Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Batman: The Brave and the Bold




Batman: The Brave and the Bold is an American cartoon series based in part on the DC Comics "team-up" series The Brave and the Bold. Like the comic series, it features two or more super heroes coming together to solve a crime or foil a super villain, but like the original comic series (and unlike the current one), the cartoon focuses on Batman working with the different heroes. The series debuted on November 14, 2008 on Cartoon Network.[1]
The series marked the first appearance of the new Warner Bros. Animation logo featuring a 1940s-stylized Bugs Bunny mascot.
Overview
Each episode of Batman: The Brave and the Bold features main character Batman teaming up with other characters from the DC Universe to thwart villains or solve crimes. Beginnings usually have a small introduction and are usually not related to the remainder of the episode, apart from the regular appearances and reappearances of a villain who will figure prominently in episodes to come. In the first season, the villain was Equinox; in the second and current season, the villain is the alien Starro.
The show is split into two parts: A small adventure right before the theme song, and the main adventure right after that, similar to The Batman. The show's creator has said that if a character's guest appearance in the teaser is deemed successful, then it may warrant exploring the character further in a future episode's main adventure.
The show has no overarching story, instead having most episodes stand alone. The show is lighter in tone than previous Batman series, depicting the Dark Knight as more lighthearted and playful with a "dry, ironic wit." The show even features various references to the campy 1960s Batman TV series.
While the tone is lighter, the series has touched on the subject of death which includes retelling the murder of Thomas Wayne and Martha Wayne at the hands of Joe Chill, the death of the Silver Age Blue Beetle, the assassination of Boston Brand, the death of the first Black Canary, the execution of "Gentleman" Jim Craddock, the self-sacrifice and death of B'wana Beast, Professor Milo being devoured by rats after being transformed into cheese by the Spectre, the sacrifice and death of the Doom Patrol, the multiple, repetitive deaths of Batman in the episode "Emperor Joker!", and the death and sacrifice of G.I. Robot in "The Plague of the Prototypes!". The tone of the series was addressed in an episode of the show itself, when Bat-Mite broke the fourth wall to read out this missive from one of the show's creators:
"Batman's rich history allows him to be interpreted in a multitude of ways. To be sure, this is a lighter incarnation, but it's certainly no less valid and true to the character's roots than the tortured avenger crying out for mommy and daddy."
Show creators have chosen to go with "lesser known" characters. In many instances, the characters are those that were repeatedly teamed with Batman in the 1970s run of the Brave and the Bold comic book, such as Green Arrow, Wildcat, Plastic Man, and even the Joker; thus, the characters have a look and feel akin to their Silver Age incarnations. Batman's five most frequent recurring partners are Blue Beetle III, Plastic Man, Green Arrow, Red Tornado, and Aquaman.[citation needed] While the show has featured major heroes such as the Green Lantern and the Flash, it consistently focuses on the lesser-known individuals to have carried the names, such as Guy Gardner and Jay Garrick, rather than the more popular, better known Hal Jordan or Barry Allen, until Barry appeared in the second season episode "A Requiem for a Scarlet Speedster!" (though this episode centers around Kid Flash and Jay Garrick), while Hal appeared in the first season episode "The Eyes of Despero!".
Additionally, Batman's alter ego of billionaire playboy Bruce Wayne did not appear as an adult during the series in situations where Batman was unmasked. His face was kept hidden until the season 2 episode "Chill of the Night!" when Batman finally confronts Joe Chill.
It was announced at the San Diego Comic Con 2010 that Batman: The Brave and the Bold will end after season three. Work has begun on a new Batman animated series, set to return the character to a more serious tone.
Comic book
In January 2009, the first issue of Batman: the Brave and the Bold was released. The comic book follows the same format as the show, starting off with a brief story unrelated to the rest of the issue. Several authors have contributed to the comic book series, including Matt Wayne, J. Torres and Landry Walker.
Some of the DC characters appearing in the comic have yet to appear in the show, or can't appear at all due to legal reasons. Unlike the cartoon, the comic book tie-in doesn't share the limitations on which characters can be used.[citation needed]
The Batman: The Brave and the Bold comic series is due to begin selling in the UK on 11 March 2010 and will be published by Titan Magazines.
Principal cast
* Diedrich Bader - Batman, Kilowog, Ace, Owlman, Solomon Grundy, Punch, Gorilla Boss
* Corey Burton - Red Tornado, Silver Cyclone, Thomas Wayne (in "Invasion of the Secret Santas"), False-Face, Doctor Mid-Nite, Dr. William Milton Magnus, Mercury, Chancellor Gor-Zonn, General Zahl, Killer Moth
* John DiMaggio - Aquaman, Gorilla Grodd, Tiger Soldier, Typhon, Enemy Ace, Ubu, Faceless Hunter, Black Adam, Black Mask, Taboo
* Will Friedle - Blue Beetle/Jaime Reyes, Scarlet Scarab
* Tom Kenny - Plastic Man, Baby Face
* James Arnold Taylor - Green Arrow, Blue Bowman, Green Lantern/Guy Gardner, Major Disaster, Wotan, Nabu, Mark Desmond, Arges, Leslie "Rocky" Davis, Alpha-Red
Special guest cast
* Edoardo Ballerini - Vulture, Jack
* Xander Berkeley - Sinestro
* Clancy Brown - Per Degaton, Rohtul
* Mindy Cohn - Velma Dinkley
* Jeffrey Combs - Kite Man
* Kevin Conroy - Batman of Zur-En-Arrh,[13] Phantom Stranger
* Tim Conway - Weeper
* Olivia d'Abo - Elasti-Girl
* Diane Delano - Big Barda
* Dana Delany - Vilsi Vaylar
* Michael Dorn - Bane,[14] Kru'll the Eternal
* Greg Ellis - Gentleman Ghost, Doctor Fate, Cavalier, Dr. Canus, Hawk, Shrapnel, Thomas Wayne (in "Dawn of the Deadman!")
* R. Lee Ermey - Wildcat
* Oded Fehr - Equinox
* Ellen Greene - Mrs. Manface
* Ioan Gruffudd - Blue Beetle Scarab, Matthew "Red" Ryan
* Mark Hamill - Spectre
* Neil Patrick Harris - Music Meister
* Tippi Hedren - Hippolyta
* John Michael Higgins - Riddler
* William Katt - Hawkman
* Wallace Langham - Ocean Master
* Loren Lester - Green Lantern/Hal Jordan
* Vicki Lewis - Wonder Woman
* Matthew Lillard - Shaggy Rogers
* Carl Lumbly - Tornado Champion/Tornado Tyrant
* David McCallum - Merlin
* Andy Milder - Flash/Jay Garrick
* Phil Morris - Fox, Jonah Hex
* Laraine Newman - Ms. Minerva
* Julie Newmar - Martha Wayne (2nd voice)
* Hunter Parrish - Kid Flash, Geo-Force
* Ron Perlman - Doctor Double X
* Jim Piddock - Calendar Man/Calendar King, Doctor Watson, Doctor Sivana, Shazam, Thaddeus Jr.
* James Remar - Two-Face (1st voice)
* Paul Reubens - Bat-Mite
* Henry Rollins - Robotman
* Michael Rosenbaum - Deadman
* Stephen Root - Penguin, Woozy Winks, Planet Master
* Tom Everett Scott - Booster Gold
* Armin Shimerman - Calculator, Psycho-Pirate, Walter Mark "Prof" Haley, Guardians of the Universe
* John Wesley Shipp - Professor Zoom
* J.K. Simmons - Guardians of the Universe, Evil Star, Kyle "Ace" Morgan
* Cree Summer - Vixen
* Jeffrey Tambor - Crazy Quilt
* Tony Todd - Astaroth
* Alan Tudyk - Flash/Barry Allen
* Michael T. Weiss - Adam Strange
* Adam West - Thomas Wayne (3rd voice), Proto Bat-Bot
* Wil Wheaton - Blue Beetle/Ted Kord[
* Gary Anthony Williams - Fun Haus, Mongul, Mongal
* Tyler James Williams - Firestorm[
* Thomas F. Wilson - Sportsmaster, Catman
* Peter Woodward - Caesar, Ra's al Ghul
Information from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Batman: Under the Red Hood

Batman: Under the Red Hood is a direct-to-video animated film based on the Batman storylines "A Death in the Family" and "Under the Hood". The film is the eighth in the DC Universe Animated Original Movies line released by Warner Premiere and Warner Bros. Animation. It was released on July 27, 2010. The film stars Bruce Greenwood as Bruce Wayne/Batman, Jensen Ackles as Red Hood/Jason Todd, and John DiMaggio as the Joker. The screenplay was written by Judd Winick, who also wrote the "Under the Hood" run in the monthly Batman comic.
The two-disc special edition and Blu-ray also includes an animated short featuring Jonah Hex.
Plot
Ra's al Ghul hires the Joker to help him with his latest terrorist scheme, but soon regrets it when the Clown Prince of Crime kidnaps Jason Todd, the second Robin. In a warehouse in Sarajevo, Bosnia, the Joker beats Jason with a crowbar, ultimately leaving him half-dead on the warehouse floor. Jason tries to get out, but the Joker put a lock on the door. He then sees a bomb ticking in the warehouse. Batman arrives too late, and Jason is killed in the explosion.
Five years later, in Gotham City, the vigilante/crime lord Red Hood has assembled a meeting with the city's top-earning thugs and dealers. The Red Hood announces his takeover of the drug trade and tells them to give him 40 percent of their earnings in return for protection from Batman and Black Mask. As a warning, he tosses them a bag containing the severed heads of all their lieutenants.
Batman chases some thugs in a moving truck and crashes it into a wall. He tries to interrogate them until the box that was in the truck opens and reveals Amazo, a powerful android with the ability to copy the abilities of every metahuman it encounters. Nightwing (Dick Grayson), who was once the first Robin, arrives on the scene to help him. The robot is defeated and Batman interrogates the three thugs at the location and finds out they are working for the Red Hood. The Red Hood then kills the thugs with a sniper rifle. Batman chases the Red Hood, who leads him to the Ace Chemical Plant — the site of the first Red Hood's transformation into the Joker. The current Red Hood rigs an explosion in the plant and escapes.
Later in the Batcave, Nightwing appears, having returned after he learned of the Red Hood. Batman tells Nightwing that since the Red Hood began his reign of terror, drug trafficking has gone up, but crime has gone down. Batman and Nightwing proceed to Arkham Asylum to interrogate the Joker about the Red Hood. The Joker denies any involvement with his successor, then taunts Batman by reminding him of Jason's death, tempting Batman to kill him.
At his headquarters, Black Mask is angry because his "Amazo" was destroyed, and promptly puts a hit out on the Red Hood. A lackey starts to talk about the next incoming shipment; however, both Batman and the Red Hood have bugged the place, listening in on the conversation. The Red Hood shows up and hijacks a helicopter, but is stopped by Batman and Nightwing. The Red Hood runs and Batman chases him. Nightwing later joins up with Batman and the chase leads to a blimp and rooftops. Nightwing takes notice that the Red Hood is able to evade Batman at every turn, including cutting a Bat-lasso before it went taut on his leg. The chase leads to a train station above ground, and an explosion occurs facilitating the Red Hood's escape and leaving Batman and Nightwing temporarily shaken.
Batman and Nightwing regroup in the Batcave, with Batman's butler, Alfred Pennyworth, bandaging Nightwing's right leg and taking him home. Batman and Nightwing agree that the Red Hood's skills, methods, and arsenal are comparable to their own, except that the Red Hood is willing to kill to get what he wants. However, there's something else that troubles Batman, and he stays on his computer monitor to watch the video footage of the chase from the cowl's camcorder, trying to figure out what the Red Hood said at the train station. It reveals that the Red Hood said, "You haven't lost your touch Bruce," meaning that he knows Batman's true identity. Batman recalls Jason performing the same maneuver he had seen the Red Hood use: Cutting a lasso on his leg before it went taut. In addition, a flashback reveals that as he got older, Jason grew more violent, even shattering a drug dealer's collarbone during one of their patrols.
At one of the Red Hood's protected areas, a shootout by Black Mask's henchmen occurs with an intrigued Red Hood watching from afar. At another location, one out of eight of the crime bosses following the Red Hood is being beaten and about to be burned when the Red Hood intervenes. However, it is actually a trap, and a group called "The Fearsome Hand of Four" attacks the Red Hood. The Red Hood is beaten, but he admits his intervention was merely a stall tactic. Batman appears and the two adversaries take on the group together. When one of the four gains the upper hand on the Red Hood, the Red Hood kills him. They have an argument, leading Batman to ask what has happened to him, hinting that he knows his opponent's true identity. However, the Red Hood replies that it is too late for Batman to help, and leaves. Batman manages to obtain a blood sample from the Red Hood at the scene of the battle, and the analysis is a match to Jason Todd.
Back at the Black Mask's headquarters, Black Mask is given the news that his shipment has been confiscated by the Red Hood. He flies into a rage when a small red dot is seen on his neck and then his forehead. From afar, the Red Hood waves and shoots a rocket into Black Mask's room. Black Mask survives and is forced to call on the Joker, setting him free and is giving him the task of killing the Red Hood.
Back at Wayne Manor, Bruce digs up Jason's grave site and finds a fake body made of latex. Enraged, he goes to Ra's al Ghul's mansion and demands the truth about Jason. Ra's reveals that he switched Jason's body and revived him in his Lazarus Pit because he felt responsible for the boy's death; Ra's was the one who hired the Joker as a distraction for the Dynamic Duo in Bosnia while he tried to cripple the world economy by destroying financial districts in Europe. Following his resurrection, Jason escaped. Ra's had been trying to find Jason for years, until he heard the news from Gotham of him becoming the Red Hood. Ra's promises to stay out of any further conflicts between Batman and the Red Hood, ruefully saying that he's "done enough".
On his way back to Gotham, Batman finds that the Joker has abducted all eight of the Red Hood's crime bosses, including Black Mask and his assistant, on the bridge. The Joker starts to pour gasoline on the hostages in a large truck container, and as he is trying to light it, the Red Hood appears and reveals that the Joker is his real target; all of the attacks he made on Black Mask were to get him desperate enough that he would seek aid from the Joker and arrange his escape from Arkham. The Joker finally sets the hostages on fire. From out of nowhere, Batman swoops in and splashes fire fighting foam to stop the fire and tries to take the Joker out with him. The Red Hood grabs onto the Joker and cuts the wire holding them, sending the Joker into the river.
Red Hood tells Batman to come to Crime Alley if he wants the Joker back. Showing up at an abandoned apartment, the Red Hood tosses the Joker on the ground and starts to beat him with a crowbar. By the time Batman arrives, the Red Hood is finished and waiting for Batman to arrive. Red Hood and Batman fight it out and end up on a rooftop of a church. The Red Hood takes off his helmet and reveals he truly is Jason Todd. After another short fight, Jason jumps through a window and back in the room where the Joker is being held. Jason confronts Batman, saying that he had forgiven him for not saving him, but is furious that he still allows the Joker to live. Batman confesses that he always wanted to kill the Joker, but will not allow himself the pleasure because there would be no going back. Jason then tosses Batman a gun and tells him he must shoot the Joker or him. Batman refuses and turns his back. Enraged, Jason then shoots at Batman; he misses, however, and Batman throws a small batarang into the barrel of the gun. The gun explodes, thus incapacitating Jason. Jason then sets off a bomb he had previously planted in the room. The Joker maniacally attempts to stop Batman from defusing it so he can finally "be the only one who gets what he wants" that night, but Batman ultimately subdues him. The bomb goes off, and this time Batman succeeds in saving Jason's life from the explosion; nevertheless, Jason is nowhere to be found.
The Joker is returned to Arkham Asylum and Black Mask is set free on a million dollar bail. With Jason revealed to be alive, Alfred asks Batman if he should remove the memorial display case containing Jason's Robin uniform. Batman replies that nothing has changed between Jason and him and departs in the Batmobile. A quick flashback is shown of Jason Todd's first day in his Robin costume, happily jumping onto the Batmobile and declaring that it is the best day of his life.
Cast
* Bruce Greenwood as Bruce Wayne / Batman
* Jensen Ackles as Jason Todd / Red Hood (adult)
* John DiMaggio as The Joker, Additional Voices
* Neil Patrick Harris as Dick Grayson / Nightwing
* Jason Isaacs as Ra's al Ghul
* Wade Williams as Roman Sionis / Black Mask
* Carlos Alazraqui as Chi Chi,[5] Thug #1 (uncredited)
* Robert Clotworthy as Leon
* Gary Cole as Bobo, Commissioner James Gordon (uncredited), Guard #2 (uncredited)
* Brian George as Ra's Assistant
* Kelly Hu as Ms. Li
* Phil LaMarr as Rick, Additional Voices
* Alex Martella as Jason Todd / Robin (young)
* Vincent Martella as Jason Todd / Robin (teen)
* Jim Piddock as Alfred Pennyworth
* Kevin Michael Richardson as Tyler, Large Assassin (uncredited), Additional Voices
* Andrea Romano as Reporter #1
* Dwight Schultz as Freddie, Drug Dealer (uncredited)
* Fred Tatasciore as Mercenary #1, Amazo (uncredited), Guard (uncreditd)
* Keri Tombazian as Reporter #2, Female Assassin (uncredited)
* Bruce Timm as Edward Nygma / The Riddler
* Michael Villani as Reporter #3
Information from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Batman: Gotham Knight

Batman: Gotham Knight (バットマン: ゴッサムナイト, Battoman: Gossamu Naito?) is a 2008 psychological horror animated direct-to-DVD anthology film of six animated short films set in-between Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. It depicts Batman battling against the mob of Gotham City, as well as other villains. The producers have acknowledged that it is not necessarily meant to be canon to the "Nolanverse," and indeed any of the six segments could easily fall into almost any Batman continuity. The shorts, or segments, are written by Josh Olson, David S. Goyer, Brian Azzarello, Greg Rucka, Jordan Goldberg and Alan Burnett. Although all based on Japanese anime art style, each segment has its own writing and artistic style, just as the works from the DC Universe, and with the same style of The Animatrix although some segments are connected.[3][4] All six films of the feature star Kevin Conroy, reprising his voice role as Batman from the DC Animated Universe.
It is similar to another tie-in, The Animatrix, as both are collections of short animated films relating to their respective series. It is the third in the line of DC Universe Animated Original Movies released by Warner Premiere and Warner Bros. Animation; with the first two releases being Superman: Doomsday, Justice League: The New Frontier, (followed by Wonder Woman and Green Lantern: First Flight). It is rated PG-13 for stylized violence, including some bloody images,[5] but it is not the first animated Batman film to be rated PG-13 (that claim goes to the uncut version of Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker). This film is notable for being the first DC Original Animated movie to have a connection with another Batman medium. While Superman: Doomsday and Justice League: The New Frontier have been released in the United Kingdom with a 12 rating, Batman: Gotham Knight is being accompanied with a 15 certificate for "images of bloody violence and injury". The film aired on Cartoon Network on October 4, 2008 at 9:00 pm with a TV-14-V rating and an exclusive parental warning after each commercial break, with a few of the more graphic scenes cut.
-Have I Got a Story for You (Studio 4°C)
Have I Got a Story for You was written by Josh Olson and animated by Studio 4°C. A street kid meets with his three friends at a skate park. All three of them claim to have seen Batman earlier that day. Batman's battle with the Man in Black, a high-tech criminal, is told in reverse chronological order, with three very different interpretations of Batman's form and abilities: one describes him as a living shadow that can melt away and reappear at will (similar to Vampire Batman), another describes him as a half-human, half-bat creature (similar to Man-Bat), and one describes him as a combat robot that can leap tall buildings in a single bound. At the end, Batman pursues the Man in Black to the skate park, and captures him with the help of the fourth street kid. The fourth kid is able to see what Batman truly is after seeing him sustain injuries from the battle: a very human warrior in a costume. He proceeded to tell his experience to his friends after Batman disappeared.
Though the film credits give "story by" acknowledgment to first-time writer Jordan Goldberg, Josh Olson acknowledged it was actually based on a very similar story by Frank Robbins called "The Batman Nobody Knows".[6] The story was first printed in Batman #250 in 1973, and subsequently adapted as "Legends of the Dark Knight" in the original Batman: The Animated Series. According to Olson: "The first time it's stealing, the second time it's borrowing, the third time you're creating a genre".[6]
Also, the three different versions of the man in black have many similarities to other members of Batman's Rogues gallery, though they all resemble a member of the League of Shadows. The first story features a tech-wielding villain who has teeth similar to Killer Croc, the second uses a jetpack, which may or may not be a reference to Firefly, and the third has similarities to Deadshot. Also, the Batman of the second encounter is very similar to the villain Man-Bat. When the Man in Black is seen by all the teenagers, he has no identifiable characteristics.
Lastly, the story is told backwards, with the kid who claims he saw Batman most recently going first, ending with the kid who actually saw him first, in a tongue in cheek homage to Batman Begins and The Dark Knight's director Christopher Nolan's earlier film Memento.
* Kevin Conroy as Batman
* Jason Marsden as Cop
* Scott Menville as B-Devil
* George Newbern as Man in Black
* Corey Padnos as Porkchop
* Crystal Scales as Meesh
* Alanna Ubach as Dander
* Hynden Walch as Woman
Crossfire (Production I.G)
Batman emerges through the flames as Maroni threatens Anna Ramirez.
Crossfire was written by Greg Rucka and animated by Production I.G.. Crispus Allen and Anna Ramirez are partners and members of the Major Crimes Unit that have been hand-picked by James Gordon. The two are assigned to take the recently captured Man in Black (captured during Have I Got A Story For You), revealed to be Jacob Feely, an escaped inmate from Arkham Asylum with an expertise in advanced electronics and explosives, to the Narrows to be incarcerated. On their way, they argue over whether Batman can be trusted, with Allen saying that they're just running errands for a vigilante, while Ramirez replies that Batman has changed Gotham for the better. As they are heading back, Allen declares his intention to leave the MCU, and Ramirez pulls into a vacant lot to confront Allen. However, the two get caught in a confrontation between gangs, The Russian and Sal Maroni. Maroni's men are gunned down, and Maroni takes refuge behind Allen and Ramirez's patrol car, which The Russian subsequently destroys with a rocket launcher. Ramirez and Maroni manage to get clear in time, while Allen is rescued by Batman, who proceeds to take out The Russian and his men. Maroni then threatens to kill Ramirez, but he, too, is dispatched by Batman. Batman recognizes Allen and Ramirez as Gordon's hand-picked officers, remarks that Gordon is a good judge of character, and disappears.
* Kevin Conroy as Batman
* Corey Burton as The Russian
* Gary Dourdan as Crispus Allen
* Jason Marsden as Doctor
* Scott Menville as Cop
* Jim Meskimen as James Gordon
* Pat Musick as News Anchor
* Ana Ortiz as Anna Ramirez
* Rob Paulsen as Maroni
* Andrea Romano as Dispatcher
Field Test (Bee Train)
Lucius Fox as he appears in Field Test.
Field Test was written by Jordan Goldberg and animated by Bee Train. An accident involving a new WayneCom satellite's gyroscopic electromagnetic guidance system gives Lucius Fox an idea to create a device with the satellite's gyro with an advanced motion sensor that will electromagnetically deflect small-arms fire. Bruce Wayne takes the device and attends a charity golf tournament being held by developer Ronald Marshall, with whom he discusses the mysterious death of a woman, Teresa Williams, who had opposed some of Marshall's plans. During the tournament, Wayne secretly takes Marshall's PDA device. Later that night, as Batman, he hijacks a boat owned by Sal Maroni and drives it alongside a boat owned by rival gang leader, The Russian, and proceeds to attack both gangs at once, with assistance from his new device. He attempts to force a truce between the two gang leaders until he can get evidence against them, but is disrupted when one of Maroni's men fires at him. The bullet deflects and instead hits one of The Russian's men. Distressed, Batman takes the injured man to the hospital. Later, he returns the device to Fox, stating, "... it works too well; I'm willing to put my life on the line to do what I have to. But it has to be mine, no one else's."
* Kevin Conroy as Bruce Wayne / Batman
* Corey Burton as The Russian, Ronald Marshall
* Will Friedle as Anton
* George Newbern as Guido
* Rob Paulsen as Sal Maroni
* Kevin Michael Richardson as Lucius Fox
In Darkness Dwells (Madhouse)
Batman watches Gotham City in the segment In Darkness Dwells.
In Darkness Dwells, was written by David S. Goyer and animated by Madhouse. The police respond to a riot in a cathedral where Cardinal O'Fallon was giving a sermon. According to eyewitness testimony, the Cardinal was abducted by a large lizard-monster and taken down into the crypts below the cathedral. Lieutenant Gordon, Crispus Allen, and Anna Ramirez investigate; Gordon has a brief conversation with Batman, who agrees with Gordon's theory that the Scarecrow's fear toxin is behind the riot as the doctor has been at large since the riot at the Narrows (during the event of Batman Begins). Batman gives Gordon an earpiece that will allow them to stay in contact and descends below ground, trying to find Cardinal O'Fallon and his abductor. A homeless man living in an abandoned subway station identifies the abductor as Killer Croc. Batman and Gordon briefly discuss the villain's past, but are cut off when Killer Croc himself shows up, under the influence of the fear toxin, and attacks Batman. Batman defeats him, but not before sustaining a bite that transfers some of the toxin to him. He then finds Cardinal O'Fallon being put on trial and sentenced to death by the Scarecrow, who is unhappy with O'Fallon's efforts to help the homeless. Batman leaps in to defend the Cardinal. Using the methane already present in the room, he sparks an explosion that destroys several water pipes, flooding the area and allowing him to escape with the Cardinal. Gordon appears in a helicopter to retrieve the Cardinal and offers to help Batman as well, but Batman refuses, saying, "Maybe next time."
* Kevin Conroy as Batman
* Corey Burton as The Scarecrow
* Gary Dourdan as Crispus Allen
* Will Friedle as Cultist
* Brian George as O'Fallon
* Jim Meskimen as James Gordon
* George Newbern as Man
* Ana Ortiz as Anna Ramirez
* Rob Paulsen as Mole Man
Working Through Pain (Studio 4°C)
Working Through Pain was written by Brian Azzarello and animated by Studio 4°C. Continuing on from In Darkness Dwells, Batman is shot in the stomach by a man hallucinating in the sewers of Gotham.
A wounded Batman as he appears in Working Through Pain.
He cauterizes the wound and attempts to get out from underground, reflecting on his experiences with managing pain as he does so. First, he remembers volunteering with a relief effort and assisting a doctor in performing surgery without anesthesia. Next, he reflects on the lessons he learned from a woman named Cassandra, who was cast out of her community for disguising herself as a boy in an attempt to become a Fakir. Over several months, she teaches him to minimize his pain to the point where he can control it, sleeping on a bed of needles or standing on hot coals without reacting. One night, several young men appear to harass Cassandra, who takes their blows without seeming to feel them. Bruce steps in to defend her, not only demonstrating his ability to withstand their attacks, but defeating them all with his martial arts skills. Cassandra then tells him to leave, saying that he has learned what he came to learn.
Young Bruce Wayne as depicted in Working Through Pain.
She then comments on how Bruce's pain was beyond her, or possibly even his, ability to handle, but how it also appeared to be leading him down a path he desired. Back in the present, Batman ends up in a gutter, where he discovers a cache of guns buried in the garbage. Alfred arrives to assist him and tells Batman to give him his hand so he can pull him out of the gutter, but Batman, arms full of guns, replies that he can't.
* Kevin Conroy as Bruce Wayne / Batman
* Will Friedle as Youth 1
* Brian George as Arman, Scruffy Man
* Jason Marsden as Youth 2
* David McCallum as Alfred Pennyworth
* Parminder Nagra as Cassandra
* George Newbern as Youth 3
* Rob Paulsen as Youth 4
* Kevin Michael Richardson as Avery, Wounded Man
* Hynden Walch as Young Cassandra
Deadshot (Madhouse)
Deadshot as he appears in Deadshot.
Deadshot was written by Alan Burnett and animated by Madhouse. Bruce Wayne has a flashback to the murder of his parents. In his penthouse, he examines the firearms he took from the underground tunnel's gutter (during the event of Working Through Pain) which he intends to turn in to the police. Wayne admits to Alfred that even though he vowed never to use them in the memory of his parents, he can still understand the temptation to use one. Meanwhile, in another city, an assassin known as Deadshot carries out an assassination on a local mayor with a spectacularly difficult shot from a ferris wheel literally miles away from the man and returns to his tropical base. There, one of his associates hires him to carry out a hit in Gotham. It is revealed that The Russian has put out a hit on Lieutenant Gordon, and Batman is called in to protect him. Batman gives Crispus Allen Ronald Marshall's handheld PDA device (which he stole as Bruce Wayne in Field Test), containing a link to encrypted e-mails proving that Ronald Marshall hired Deadshot in the past. He then follows Gordon's motorcade, with Alfred providing satellite-imagery assistance using the new WayneCom satellites. Deadshot attempts to shoot Gordon from a moving train, but Batman deflects the bullet. Deadshot then gleefully reveals that Batman was his real target the entire time, and that the threat against Gordon was merely a ruse to draw him out. He opens fire as the train enters a tunnel, and as Batman attempts to charge Deadshot, he is injured, falling off the train. Deadshot advances to where he saw Batman fall, gloating, but is ambushed from behind and disarmed. He and Ronald Marshall are arrested. Wayne confides to Alfred about how similar the fight in the tunnel seemed to the night his parents were murdered, and comments that "I've been trying to stop those two bullets all my life." He expresses discouragement, and Alfred agrees, but adds that he thinks Bruce has a higher purpose. Bruce then looks up at the sky and sees the Bat-Signal.
* Kevin Conroy as Bruce Wayne / Batman
* Gary Dourdan as Crispus Allen
* Jason Marsden as Thomas Wayne, Doctor
* Jim Meskimen as James Gordon, Floyd Lawton / Deadshot
* David McCallum as Alfred Pennyworth
* Pat Musick as News Anchor
* Kevin Michael Richardson as Bulky Man
* Andrea Romano as Martha Wayne
* Hynden Walch as Young Bruce, Female Campaign Worker
Information from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (2002 TV series)

He-Man and the Masters of the Universe is an American animated television series. Developed for television by Michael Halperin, who created the original series, it was animated by Mike Young Productions. It served as an update of the 1980s series of the same name, produced to coincide with Mattel's revival of the Masters of the Universe franchise eleven years after its previous attempt. The series made its premiere on Cartoon Network's Toonami on August 16, 2002.
Unlike the previous He-Man series, set on the futuristic planet of Eternia, this version sought to return to the roots of the storyline and provide broader explorations never reached in the first series, including origins for each character, and some first time animated debuts of familiar toyline faces. The series also brought back several writers from the original series, such as Larry DiTillio.
The remake is noted for the many similarities it shares with the original. For example, it has an homage intro to the 1980s version's intro speech but in this version, Prince Adam is interrupted by an explosion and invasion by Skeletor and his henchmen. Prince Adam transforms into He-Man when he says "By the power of Grayskull... I have the power!" (later episodes feature a chorus singing He-Man's name during the scene change). It also features "scene change" sequences, but only the one involving the Sword of Power was taken from the Filmation series; all the others were created just for this series, plus the sequences occur less frequently than on the previous series.
Comic book
To coincide with the release of the series, a He-Man comic was created by MV Creations. Three separate series were released between 2002–2004: two mini-series, a short-lived ongoing series and a handful of one-shots were published. Some of these were collected into trade paperback graphic novels. The tone and maturity of the comic was slightly different from the cartoon, as the writers hoped to appeal to the older demographic purchasing the comic. The comic ultimately came to a close when Mattel began to end the licensing program for the Masters of the Universe relaunch. The comics were published by Image Comics, then MV Creations themselves (through Crossgen Comics), before eventually going back to Image Comics.
Cast
* Cam Clarke - Prince Adam/He-Man
* Kathleen Barr - Evil-Lyn
* Lisa Ann Beley - Teela
* Gary Chalk - Duncan/Man-At-Arms, Whiplash
* Brian Dobson - Skeletor/Keldor, Buzz-Off, Webstor, King Hiss, Sssqueeze, Ceratus
* Paul Dobson - Man-E-Faces, Snake Face, Trap-Jaw, Tri-Klops, Lord Carnivus
* Michael Donovan - King Randor, Count Marzo, Roboto, Tung Lashor
* Gabe Khouth - Mekaneck, Orko
* Scott McNeil - Beast Man, Clawful, Mer-Man, Ram-Man, Stratos, Kobra Khan
* Nicole Oliver - Queen Marlena, The Sorceress of Castle Grayskull
* Mark Acheson - Fisto, Chadzar
* Don Brown - Evilseed
* Brian Drummond - Odiphus/Stinkor, Tuvar (Two of Two-Bad), Belzar
* Mark Gibbon - Baddhra (Badd of Two-Bad)
* Christopher Judge - Zodak
* Campbell Lane - Kulatuk Priest
* Colin Murdock - Hordak
* Richard Newman - General Rattlor, Lord Dactys, The Faceless One, Azdar
* John Payne (II) - Sy-Klone, Moss Man
Information from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Batman: City Of Scar (Fan Made Movie)
CITY OF SCARS
Uploaded by Batinthesun. - Watch feature films and entire TV shows.
Here goes a very impressive fan made Batman short film. I have yet to see this all, but I would like to know how they made the bat-suit, it’s brilliant. Look out for The Epic Network fan made “Spiderman In The UK” starring Ramz, to be released April 1st 2011.
“When the Joker escapes from Arkham and murders the parents of a young boy, Batman recalls the pain of losing his own parents as a child. He is pushed past his limits to the point where his focus becomes revenge on all who stand in his way, including many of Gotham’s underworld. Finally, Batman is forced to look at the psychological profile of his own mind and accept the consequences of his life to find resolve.”
Source from : http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xdpig1_city-of-scars_shortfilms
The Batman animated

The Batman is an American animated television series produced by Warner Bros. Animation based on the DC Comics superhero Batman. It ran from 2004 to 2008, on the Saturday morning television block Kids WB. Reruns of the first two seasons air on the Boomerang channel as of 2009.
Although the series borrows many elements from previous Batman storylines, it does not follow the continuity set by the comic books, the film series, nor that of Batman: The Animated Series or its spin-offs. The character designs were provided by Jackie Chan Adventures artist Jeff Matsuda; he also directed the ending. The series won six Emmy Awards and one Annie Award.
Awards
The Batman received Annie Award nominations for Best Animated Television Production in 2005 and 2006, and for Best Music in a Television Production in 2006.[9]
The Batman was nominated for twelve Daytime Emmy Awards during its five year run, winning six times. In 2005 it was nominated for Outstanding Special Class Animated Program, Outstanding performer in an Animated Program (Kevin Michael Richardson as the Joker), Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition, and Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Live Action and Animation (for which it won). In 2006 it was nominated and won Outstanding Special Class Animated Program and Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Live Action and Animation. In 2007 it was nominated for Outstanding Special Class Animated Program and won Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Live Action and Animation. In 2008 it was nominated for Outstanding Special Class Animated Program and Outstanding Performer in an Animated Program (Kevin Michael Richardson as the Joker), and won Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Live Action and Animation, and Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing - Live Action and Animation.[9]
The Batman was also nominated for Motion Picture Sound Editors "Golden Reel Awards" for Sound Effects Editing in 2005, 2008, and 2009, winning in 2008.
The show also received its share of criticism with critics and fans. Some fans felt that it strayed too far from the comics and did not live up to the legacy of Batman: The Animated Series. Some critics felt that the show featured too many batsuits and gadgets and was meant to "inspire toys for kids to buy." [1]. In 2009 CraveOnline ranked the show #5 for Top 5 Worst Superhero Cartoons.
Crew
* Michael Goguen - Supervising producer
* Duane Capizzi - Supervising producer
* Glen Murakami - Producer
* Jeff Matsuda - Producer
* Linda M. Steiner - Producer
* Sander Schwartz - Executive Producer
* Alan Burnett - Executive Producer
* Kimberly A. Smith - Associate Producer
* Ginny McSwain - Voice Director (2004–2006)
* Andrea Romano - Voice Director (2006–2008)
* The Edge - Theme Music Creator
Information from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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