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2008
originally aired September 1992 - September 1999
17 discs 109 episodes TV-Y7
1.33:1, English 2.0
For many Batman fans, there is no comparison. More than the live-action movies, more than the 1960s TV series, more even than the original comic books, Batman: The Animated Series was and remains the definitive presentation of The Dark Knight. Taking bits and pieces from the best that had come beforehand, creators Bruce Timm and Eric Radomski (later aided by Alan Burnett and Paul Dini among others) ushered in a whole new era of childrens' animation and created frankly one of the finest television programs ever aired.
originally aired September 1992 - September 1999
17 discs 109 episodes TV-Y7
1.33:1, English 2.0
For many Batman fans, there is no comparison. More than the live-action movies, more than the 1960s TV series, more even than the original comic books, Batman: The Animated Series was and remains the definitive presentation of The Dark Knight. Taking bits and pieces from the best that had come beforehand, creators Bruce Timm and Eric Radomski (later aided by Alan Burnett and Paul Dini among others) ushered in a whole new era of childrens' animation and created frankly one of the finest television programs ever aired.
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Tonally, the show seemed to put itself mainly in a 1970s Dark Knight Detective template, but also tossing in bits from the Tim Burton movies, the 60s TV show, the Dick Sprang/Bill Finger 1940s stories, and the darker late 1980s comic books. Like those Dennis O'Neil/Neal Adams stories, Batman was a dark and brooding adventurer, and a whip-smart detective. But he was not obsessive and not a psychopathic jerk incapable of having forming relationships. And Bruce Wayne was just foppish and playboy-ish enough to get giggles from his fellow socialites, but he never went so far as to render Bruce Wayne impotent in the business world and useless as a force for good. Conroy's Bruce Wayne was a publicly respected figure and a genuine philanthropist. The villains were menacing and (within the limits of BS&P) murderous, but their violence was never so grotesque as to render Batman's efforts futile. There was plenty of action and adventure, but never at the expense of story and character.
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The groundbreaking designs were straight out of 1940s art deco, taking a bit of inspiration from the 1940s Fleischer Superman cartoons but with a twist. In order to capture the darkness and shadowy mood of Gotham City, the artists actually worked from a black canvas, adding color to the already existing blackness. The Gotham City of this show is a timeless one, with black and white TVs and tommy guns mixed with computers and cell phones.
The stories are timeless too. In fact, that is the key to the show's lasting success. Take away the artwork, the acting, the music, the violence, action, and suspense, and you still have something has yet to be replicated in American childrens' animation. I'm talking about the scale of the storytelling. It was rarely epic and it was rarely larger than life. The storytelling was exactly to scale of human experience.
While there were plenty of escapades involving battles with Batman and his gallery of rogues, as well as gritty crime stories involving the less flamboyant outlaws, many of the episodes stepped back and took a look at the regular people living in Gotham in the midst of this 'never ending battle' (yes, I know that's a Superman reference, sue me). Some of the very best episodes involved the smallest of stories involving these always three-dimensional characters.
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Sixteen years later (dear God...), the show still holds up as an intelligent, exciting, tragic, funny, and moving action drama. It is the highest quality adult entertainment, that just happens to be pitched at a level that still renders it appropriate for children. It is easily one of the finest cartoons ever made, and perhaps the very best adaptation of a comic book in any medium.
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The packaging is a real keeper, which is I suppose the point. The seventeen discs are housed in two extra large clear plastic keep cases (the two cases take up less room than the boxes for 2 of the 4 boxes from the original releases). On top of them is a 40 page book of DVD contents and original production art. It's nothing special, but it's nice to glance at if you don't already own Batman: Animated. The collection is housed in a very snazzy dark blue case, with thick, hard plastic. It's, comparatively, a little longer than The West Wing series box, but not nearly as thick. While I usually disdain special boxes for complete series collections (which Warner seems to make a habit of), this will look very nice next to my other awkwardly shaped TV series collections (Homicide, Alias, The West Wing, Macgyver, Get Smart).
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For what it's worth, I doubt this series will ever come out on BluRay, since the non-restored cell-based animation won't look nearly as snazzy as the more recent Justice League series (that season 1 BluRay set has colors so bright and vivid that it hurts my eyes). Frankly, the slightly worn-looking video and dirt and grain actually makes the series look more like something from the 1940s, so that's an accidental plus (they look sharp on a normal size TV, but my 56" DLP emphasizes the fact that Warner did not spend Looney Tunes-money updating the transfers). Of course, if you already own the previous four volumes, I can't completely recommend paying $75 on Amazon for the same discs, plus a new twenty-two minute documentary and a slim art book. I bought it because I'm a completest. If you don't own the series, I absolutely recommend this set as the way to go. If you already own everything prior, it's a judgment call.
Scott Mendelson
Series - A+
Video - B
Audio - B
Extras - B
Packaging - A-
The 'Lost Episode' (cinema scenes from the Sega CD game that contained the original voices and artists):
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