skjam: Man in blue suit and fedora, wearing an eyeless mask emblazoned with the scales of justice (Default)
The Batman Superman Movie: World's Finest (1997) dir. Toshihiko Masuda

In Gotham City, the Joker (Mark Hamill) and Harley Quinn (Arlene Sorkin) steal a jade dragon. Based on fragments left behind, Batman suspects he knows where the Clown Prince of Crime is headed. As it so happens, Bruce Wayne has business in Metropolis; Waynetech has partnered with Lexcorp to develop space exploration robots. This puts him conveniently nearby when the Joker offers a deal to Lex Luthor (Clancy Brown) to murder Superman (Tim Daly) in exchange for one billion dollars.

While he's in town, Bruce discovers that he's got a bit of a thing for feisty reporter Lois Lane (Dana Delaney), and she reciprocates, much to the annoyance of her fellow journalist Clark Kent.

Superman isn't keen on having Batman (who has a shady reputation outside Gotham) operating in his city, and soon learns the Caped Crusader's secret identity and vice versa. The two heroes clash in both costumed and civilian identities, but must learn to work together to defeat the villains' plans.

This short movie is actually a edited compilation of a three-part story in the Superman: The Animated Series television show. It's a good edit that doesn't show the seams as much as some other compilation movies I've seen.

About the title: World's Finest Comics was an anthology comic book series that began featuring Batman (and Robin) teaming up with Superman in every issue starting with #71 (July 1954). Thus the title became a nickname for the team-up. The story also pays homage to the first "official" Batman-Superman team-up in Superman #76 (1952) which had Bruce Wayne and Clark Kent sharing a cruise ship stateroom...for reasons...and accidentally learning each other's secret identities. That story also featured a bit of teasing of a Lois/Bruce relationship--though she chose to grant Robin a "date" at the end! In this story, the cruise ship in danger appears as a way to get Superman out of town for a bit.

The 1990s Batman and Superman animated series were excellent, and spawned a couple decades of a "DC Animated Universe." They used innovative animation techniques and superior voice acting, and some of the character and characterization bled back into the print comics.

Harley Quinn here is before the background reveals and character development that moved her into sympathetic territory and eventual anti-hero status with her own comic books and animated series, but the madcap antics and zany personality make her a delight in the movie. By comparison, stoic Mercy Graves (Lisa Edelstein), bodyguard of "legitimate businessman" Lex Luthor, is a bit of a lump and spends most of her time on screen getting beat up. No spinoffs for her!

Joker and Lex Luthor also play off each other well. The Joker is manic and theatrical, while Lex is trying to appear civilized but has a nasty temper underneath.

A good character moment for Lois as she learns Batman's secret identity and keeps it safe without him needing to ask.

Content note: Comic book style violence, with Mercy suffering lasting injuries, and the Joker supposedly dying offscreen (no body found.) Some relatively scanty outfits on women, particularly in a bad guy dance club.

This is an excellent long episode of a classic animated series, well worth finding and watching again, with your kids if you have them.
skjam: Man in blue suit and fedora, wearing an eyeless mask emblazoned with the scales of justice (Default)
Green Lantern: First Flight (2009) Dir. Lauren Montgomery

Test Pilot Hal Jordan is practicing in a flight simulator when that non-vehicle is suddenly surrounded by a green glow and transported to a nearby desert. There he finds a crashed spacecraft and its dying pilot, an alien named Abin Sur. Abin Sur bequeaths his power ring, a device that uses green energy to create various effects, to Hal. The ring creates a uniform for Hal, making him a member of the Green Lantern Corps, an elite force of universal peacekeepers and law enforcement. To start with, he uses this power to become a superhero on Earth.

The story proper picks up several months later. The Guardians of the Universe have finally found time to send a delegation of Green Lanterns to Earth to summon Hal Jordan for examination. The squad is led by Sinestro (whose name in his native Korugarian means "trustworthy person who will never turn evil on you"), a top-ranked Lantern; and also includes attractive woman Boodikka, who seems sympathetic towards Hal; and Kilowog, a Lantern drill sergeant who is less than impressed that a human got hold of a power ring. They take him to Oa, center of the universe, and headquarters of the Corps.

The aliens that have previously visited Earth have given it bad reviews, and humans have a less than stellar reputation. So the Guardians are skeptical about Hal Jordan's qualifications for the Corps, and annoyed by his non-deferential attitude. "And then there's the smell." Named Guardians are Appa Ali Apsa, the nominal leader, Ranakar the hide-bound conservative, and Ganthet the relatively progressive. They're about ready to dismiss Hal out of hand, but Sinestro steps in to propose that he personally take charge of Hal's training to see if he's really got the stuff for the Corps.

Sinestro turns out to be a hardass who believes in on the job training, and the first case he's taking his rookie on is "find and capture the being who murdered Abin Sur." This turns out to be a nasty fellow name Cuch, who works for alien warlord Kanjar Ro. Hal intervenes when Sinestro's questioning of a contact looks more like torture than interrogation. Then the suspect shows up, a firefight ensues, and Hal eventually captures Cuch. Sinestro is less pleased by Hal's success in completing the actual mission, and more angry that Hal is "soft" and made Sinestro look "weak" in front of others. Sinestro's not satisfied with his role as a space cop, and wants to bring order and a lack of crime to the whole universe using the power that the Guardians now fritter away on "cleaning up garbage."

Sinestro interrogates Cuch, uninterrupted this time, and learns the location of Kanjar Ro, who is in possession of something called the "Yellow Element" which is the one thing the Corps' green energy is vulnerable to. The Guardians are not pleased with the comatose state Cuch is left in, and demand that Sinestro bring in Kanjar Ro alive and unharmed so the Guardians can do their own questioning. Sinestro grudgingly agrees.

The hunt for Kanjar Ro begins, but as long time fans of the Green Lantern Corps and/or people who just know how superhero stories work guessed, Sinestro has ulterior motives, and this spells trouble for Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps.

Since much of the same crew had previously worked on Justice League: The New Frontier which had covered Hal Jordan's origin story in some detail, they decided to recap it very briefly and move on to newer material. This movie's continuity is largely based on the Post-Crisis version of Hal Jordan's early days, having the later organization of the Green Lantern Corps retrofitted as something already existing when Hal gets the ring, and characters who originally joined the organization after Hal preceding him as established Lanterns, as well as giving him a personal relationship with Sinestro before that person left the Corps.

The animation is decent and gets the job done, and I also enjoyed the voice acting without thinking about it too hard.

Hal Jordan is sometimes considered the "boring" Green Lantern, as a standard straight white American man whose schtick was fearlessness. All the subsequent Green Lanterns were designed as complements or contrasts to him, so he sometimes comes across as generic, and too often his "fighter jock" personality traits are exaggerated to give him "personality." Here, that's somewhat muted by his being the "rookie" who's learning the ropes of his new job. Mind, to make him the central hero of the movie, in the last act the rest of the Corps is forced on to the sidelines to let Hal shine. I'd have liked to have seen the other Corps members trying to think of ways they could contribute despite their rings not being useful at the time.

I did like this version of the Weaponers of Qward, who were nicely creepy and do a good job of foreshadowing later developments, and the very E.E. "Doc" Smith way Hal deals with the Yellow Element.

Overall: An acceptable movie for introducing Hal Jordan as a solo(ish) character for potential future movies or a continuing series.

My DVD set also included a Duck Dodgers episode in which Dodgers (played by Daffy Duck) temporarily joins the Green Lantern Corps, and Sinestro is played much more in his Silver Age dastardly villain who just wants personal power mode; and two episodes of the Justice League Unlimited series in which Green Lantern John Stewart, Batman and Wonder Woman are sucked into the Wild West and then the dark future of Batman Beyond by Chronos the Time Thief. The second episode has a brief Hal Jordan appearance.

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