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Batman: The Animated Series Tamil Pdf Download
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The Dark Knight battles crime in Gotham City with occasional help from Robin and Batgirl.
This animated series conveys the dark mood of the original "Batman" comic books. Unlike the light action "Batman" show of the 1960s, Gotham City's Caped Crusader, Bruce Wayne, is sometimes moody. And Robin's alter ego, Dick Grayson, has a more-mature personality than in the original series.
Following the massive success of Tim Burton's "Batman" and "Batman Returns," Warner Bros brought the ethos thus brought to Gotham City's defender to the small screen, and in the process ensured that the true owner of the title "Best Batman Ever" would belong not to Michael Keaton, George Clooney, Val Kilmer or even Adam West, but to Kevin Conroy - he voiced both Batman and Bruce Wayne, and his convincing depiction of both sides of the man (Bruce speaks with a higher, more laid back tone than his alter ego) is only the tip of this show's iceberg.
You knew this was a class act from the opening - Batman thwarting a pair of robbers and leaving them for the police, in a main title all the more effective for never showing the title of the programme (but then, it didn't need to - when we saw him lit up by lightning at the end we got all the ID we needed). Written with care by the likes of Paul Dini, Randy Rogel (whose "Robin's Reckoning" - a two-part story, and a deserved Emmy winner for Part 1 - beats "Batman Forever" hands down in its handling of Dick Grayson's life), Michael Reaves and Marv Wolfman, the episodes may have been in children's slots - although the Fox Network did air some episodes at night initially - but they never treated their subject matter lightly; unlike other attempts before and (ouch) after, Batman, Alfred and the rest actually had dimension, the villains were truly menacing, and they even pulled off the feat of making Robin worth the while. It also wasn't afraid to actually kill people - unusually for Western cartoons - as demonstrated in the episode where Clayface met his end in a rainstorm.
The makers also brought back Danny Elfman's superb Bat-theme from the Burton movies, but only used it over the main titles and end credits - Shirley Walker and her team of composers never used it in their scores (and can I just say that it's a disgrace that Rhino's issued two albums of music from "Batman Beyond" - I refuse to call the show by its idiotic international title - and nothing from the original show?), with Walker's own Bat-theme taking pole position for the movie "Batman: Mask of the Phantasm" (which she scored) and on the TV show from the third season onwards... though on some prints of the later episodes Elfman's end theme has been put on instead. Much as I admire the great man, Walker's music is nothing to be ashamed of (case in point her excellent theme for "Superman"), so I object to that.
The series set new standards for superhero cartoons (yes, I know the Dark Knight doesn't really have superpowers) that, to their credit, Warner Bros has been trying to live up to ever since - but good as "Justice League" is, "Batman: The Animated Series" is the real deal. The later video movies are also a must (I refuse to sit through "Batman & Robin," in part because I doubt it'll beat "Batman and Mr. Freeze: Subzero"). If you really think the cartoons from the couple of decades before this series arrived were better, that's your loss; only one animated series in history tops this. (It's "The Simpsons," obviously. What, you thought it was "The Flintstones"?)
For the most part - I quite enjoyed this animated, Batman, TV series from 1992. Yep. I really did.
The 2-D animation was definitely top-notch and one could tell that there was certainly some real, mature thought put into the show's story-lines.
But the thing that puzzled me about the Batman character (whose squared-off jawline was so sharp-edged that it could cut a brick of cheese) was that even though he was just an ordinary man, he was given some truly startling, super-human abilities.
Anyway - My biggest beef of all here has to do with the Alfred character (Bruce Wayne's trusted manservant) who I found to be too much of a stuffy, insufferable, British bore (stereotype).
(Oh - Well - At least Alfred's presence was so insignificant that it didn't ruin the rest of the show for me)
Bruce Wayne has been the Batman for approximately ten years when this series begins (as revealed in the spin-off movie, Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993)), putting him in his early to mid-30s. As a comic-book character, Batman's first appearance was in DETECTIVE COMICS #27 (May, 1939). In the book Batman: Animated (written with Chip Kidd) Paul Dini writes: "In rethinking Robin for the animated series, it was our intention that Dick Grayson would be older than the traditional depictions of his character, about twenty, and operating on his own as a solo crime fighter." He has apparently been Batman's partner for 9 years (almost half of his life). Gotham City is a fictional U.S. port city located on the north-eastern Atlantic coast. It was originally a stand-in for New York City, but has also resembled other crime-ridden urban centers such as Chicago and Detroit. Some sources, including Mayfair Games' authorized (but now out-of-print) Atlas of the DC Universe, have placed Gotham City in the state of New Jersey. Batman: The Animated Series shows Gotham City in New York State on the western tip of Long Island.
Christopher Nolan's (director for Batman Begins and The Dark Knight) Gotham City is located in the middle of the estuary of the Liberty River, where it empties into the Atlantic Ocean. The river separates most of Gotham from the mainland. The River Merchant divides Uptown from Midtown, while Midtown is separated from Downtown by the Gotham River. The Narrows is a small island in the Gotham River. A creek divides the district of South Hinkley from the rest of Gotham City. Gotham International Airport is in Pettsburg, to the north of the Liberty River estuary.
The current DC Universe version of Gotham City is separated from the mainland by the Gotham River, bridged by a series of bridges and tunnels. The east and south sides of Gotham face the Atlantic Ocean. The city is further divided by the Sprang River (named for Dick Sprang) on the northern end and the Finger River (for Bill Finger) to the south. Tiny Blackgate Isle to the south-east is home to Blackgate Maximum Security Penitentiary. (Blackgate is replaced by Stonegate Penitentiary in the animated series "Batman" (1992) and its spin-offs.) The Elizabeth Arkham Asylum for the Criminally Insane is first mentioned (as Arkham Hospital) in "The Threat of the Two-Headed Coin!" in BATMAN #258 (October 1974) by Dennis O'Neil. The first specific reference to "Arkham Asylum" was in the story "This One'll Kill You, Batman!" also by Dennis O'Neil in BATMAN #260 (February 1975). The name was inspired by the fictitious New England city of Arkham created by H.P. Lovecraft. In the post-Crisis comics Dick Grayson was 13 years old. In Batman: The Animated Series, Dick was approximately 10 years old when he was orphaned, and maybe 11 when he first became Robin. a5c7b9f00b
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