
This week saw the release of DC's latest animated feature, "Batman: Under the Red Hood," and I've got the feeling that if I'd seen it when I was 15, I would've absolutely loved it.
As it stands, though, at 27, I was a little more apprehensive going in. For one thing, I'm not a huge fan of the original comic book story it was based on, although I'm more than willing to concede that Judd Winick's work on "Batman" is far and away the best thing he's done in super-hero comics. I remember him saying in an interview that as a fan, he was a little let down by the fact that the reveal of Jason Todd as the villain behind "Hush" (which made absolutely no sense beyond just shock value) turned out to be a fake-out and wanted to do a real return of Jason Todd using that as a springboard.
For me, though, that's flawed right from the start. Even putting aside the fact that the fans pretty much had their say on the matter thanks to a 1-900 number, "Death in the Family," the story where Jason Todd is killed, this is such an important moment for Batman, Much like the way I feel about Barry Allen, I don't think you can get more storytelling potential out of bringing him back than you already have from his death.
Of course, if you'd asked me in 2004, I probably would've said the same thing about Captain America's sidekick Bucky, but Ed Brubaker and Steve Epting did a pretty solid job of bringing him back. But his death -- which happened off-panel and was revealed in flashback, not as the centerpiece of a story -- is a different matter. Either way, I went in with opinions that the average viewer might not have, and unfortunately, the movie didn't do a whole lot to sway my opinion.
It's problematic in a lot of areas, one of the more notable among them being that there's never any doubt that the Red Hood is, in fact, Jason Todd, which we know because the first five minutes are an abbreviated recap of "Death in the Family" in which Jason gets crowbarred and exploded, serving no other purpose than to set up his return.It's actually done pretty well from a storytelling standpoint, although it lacks the sort of visceral impact of the comic, mostly because the TV-friendly lack of blood makes Robin look more "Battle Damaged" than "Beaten To Death." It's compressed to the high notes that make up All You Really Need To Know: The Joker kills Robin and Batman doesn't get there in time to save him.
It does, however, beg the question of why they just didn't go ahead and do a "Death in the Family" movie. To me, it seems like DC's animated films are geared towards either original stories (like the "Wonder Woman" and "Green Lantern: First Flight" films) or modifying more recent comics ("New Frontier," the "Superman/Batman" films, and the recently announced "All Star Superman"), so maybe it's just a matter of "Death in the Family" being too old, despite the fact that the comic still sells pretty well in paperback.
Even if the goal is to make the movies stand on their own, a "Death in the Family" would at least provide a wider context, and there's more to it than just the death of Robin. But instead, we've just got "Under the Red Hood," and while there wasn't much of a mystery to the comic (other than the "oh man, are they actually going to bring back Jason Todd?!" questions raised by the teases and solicitations), it was an aspect of it that's done away with here, which leads to long, boring scenes of Batman running DNA tests and wondering if it's really him while the audience waits patiently for Batman to catch up.
I'm going to go out on a limb here, but the average TV viewer should probably never be able to reach a conclusion faster than the World's Greatest Detective. Just a thought.

Worse than that, though, is the movie's dialogue, which reaches its absolute nadir when Nightwing shows up.
The major problem here is that I can see no other reason for Nightwing to be in this movie other than to provide ascendant geek icon Neil Patrick Harris with a role. Winick, who wrote the movie as well as the original comics, gives him nothing to say but the obvious. In one of the opening sequences, he and Batman team up to fight Amazo, and when Amazo starts flying, Nightwing asks "did you know he could fly?" When Amazo shoots lasers out of his eyes, Nightwing says "Lasers! He's got lasers!" We know, dude. We can see it.
Eventually, Nightwing hurts his leg, wraps it up in bandages, and then is never seen again, as though the movie itself gets fed up with having him around. It's a shame, too: Harris is a solid voice actor and does a pretty good job with what he's given; it's just that what he's given is pretty terrible.
But it's not limited to him. A good three-quarters of the dialogue in this thing feels like it comes straight from the Batman Character Cliche Generator, and the exposition is an absolute chore to listen to. Does Batman really need to explain to a gang of thugs that Amazo is "a highly advanced cybernetic android equipped with the ability to absorb the power of super-humans?" Of course he doesn't. But someone needs to explain it to us, and they're the characters in the scene, so that's that. At one point, during a sequence where Ra's al-Ghul talks about bringing Jason Todd back from the dead, he even starts a sentence with "as you know...." If Batman already knows it, why are you saying it to him?
It's exposition that feels like exposition, and it's one of the most noticeable things that can pull a viewer right out of the story.
There are also scenes that are genuinely hilarious that I'm pretty sure aren't meant to be, like Jason's emergence from the Lazarus pit:

It's never really explained why he's dressed like a mummy, and the scene where he spazzes out and starts poking dudes in the eye could've been lifted straight from "the Venture Brothers." Not sure that was the desired effect.
But before you get the idea that I absolutely hated it, there's a lot to like about the movie. As I mentioned above with Harris, the voice acting's solid: Bruce Greenwood as Batman suffers by not being Kevin Conroy and the same goes for Jason Isaacs as Ra's al-Ghul not being David Warner, but Jensen Ackles does a fine job as the Red Hood and John DiMaggio (who plays Aquaman on "Batman: The Brave and the Bold") is a real standout as the Joker.
More importantly, though, the action scenes are fantastic. The DC animated movies that I've seen have all had top-notch quality as far as animation, and the fight scenes are fluid and dynamic with excellent choreography. They really feel like there's some emotional weight to them, too, and they do a lot to counteract the effect of the dialogue by making it seem exciting. Plus, really neat set pieces, like Batman jumping through a car that gets thrown at him (which I believe was lifted from "Batman vs. the Incredible Hulk") and slapping miniature jet engines on things and people to make them shoot down alleys into walls. So goofy, but so fun.
And there's even some really good characterization. I absolutely loved this movie's version of Black Mask, as he is essentially Gotham City's Tony Montana. There's even a running gag of him employing lieutenants for the sole purpose of punching out whenever he gets mad at Batman that's actually really funny, and very reminiscent of the "Old" (read: pre-super-hero comics) Judd Winick:

In the end, though, it all evens out to something that just feels like a long -- but not too long, it's only 75 minutes -- and mediocre dream-sequence episode of "Justice League." I've been waiting since the start of DC's direct-to-video animated movies to hit the one that I feel like I need to own rather than just give a watch whenever it shows up on Netflix, and sadly, this isn't it.
But hey, there's always "All Star Superman."

































Comments:
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Thursday 29 July
By coren
While I felt like the proving it was Jason bit went on too long, Batman pretty much had it figured out much earlier in the movie. And yeah, we were ahead of him on that score, but like you said, we had the advantage of the "Death in the Family" bit to give it away - if it was several years ago that those events had happened instead of fifteen minutes, it might not have been so glaringly obvious.
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Wednesday 28 July
By David
You don't feel that way about "Crisis on Two Earths"? Your review was pretty darn positive.
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Wednesday 28 July
By Chris Sims
Yeah, I liked it a lot (except the one or two issues I brought up), but even so, I don't feel the need to ever go back and revisit it like I do with the source material, or even my favorite episodes of "Batman: The Animated Series" or "Superman" or "Batman Beyond" or "Justice League Unlimited." I'm not sure what it is. Maybe just the time investment?
Maybe it's the idea that if everything stands alone, then nothing really relates to anything else.
Wednesday 28 July
By Brad
I thought this was one of the best animated movies DC has put out.
You're right that there's no mystery to the Red Hood's identity, but I don't think the story is relying on that mystery either. Batman figures out Jason is the Red Hood after their first scene together. His running the DNA isn't him trying to figure out who the Red Hood is; it's him wanting to be sure, because Jason should be dead.
I thought Nightwing was a little superfluous too, but I thought his dialogue was more for comic relief than exposition. And the problem with that is he comes off more as a fifteen-year-old Spider-Man than a twenty-something Nightwing. And then he doesn't really do much. I also thought this was a pretty weak Joker, too. His laugh in particular wasn't over-the-top enough. He wasn't bad, but he didn't reach the impossibly high bar set by Mark Hamill, Heath Ledger, Jack Nicholson, or anyone else who had the character over the years.
But the two coolest parts of it are how closely it follows the comic--yet feels far better. I remember thumbing through these issues and not being terribly impressed, but it feels much more exciting here. Especially the final scene with Todd/Batman/Joker. And it's a movie that feels like it's set in a fully formed universe. Too often, these movies feel like isolated incidents, and you don't really get a sense that the characters do things outside of the time the movie spends with them. But here, you get references and cameos from other characters and villains. And they don't feel like fan-service. It feels more like a lived-in world with other crazy costumed characters.
I dunno. I just think you expected too much out of what was a really fun, true-to-comics comic book movie.
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Wednesday 28 July
By Josh
I tend to agree with Brad's assessment. It was especially refreshing to see Ubu and Talia there without the writers feeling like their presence had to be justified/explained or somehow woven into the story. It did feel like a full universe.
There was a moment as Jason Todd is beating Joker where Joker actually seems to be afraid/reluctant to be beaten or even to die. This misses the mark. I watched the 89 Batman recently along with Dark Knight and in both of those Nicholson and Ledger invite or leave themselves open to extreme physical violence. This Joker wants to hold on too much. And even if he is incidental to this story (it feels like it could have been any villain, so long as that villain had killed Jason Todd), everyone knows enough about the Joker and wouldn't be surprised or need an explanation of his motives.
I thought Greenwood did a fine job voicing the Batman. As much as I love Conroy, I have grown to accept and even enjoy other voice actors, such as Diedrich Bader from Batman: the Brave and the Bold.
Nightwing's dialogue was often awful, and it did detract from the story.
I haven't read the original story, but I have felt that Todd's return was a little contrived. I like what Morrison is doing with him, but I could have been spared his return. However, the movie itself is well done, and is one of the best of the animated movies (along with Wonder Woman and Crisis). I hope that they continue to improve and that they also start branching off into stories about other characters. I would love to see Batgirl year one turned into an animated movie or, finally the Judas Contract.
Wednesday 28 July
By Marcus Brut?
I didn't really care for DiMaggio's Joker. For me, it was too reminiscent of Hamill's, which just reminded me of how much better Hamill was.
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Wednesday 28 July
By sakuuya
How was the Showcase that comes with it? I'm honestly a bigger Jonah Hex fan than I am a Batman fan (blasphemy, I know), so the quality of the short will have a big impact on whether I decide to get this.
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Wednesday 28 July
By Chris Sims
I rented it through iTunes, so I didn't get the short.
Thursday 29 July
By Edward Liu
The "Jonah Hex" short is pretty cool. Nasty people doing nasty things to each other, and animated to look like it's shot through a dusty camera. Terrific action scene in the middle. I actually liked it better than the feature.
Wednesday 28 July
By Danny
I think that had the "Death in the Family" scene been placed in the heart of the movie, to give exposition and the movie start off with the new menace of the Red Hood, then perhaps it would have kept us guessing as well. Although anyone who reads comics should know the story, I feel this movie was made more for those with no prior knowledge to any of the events that had or were occurring at the time of viewing.
I felt the use of Nightwing was to emphasize the good son/bad son relationship between he and Jason Todd. A good example of this was Bruce "thanking" Dick, as Bruce was certifying the DNA results.
I viewed the movie last night with my gf and 13 yr old son, both of whom have no idea who the Red Hood, Jason Todd or Black Mask are/were. They found the movie very enjoyable and easy to follow. Again, that points out the thought that this movie was made for more than the comic enjoying community.
and the Ras Al Ghul explanation was a MUCH better way of delivering the return of jason Todd than that of Superboy punching a hole in reality allowing him to come back to life in the grave and dig his way out. Ugh.
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