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"The Man Who Killed Batman" is the fifty-first episode of Batman: The Animated Series. It first aired on February 1, 1993.

Plot[]

As rain pours down on Gotham City, a man hurriedly runs through the streets. As he runs, a newspaper flies by with the headline: BATMAN SLAIN? Mysterious Crimefighter Missing. The man finally arrives at Rupert Thorne's house. He gets inside and introduces himself — but Thorne already knows who he is — Sidney Debris, "The Man Who Killed Batman". Sidney, however, doesn't appreciate the fame, because now everyone wants to kill or fight him. So, Sidney tells his story...

Sidney was an average, two-bit crook who wanted to move up in the underworld and agreed to go on a drug run as a lookout. A gangster named Eddie G. gives Sidney a nickname called Sid "The Squid". The other mobsters, however, see Sidney as bait for Batman to snap up while the rest of them flee. Unfortunately, Batman does show up and tackles Sidney. Sidney is terrified and clumsy, but the other mobsters, watching their exaggerated shadows from afar, believe that Sidney is fighting Batman.

Sidney holds Batman's cowl

Sidney sorrowfully holds the late Batman's cowl.

Suddenly, Sid falls off the roof, and Batman grabs one of his hands. Beneath them, a dislodged brick punches a hole in a propane tank. In desperation, Sidney tries to climb up Batman's arm onto the building, throwing him off balance. After Sidney climbs onto the ledge, he pushes Batman toward the gas tank, and there is a tremendous explosion. Sidney emerges from the blast carrying Batman's cape and cowl, and the mobsters are stunned to see Sidney has done the impossible: He has killed Batman.

In jubilation, the rest of the underworld holds a celebration for Sidney's successful murder of Batman and toast him, but a tough fighter challenges Sidney, leading to a huge barroom fight until the police arrive. The group of criminals ends up in jail where Harvey Bullock, visibly upset, breaks the news to Renee Montoya that Batman has been killed, and asks her to check on a depressed Commissioner Gordon. Luckily for Sidney however, a blonde woman claiming to be his lawyer (who looks familiar to Bullock) announces that she has posted his bail, and the two leave. Once in the car, the lawyer reveals herself to be Harley Quinn, who got sent by the Joker to free Sidney.

The Joker talks to Sidney

The Joker talks to Sidney about Batman's apparent death.

At the theater which serves as his gang's hideout, the Joker is delighted to meet Sidney. He says that there isn't any solid proof that Batman is dead, he wants to pull a job in order to make sure. The Joker and Harley stage a pre-ambush museum robbery to prove it to Sidney and wait for Batman. He doesn't show up, much to Joker's dismay. A despondent Joker orders Harley to put the jewelry back saying "Without Batman, crime has no punchline."

After evading the police, a funeral for Batman is held in the chemical plant where the Joker was first created and it turns out to be fun, but not deadly. The coffin holds Batman's cape and cowl, to which Joker attaches a "Kick me" sign. As Joker delivers a eulogy describing the death of the Joker's dream to kill Batman, wishing his jokes could have outsmarted his cold, equanimous logic, he denounces Sidney for doing it first. When he is done, the two hoods place Sidney in the coffin, and the coffin is sent on a conveyor belt towards a vat of acid, while Harley plays "Amazing Grace" on a kazoo. The Joker sheds a tear, but then immediately cheers up with a happy, "Well, that was fun. Who's for Chinese?" and he and his minions depart. Without any people to save Sidney, all hope is lost and there's nothing more to do. But just as the acid seeps in, Sidney is apparently saved by getting sucked into a drainpipe. Winding up on the bank of the Gotham River, he knew he had to get out of town. Sidney calls Eddie G. who sets him up with Rupert Thorne to get him out of Gotham.

In the present, Sidney begs for a way to get out of town to avoid the Joker and other hoods. Thorne, however, doesn't buy his story, believing Sidney's trying to trick his way into his drug operation. After all, in one night he's killed Batman and outwitted the Joker, meaning he must really be a criminal genius. As Thorne points a gun at Sidney, Batman suddenly arrives, completely unharmed, alive, and well. Batman knocks Thorne unconscious and explains to Sidney that he faked his death by swinging away before the gas tank exploded and laid low for a while, observing what happened.

Sidney is finally a big shot

Sidney realizes his dream of being a big shot.

Sidney realizes that Batman saved him from the Joker's ambush, and attempts to walk out. Batman stops him, explaining that he's still guilty as an accomplice to the drug run, but then points out that in prison, a man like Sidney would garner high respect, which should make his sentence more bearable. As Sidney is led through the prison, the inmates cheer him on for almost killing Batman, setting up Rupert Thorne, and making a fool out of the Joker. A pleased Sidney realizes his dream of making a name for himself.

Continuity[]

  • Harvey Bullock probably recognizes Harley without her harlequin makeup because she posed as a police officer at Commissioner Gordon's testimonial dinner in "Joker's Favor".

Background information[]

Home video releases[]

Production notes[]

  • According to Eric Radomski, Bruce Timm directed this episode as a result of the network not wanting to pay for an extra director, leading to the two splitting seven episodes that weren't previously assigned to anyone, and adding them to their normal workloads.[1]
  • During production, there was concern that people would think Harley playing Amazing Grace on the kazoo was sacrilegious, "We thought we would get in trouble," said Paul Dini. "But it was really funny. I gave Arleen a kazoo and she did it in one take, which was lucky because we were all screaming with laughter when she did it. We never would have gotten another take out of her."[2]
  • Bruce Timm has praised Mark Hamill's voice work on the eulogy scene, noting it was so good "that when I was boarding it, all I had to do was listen to what he was doing with his voice and pictures just popped into my head."[2]

Production inconsistencies[]

  • Harley uses her real name when posing as a lawyer, despite having been arrested already (thus having the police department know her real name and identity).
  • During the jewelry store heist, the Joker's henchmen are carrying machine guns, but they then change to shotguns.
  • When Joker pinches Harley's cheek at the funeral scene, her normally blue eyes turn black. They revert to blue when Joker lets go.
  • At the final confrontation with Thorne, Batman completely vanishes from the scene for one second as he grabs and throws the heavy mob boss across his room.

Trivia[]

  • Paul Dini has referred to this episode as "a Will Eisner-style story", evoking the creator of one of the earliest masked heroes, The Spirit.[2]
  • This episode was the first to use Harley Quinn's real name, Harleen Quinzel.
  • The Ace Chemical Plant, where Joker ambushes Sidney, is the place where, according to several comics continuities, the Joker fell into a vat of toxic waste during his first meeting with the Batman and became who he is today. It appeared in the comic story Batman: The Killing Joke. This was later confirmed in the episode "Beware the Creeper".
  • The Joker makes a pun on the Latin term "corpus delicti" using the words "batus delecti" while wondering whether or not Batman is actually dead.
  • In his eulogy for Batman at the start of the ambush for Sid, Joker opens with "Dear friends, today is The Day The Clown Cried..." a possible reference to the shelved Jerry Lewis film.
  • Bruce Timm stated that the idea for the episode came when he and Dini debated on what it would be like if Batman was not present for the majority of the episode. Indeed, it is one of the most acclaimed episodes of the series.
  • Sidney's nickname, "Sid the Squid", was apparently popular with the writers at Warner Bros. Animation at the time, as it was also used for one of the enemies of Animaniacs character Slappy Squirrel. It also appeared in the previous episode "Robin's Reckoning" as a past alias of Tony Zucco. The name "Squid" is improvised by Eddie G. when he notices the logo of a company called "Coburn Calamari"; "Killer Coburn" was another of Zucco's aliases.
  • Harley playing the kazoo while the coffin rolls down into the acid during the ambush is a parody of the funeral for Mr. Spock in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
  • The idea that the Joker does not want Batman dead and enjoys fighting him time and time again is reminiscent of one often put forward in various DC continuities, most notably in Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, The Dark Knight, Batman: Arkham Asylum and Batman: Arkham City.
  • In Mark Hamill's introduction for the book "The Joker: A Visual History Of The Clown Prince Of Crime" (2011), he specifically mentioned the scene from this episode where Joker gave Batman's solemn eulogy, casually sent Sid to his death, and then said "Well, that was fun! Who's for Chinese?" Hamill credits both the scene and the line, "Without Batman, crime has no punchline", with being the single most significant moment to him "getting" the character of the Joker. Years later, Hamill would perform the eulogy in Star Wars Celebration VI.[3]

Cast[]

Actor Role
Kevin Conroy Batman
Robert Costanzo Harvey Bullock
Matt Frewer Sidney
Mark Hamill The Joker
Maurice LaMarche Murphy
Ingrid Oliu Renee Montoya
Robert Picardo Eddie G.
Arleen Sorkin Harley Quinn
John Vernon Rupert Thorne

Uncredited appearances[]

Quotes[]

Bullock: Uh, Montoya, word is coming in from the streets on a homicide victim.
Montoya: We have an ID?
Bullock: Yeah, it's uh, (pauses) It's Batman.
Montoya: What?! How?!
Bullock: That explosion at the Customs House! They said it's the work of some mastermind called the Squid.

Bullock: Hey, don't I know you?
Harleen Quinzel: I believe I served you a subpoena once. It was a small subpoena.

Joker: Where is he? He's never been this late before. There's a certain rhythm to these things. I cause trouble, he shows up, we have some laughs, and the game starts all over again. Only now, thanks to you, I've got this terrible feeling that he's..........really not coming.

Joker: Without Batman, crime has no punchline.

Harley: You know what's great about you, puddin'? You really put the "fun" in "funeral".

Joker: (giving off a speech during the ambush) Dear friends...Today is the day that the clown cried. And he cries not for the passing of one man, but for the death of a dream. The dream that he would someday taste the ultimate victory over his hated enemy. For it was the Batman who made me the happy soul I am today. How I agonized over the perfect way to thank him for that. Perhaps with a cyanide pie in the face. Or an exploding whoopee cushion playfully planted in the Batmobile. But those dreams were dashed by the weaselly little gunsel sitting there in our midst. The cowardly insignificant ganef who probably got lucky when Batman slipped on the slime trail this loser left behind him. This mound of diseased hyena filth who's not fit to lick the dirt from my spats!...But I digress. The time for sorrow has passed. It's time to look ahead to a future filled with smiles. And I'll be smiling again just as soon as we take that man there and slap him in that box there, and roll him into that vat of acid there!

Joker: (after the ambush; sighs heavily) Well, that was fun! Who's for Chinese?

Thorne: So the famous Sid the Squid is nothing but a pathetic victim of circumstance. Just how stupid do you think I am?
Sidney: Excuse me?
Thorne: You think I didn't hear the rumors of the third-rate stumblebum who rubbed out the Batman? And now you say you accidentally made a fool of the Joker? Nobody's that lucky or stupid!
Sidney: Yes, I am. Honest!

Thorne: Sure I'll get you out of Gotham, Sidney, in a pine box!

Batman: (slams Throne's arm on his desk) That's for pulling a gun. (throws Thorne across the room) That's for the drugs. (finally punches Thorne out cold) And that's for any I missed.

Sidney: Guess I can't win for losing, huh?
Batman: I don't know. In the right environment, a man of your dangerous reputation could still get a lot of respect.

Sidney: A big shot at last!

References[]

  1. "Knight Vision: That Master of Dark Deco, Eric Radomski, Looks Behind the Mask of the Animated Batman" by Bob Miller - Comics Scene #43 (June 1993)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Episode Guide" - Cinefantastique Vol. 24 #6/Vol. 25 #1 (February 1994)
  3. From Jedi to Joker: Mark Hamill at Star Wars Celebration VI - Part 2 - Tampa Bay Pop Culture | Examiner.com
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