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I highly recommend The Dark Knight Returns and Batman Year One, definitive Frank Miller Batman graphic novels, and two of the best. Jeph Loeb (writer) and Tim Sale (artist) team up a lot and did two great Batman graphic novels, The Long Halloween, and Dark Victory. The mystery in The Long Halloween will have you crazed. Kingdom Come written by Mark Waid and drawn by the amazingly talented Alex Ross has Batman at an old age who has to have robotics hold his body in place from all he has put it through, and the novel is a mashing of big DC superheroes who fight evil superheroes on a large scale, and is one of the best graphic novels I have ever read. Check out Alex Ross's work, he's mind boggling.
Yeah, that episode never really did it for me. I thought the kids were super annoying and the ending with Firefly was pretty lame if you ask me. Also, they just had to throw in a Joel Schumacher reference. I love Batman Forever, so I thought that reference was pretty tacky! Anyway, the TNBA (The New Batman Adventures) when Batgirl became more prominent, Dick Grayson became Nightwing, and Tim Drake became Robin wasn't up to speed with the original BTAS I thought. The series animation was better, yes, and the overall feel was sleeker, but I thought the episode stories were much weaker and lacked the original menace and brooding darkness which the BTAS from 1992-1995 maintained.
AAAAHHHH!!!! I wish I had been there with you! AND I AGREE! Kevin Conroy IS Batman! There is no substitute!!
I thought The New Batman Adventures were much darker than that of the original animated Batman series. There were the grown up sexual references, the guns actually shot bullets and Batman actually got shot and bled, and though there is less a focus on Batman and more on the team, I admire the risk they took, and I think they pulled it off.
Indeed, it's story-telling depth and maturity, even though I didn't catch it as a little kid, strikes me as more than impressive now. The psychology on episodes like "Nothing to Fear" and "Dreams in Darkness" seem fit for a Tim Burton Batman movie instead of a cartoon. Big points to Bruce Timm, Paul Dini, and Alan Burnett for dreaming up this legened of a show!
TNBA's problem is that their order number was too low. 24 episodes just wasn't enough for the writers to do anything. They should have had a 52 episode order, similar to STAS (Superman: The Animated Series) even the 65 episode first season order that BTAS had.
If you've read The Batman Adventures (vol 2), it gave the series a lot more of a chance to breath, and did the show a great deal of justice (and Batman changes to his Justice League design halfway through, but nobody else changes).
Indeed, TNBA did have too few episodes, 24 was just not enough. Still, there were some really epic episodes, like "Holiday Knights", "Sins of the Father", "Never Fear", "Over the Edge", "Growing Pains", "Old Wounds", and "Judgment Day", to name a few.
Toss in "Joker's Millions", too. That one was great. "Old Wounds" and "Over the Edge" are probably my two favorites from that short, short series.
"Joker's Millions" was all right, but sometimes goofy and ridiculous. Also, there was a considerable lack of action compared to some other episodes in the series. Still, it had some great moments, like when Nightwing and Batgirl take out King Barlow's thugs in the Iceberg Lounge.