to include its own original twists that didn’t step on the toes of the source material. It’s hard to say whether or not they saved the best for last this one since the whole trio of “Batman’s Overall, although getting used to the various animation styles and vastly separated tones can be a bit jarring at first, I don’t think anyone should have difficulty in enjoying this and [ Back to Reviews ] |




























































