4. Terry McGinnis
(Batman Beyond)
It is not secret that I am a huge Batman fan and I have been
one ever since I was a little kid watching Batman:
The Animated Series. Kevin Conroy, in my opinion, is Batman and nobody else
in television, film, or video games will ever take his place. As time
progressed, Superman received his own show and it was only inevitable that the
two heroes would cross paths. As the popularity of these two shows increased
and the DC animated universe became intertwined, spinoff series were discussed
and greenlit. Enter the first of these series, Batman Beyond. What could have just been a kid show about a young futuristic
Batman turned out to be my favorite out of the DC animated universe. Wait, did
I say Kevin Conroy is Batman? Oh, sorry, I meant Will Friedle.
Ok, I am somewhat joking because Kevin Conroy will always be
Bruce Wayne’s Batman, but Friedle portrays Terry McGinnis who is my favorite
Batman out of them all. But, the original Batman is a classic, why would I like
the beyond counterpart better? Well, there are a number of reasons I like Terry
McGinnis better than Bruce Wayne. First Bruce Wayne is utterly psychotic. Have
you ever read any of Grant Morrison’s run on Batman, the Batman of Zur-En-Arrh,
anyone? Bruce Wayne’s Batman is a man who is just too obsessed with his war on
crime that it has clouded and pushed out every other aspect of his life. Terry
McGinnis, on the other hand, experiences a tragedy in the death of his father
but deals with this death in a much saner manner. While, he does don the Batman
suit to carry out vengeance against those who caused the death of his father,
his main purpose for being Batman is to make up for past sins. Also, McGinnis
is able to still lead a somewhat normal life. He even gets married eventually which is something Wayne was never able to do.
Second, I like my superheroes with powers and I consider
Batman Beyond as a batman with superpowers. His suit provides flight, super strength,
and super vulnerability. He is able to take punishment the original could only
think of. Last, the dynamic of having two minds behind Batman instead of one
makes Batman better in that if Wayne can’t think of something McGinnis can come
up with a solution which he does on different occasions. Plus, the entertainment
of having the two superb voice actors converse back and forth is great and
enjoyable.
Something that got me really interested in the character
again is the fact that DC Comics brought Terry McGinnis into the comics proper
and even put him into continuity with Damian Wayne behind the computer instead
of Bruce Wayne. However, with the death of Damian Wayne, I don’t know what that
does to the continuity. I have been enjoying Adam Beechen’s writing in the Batman Beyond Unlimited series which
continues the continuity of the animated universe (It is not a kid’s comic by any
means, however) and it is my favorite ongoing comic series at this time.
Best portrayal: Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker
Favorite moment(s): Terry
at the behest of Bruce Wayne takes out the Justice League after one of their
villains ransacks the mall where Terry’s Mom and Brother are shopping.
As he is chasing after Aquagirl in a water tank in the
Fortress of Solitude, hundreds of Starros latch onto Terry to control his mind.
With the batsuit, he electrocutes every one of them.
Batman of Zur-En-Arrh was originally an Alien Batman, that Morrison took the direction he did really cheezed me off. /nerdrage
ReplyDeleteI have to agree, the voice acting between Conroy and Friedle was absolutely what sold much of the two minds behind the mask for me, personally I was never much of one for the "Batman with Super Powers" but it was the next logical step for Wayne's war on crime in Gotham so..ok I let it slide.
Beyond was perhaps the best of the DCAU spin-offs, it would have been nice to have seen a more concrete series ending, but the whole thing done in JLU to show that Waller had a hand in making Terry into the man he is...That was really well done.
Yeah, Morrison bothered me with that choice. He also destroyed the notion of the bat mite.
ReplyDelete