Batman: The Animated Series/Headscratchers: Difference between revisions

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** Because Batman's more badass than Harvey Dent.
* Batman uses his Batman voice rather than his Bruce Wayne voice whenever he's alone with Robin and/or Alfred. This implies that either he's more comfortable in his invented superhero persona than his real lself or that ''this is in fact his real voice'' (i.e. he sees Bruce Wayne as a disguise for Batman, not the other way round). Either way, he seems to be a messed up person.
** [[Secret Identity Identity]] is made explicit in ''[[Batman Beyond (Animation)|Batman Beyond]]''. Also: Batman being messed up is the point.
** In the DVD commentary the writers directly state the Batman is his true personality while Bruce Wayne is a persona he adopts.
* In "Harley's Holiday", why didn't Batman just let Harley skip town? He'd have one less villain to worry about. Instead, back to Arkham with you, where the one guy who made you turn to crime is waiting.
** Been a while since I've seen that episode but I can definitely tell you that Batman is (a) a control freak, who would want his enemies where he can see them, and (b) the kind of fellow who would consider it unethical to let someone as dangerous as her be someone else's problem in another town. He's obsessive and unyielding.
** That episode is pretty clear that Bats honestly wants Harley cured. Add to it the episode about Arkham becoming more prison-like:
{{quote| Lock-up: "I was working WITH you Batman! You apprehended the scum of the earth, and I kept 'em locked away!"<br />
Batman: "I've seen how you treat your prisoners: forgotten and scared, without hope or compassion."<br />
Lock-up: "Can it be you [[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming|actually care for those creatures?]] You're just as crazy as they are!" }}
** Also Batman stuck with her to protect from an Angry Cop, a vengeful Mob Boss, and the world's most [[Papa Wolf|over protective]] Dad.
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*** Indeed, Batman would have saved the person he was most likely able to actually save, or was closest to him, or if you were to take a more cold and pragmatic approach the one most likely to give him valuable intel about his current case (if he could only save one person). He doesn't kill, and he does try to save every life that he can, but that doesn't mean he's going to stand there and let himself get blown up just because he couldn't save everybody.
** They're fine- they were wearing helmets.
* This troper doesn't like it that this show, along with ''[[Superman: theThe Animated Series]]'' and ''[[Pinky and The Brain]]'', is on Toon Disney. I mean, yeah, the shows are good, but they're Warner Bros. cartoons that, by all means, just don't belong on a Disney-owned network. Surely I'm not the only one who thinks that.
** ... ''What?''
** Hey, at least they're on TV at all.
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** Also Batman was pursing Clayface for his previous crimes too, which include but are not limited to attempted murder. Had he come quietly they might have allowed him and Stella to continue the treatments. Not to mention that Clayface actually didn't give a damn about Stella and was using her to keep himself alive and maybe find a cure. This is apparent when he simply parrots a line from one of his movies in an attempt to keep her. Remember that even before his transformation Matt Hagen was an egotistical jerk, which lead to his accident in the first place.
*** He did yell her name mournfully as he "died", that's got to count for something. Yes, he was extremely temperamental around her, but he was ''dying'', anyone would be in a bad mood. The thing about repeating a line from the film could be an indicator not of fault in him, but in her, as it could mean that she's more in love with his characters than him, and thus he felt he had to answer as a character rather than as the real Hagen. Also, what evidence is there of him being an egotistical jerk before his transformation?
**** He could also have been screaming her name in rage and desperation, as in "(DAMMIT, HELP ME) STELLA!" Also it was implied in his first appearence that his jackassery as Matt Hagen is what led to the car accident that disfigured him in the first place. His only friend was his stunt double (I think), and from the way they talk about him no one else seemed to be able to stand the guy. As [[Atop the Fourth Wall (Web Video)|Linkara]] points out in in the [[Power Rangers Time Force|Time Force]] installment of his ''History of [[Power Rangers]]'' there is a difference between having a sympathetic back story and ''actually' being a sympathetic character. Clayface has a sympathetic backstory that makes us feel sorry for him, but there is no hard evidence whatsoever that he's an actual sympathetic character. I'm sorry about everything that's happened to you matt, but you're still an asshole and a criminal.
* Poison Ivy is depicted as a strict vegan. Why would anyone who is willing to kill people over plants eat only plants? People who love animals and fight for their rights as sentient beings don't eat animals all the time to express their love. They abstain from meat. Shouldn't Ivy be a carnivore?
** Ivy's insane. Logic doesn't enter into it.
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**** But a flower has yet to reproduce, and picking it prevents it from wilting and producing seeds. I think Ivy gets angry not because they're killing the flower but because they're interfering with the plant reproduction. As for the poisons, presumably you could make them from a single petal, which would not necessarily cause the death of the flower.
** Human beings (which is essentially what she still is) cannot live on a carniverous diet. As for her being a total ''vegan'', though...I don't know, snobbery of animals so severe that she can't stomach eating them? Or something?
*** Actually human beings CAN live on a carnivorous diet. Inuits do so, as fresh fruits and vegetables are pretty scarce on the Arctic tundra. Just look up "No-carbohydrate diet" on [[The Other Wiki|the other wiki]]. The real question is: Where does Ivy get her vitamin B12 if she's a vegan?
**** Supplements? I have no idea when vitamin pills were invented so I don't know if that would be an anachronism.
** As mentioned above, she's insane. My guess is that it's an attempt to work the plant theme further into her lifestyle just for the purpose of show. I wouldn't put it past the character. She's kind of an uppity bitch like that.
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** The DCU as a whole doesn't really have a New York City, so maybe the statue is a Gotham landmark in this continuity.
*** Isn't Metropolis meant to be the New York analogue? As for the presence of the statue, perhaps it's the doing of some sort of space-time warping supervillain or something.
*** DCU logic often says that both Gotham and Metropolis are NYC, albeit below and above 125th Street, respectively. A one-time Atlas of the DCU placed Metropolis in NJ, with Gotham in Delaware. [[Take That]]! [[WaynesWayne's World]].
*** Actually, it's Metropolis in Delaware, and Gotham in New Jersey.
*** New York exists in the DCU and several heroes have been based there at some point, from Kyle Rayner to Wally West. It's just not as crowded as its Marvel counterpart.
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** Simple. He was lying.
* Is Crane supposed to be 6 ft tall in this? If he is, how the hell tall is Bolton?
** Bolton's probably a case of "tall as he needs to be to be imposing". Looming over Scarecrow is less a sign that he's physically that much larger and more that he's just that intimidating. Comics and animation do this all the time (witness how often Optimus Prime is drawn as having a head roughly the size of a normal car, even though being a semi truck he shouldn't be anywhere near that large).
* In Judgement Day how is Two Face able to get into costume without anyone seeing overpower the guards, all within a few seconds (the penguin turns as Harvey leaves, goes to the vault places loot in and the Judge is standing there.)
* Ok, so when Harley and Ivy kidnap Bruce Wayne in "Holiday Knights", how did all of the clerks in the "Bergduff's" department store completely fail to react to the two super villains on a shopping spree? It's not like they were out on parole; it had been established earlier in the episode that they were both fugitives, and trying to lay low to avoid the cops' attention. They were wearing their costumes and everything. The store employees just didn't care that a pair of notorious, wanted criminals were there as long as their money was good? Also, they had a billionaire mind-controlled, and they made him buy them jewelry and clothes? They could have used the zombifying lipstick to enslave the cashier and walked out with anything in the store they wanted; why didn't they make Bruce Wayne transfer a couple million to a numbered Swiss bank account or an offshore holding corporation? I always assumed that Ivy and Harley were supposed to be smart, but this particular caper was pretty dumb.
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*** Furthermore, that same episode stressed that fighting styles are like fingerprints. Even if Gleason didn't get suspicious that Bruce Wayne could defeat an experienced ninja, all it would take is for her, or someone else, to find footage of Batman in action and comparing his moves to those of Wayne's, and his cover is blown.
*** That's something else that's always bugged me. I really don't buy this idea that every person's fighting style is so distinct that you can instantly recognize them decades later just by fighting them again. It sounds like one of those cheesy martial arts myths, like the Death Touch.
*** Well, first of all, "it sounds cheesy to me, a complete amateur who knows nothing about it" is not a good reason for dismissing anything. Unless you are yourself a master martial artist, you're not in a place to dismiss what a master martial artist can or cannot discern from someone's movements and fighting style. Second, none of that matters either, because in the universe this cartoon takes place in, that's explicitly stated to be how it works, just like it's the reality in the martial arts movies that the idea was likely taken from.
* Why did Clayface become evil? He just got the ability to take on any face he wanted. He could've become the most highly paid actor on Earth, but instead, he goes into a breakdown about how his career is over. He claimed it was because he couldn't hold a form for too long, but he clearly shows he's able to hold a form at least long enough to get a shot done.
** "Become evil" is a gross oversimplification and misunderstanding. He was, firstly, out for revenge. Then he was trying to find and make himself a cure. At no point did he decide, "You know, I'll be evil from here on in."
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** ...Because it's a cartoon. If you're going to bring real-world science into this, Batman should have dislocated his shoulder a thousand times by now just from swinging around on those grappel lines.
* What happened to the [[Retro Universe]] when the series became ''The New Batman Adventures''>
** It was quietly ignored, and as far as it goes [[In -Universe]], things never changed. Call it a [[Retcon]].
* The ending of "Bane". Batman delivers the beaten Bane to Thorne's office and...leaves him there. Uhm...what? Why isn't he taking Bane to prison? Then he plays a recording of Thorne's assistant conspiring with Bane to eliminate Thorne, ''while said assistant is in the same room''. Uhm...WHAT?! Doesn't Batman realise that he's just sentensed her (and likely Bane as well) to death? I'd probably understand if he'd used the recording to make her testify against Thorne or cooperate with him in another way, but that whas just pointlessly cruel! Hell, ethical considerations aside, wasn't dissent in enemy ranks working to his advantage?
* "Baby Doll". If the girl couldn't age, how could she speak in an adult voice? Sure, she an actress, but should her vocal cords allow that?
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[[Category:Headscratchers (Animation)]]
[[Category:Batman: The Animated Series]]
[[Category:Headscratchers]]
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[[Category:Headscratchers (Animationanimation)]]