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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:02,048 --> 00:00:05,343 Okay, this is from the directory that... 3 00:00:05,427 --> 00:00:09,639 This is from The Complete Directory of Prime Time TV Shows, 4 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 5 00:00:10,182 --> 00:00:14,311 and this is their little capsule summary of Batman: The Animated Series. 6 00:00:14,895 --> 00:00:18,648 "Gotham City's Caped Crusader returned in prime-time television 7 00:00:18,732 --> 00:00:22,027 "in this animated series that was much more somber in tone 8 00:00:22,110 --> 00:00:25,071 "than either the 1960s live-action Batman 9 00:00:25,322 --> 00:00:28,617 "or the animated versions that had run in the '70s and '80s. 10 00:00:29,201 --> 00:00:32,078 "This animated series was produced by Tim Burton." 11 00:00:32,162 --> 00:00:33,163 (LAUGHS) 12 00:00:34,414 --> 00:00:35,415 I don't think that's true. 13 00:00:38,835 --> 00:00:39,961 MICHAEL USLAN: Batman: The Animated Series 14 00:00:40,045 --> 00:00:41,213 really changed the way 15 00:00:41,296 --> 00:00:44,299 people were making animated drama. 16 00:00:44,799 --> 00:00:48,220 BRUCE TIMM: This was not the usual fare for kids' entertainment. 17 00:00:51,389 --> 00:00:53,475 TOM RUEGGER: We weren't just reinventing Batman. 18 00:00:54,726 --> 00:00:58,396 Batman's villain gallery was all being re-invented. 19 00:00:59,814 --> 00:01:01,358 ALAN BURNETT: Fox did not give us a lot of notes. 20 00:01:01,441 --> 00:01:02,817 They had some overall general notes, 21 00:01:02,901 --> 00:01:05,528 but, at least at first, they were pretty hands-off. 22 00:01:05,820 --> 00:01:07,822 BOB GOODMAN: I always look back at this series 23 00:01:07,906 --> 00:01:11,743 and I am stunned at the stories that we got away with telling. 24 00:01:11,826 --> 00:01:15,121 TIMM: We did push back, aggressively, because we felt like we kind of had to. 25 00:01:15,497 --> 00:01:18,750 There was many, many days when I would drive home and think, 26 00:01:18,833 --> 00:01:20,085 "Oh, I'm gonna get fired tomorrow." 27 00:01:20,168 --> 00:01:22,712 (TIRES SCREECH) 28 00:01:23,046 --> 00:01:25,465 ERIC RADOMSKI: We got an education while we were producing this series. 29 00:01:25,548 --> 00:01:28,385 RUEGGER: And it really was like watching these mini-movies. 30 00:01:28,468 --> 00:01:32,180 We didn't treat them like a TV show. We treated them like a motion picture. 31 00:01:33,682 --> 00:01:35,100 -(GRUNTS) -(GLASS BREAKING) 32 00:01:35,183 --> 00:01:37,686 -(ENGINE REVVING) -(TIRES SCREECHING) 33 00:01:40,146 --> 00:01:41,523 (EXPLOSION) 34 00:01:42,482 --> 00:01:45,944 (LAUGHING MANIACALLY) 35 00:02:04,671 --> 00:02:08,758 (SIREN WAILING) 36 00:02:09,050 --> 00:02:10,593 TIMM: We knew what we didn't want. 37 00:02:11,011 --> 00:02:15,181 We didn't want the show to seem like every other adventure show on TV. 38 00:02:23,315 --> 00:02:26,151 We wanted the show to be appealing to kids, 39 00:02:26,234 --> 00:02:29,988 because we knew that they were our primary intended audience. 40 00:02:30,071 --> 00:02:31,281 But at the same time, we wanted to show 41 00:02:31,364 --> 00:02:33,950 that we ourselves would watch, as adults. 42 00:02:35,744 --> 00:02:38,038 MIKE CARLIN: Every single project is a puzzle. 43 00:02:38,538 --> 00:02:44,336 And every puzzle has only one set of right pieces. 44 00:02:45,128 --> 00:02:47,130 And in Batman: The Animated Series, 45 00:02:47,213 --> 00:02:50,258 every single piece was the right piece to the puzzle. 46 00:02:54,679 --> 00:02:58,641 ANDREA ROMANO: This was a big paradigm shift in animation, 47 00:02:58,725 --> 00:02:59,893 this Batman series. 48 00:02:59,976 --> 00:03:02,103 Everybody looked at superheroes differently, 49 00:03:02,187 --> 00:03:04,230 everybody looked at cartoons differently. 50 00:03:05,982 --> 00:03:07,734 JEAN MACCURDY: The challenge was in the beginning. 51 00:03:07,817 --> 00:03:10,945 And convincing the powers that be 52 00:03:11,196 --> 00:03:16,076 that this look and the edginess of it could be successful. 53 00:03:16,743 --> 00:03:18,870 That, "Oh, it's so dark." 54 00:03:19,496 --> 00:03:22,916 Yes, that's why it's good. That's what's good about it, you know? 55 00:03:22,999 --> 00:03:26,336 And everybody was like, "Oh, I don't know." 56 00:03:26,544 --> 00:03:28,129 So, getting over that hurdle 57 00:03:28,213 --> 00:03:29,881 to the point where they'd let us go that way, 58 00:03:29,964 --> 00:03:31,466 that was the biggest challenge. 59 00:03:37,097 --> 00:03:38,098 Fortunately, you know, 60 00:03:38,181 --> 00:03:40,266 Eric and I were kind of in the right place at the right time. 61 00:03:40,517 --> 00:03:42,644 You know, we happened to be working at Warner Bros. 62 00:03:42,727 --> 00:03:47,315 When, you know, the prospect of doing an animated Batman show came up. 63 00:03:47,399 --> 00:03:51,194 And, you know, Jean's, like, dangling that brass ring 64 00:03:51,277 --> 00:03:52,695 and we're like, "Okay, grab it." 65 00:03:56,074 --> 00:03:58,493 RADOMSKI: And there's just an artistic integrity 66 00:03:58,576 --> 00:04:01,621 that was inherent to this series. 67 00:04:01,704 --> 00:04:05,458 And it was absolutely because of all of the people 68 00:04:05,542 --> 00:04:08,169 that really cared about what they were working on, 69 00:04:08,253 --> 00:04:09,879 and put their whole selves into it. 70 00:04:10,380 --> 00:04:12,382 And it just shows in the work. 71 00:04:12,465 --> 00:04:16,886 And the fact that it resonates with people and fans as long as it has 72 00:04:16,970 --> 00:04:18,096 is a testament to it. 73 00:04:18,179 --> 00:04:19,639 There's no other explanation other than that 74 00:04:19,722 --> 00:04:21,558 because it's just an animated show. 75 00:04:21,933 --> 00:04:24,561 But the fact that it had that impression, 76 00:04:25,311 --> 00:04:27,772 for me, is a result of the fact that, you know, 77 00:04:27,856 --> 00:04:34,404 that passion lives within the entire creation of that experience. 78 00:04:34,696 --> 00:04:39,033 So, to be part of that collective is just truly unique. 79 00:04:43,788 --> 00:04:46,916 The '66 Batman show with Adam West 80 00:04:47,000 --> 00:04:50,003 was actually my first exposure to Batman as a character. 81 00:04:50,086 --> 00:04:52,547 It was like my gateway drug. 82 00:04:55,258 --> 00:04:57,302 ROMANO: It was a show that we could watch with our parents 83 00:04:57,385 --> 00:04:58,887 and everybody was entertained. 84 00:05:00,305 --> 00:05:02,015 It was very cartoon-y. 85 00:05:03,266 --> 00:05:08,396 So, it was all that "pop"' "pow"' kind of Warhol pop art kind of way 86 00:05:08,480 --> 00:05:10,273 of viewing the story. 87 00:05:11,191 --> 00:05:12,358 TIMM: There was just something about it, you know, 88 00:05:12,442 --> 00:05:14,652 the whole "larger than life" aspect of it. 89 00:05:15,153 --> 00:05:16,988 The costumes and the sets. 90 00:05:20,283 --> 00:05:23,912 PAUL DINI: I was really invested in the show because for crazy villains 91 00:05:23,995 --> 00:05:25,830 like the Penguin and the Joker and everything, 92 00:05:26,206 --> 00:05:28,833 it really did seem to be, sort of, life and death stakes. 93 00:05:29,167 --> 00:05:30,668 And then a year later, 94 00:05:30,752 --> 00:05:32,795 there was a scene where Batman is singing 95 00:05:32,879 --> 00:05:34,547 I'm Called Little Buttercup to Robin. 96 00:05:34,631 --> 00:05:35,632 And I'm going, like, "Nah, I'm out. 97 00:05:36,382 --> 00:05:38,009 "I can't take this seriously." 98 00:05:40,136 --> 00:05:41,471 CONROY: People loved that show. 99 00:05:41,971 --> 00:05:45,308 But it's not at all what Bruce Timm was going to be going for in this show. 100 00:05:46,059 --> 00:05:48,811 ROMANO: And I liked the comedy of it, I liked the silliness of it. 101 00:05:48,895 --> 00:05:49,896 It didn't scare me. 102 00:05:50,313 --> 00:05:53,149 But then we made a cartoon series that was pretty damn scary. 103 00:05:59,072 --> 00:06:01,157 Once you got into the mid-to-late '80s, 104 00:06:01,241 --> 00:06:04,744 obviously, there was a seminal change in the type of stories that were told. 105 00:06:05,203 --> 00:06:07,205 Some of the most iconic Batman stories of all-time 106 00:06:07,288 --> 00:06:10,458 came out at that point, with Year One, Dark Knight Returns, 107 00:06:10,542 --> 00:06:11,709 Killing Joke. 108 00:06:11,793 --> 00:06:14,462 GOODMAN: The thing that really changed for me 109 00:06:14,546 --> 00:06:18,424 was The Dark Knight Returns graphic novel by Frank Miller. 110 00:06:18,716 --> 00:06:20,885 I think for everyone, there were new edges 111 00:06:20,969 --> 00:06:22,804 for the kind of stories you could tell with Batman. 112 00:06:22,971 --> 00:06:27,267 And it really redefined Batman stories ever since. 113 00:06:28,142 --> 00:06:31,688 The late '80s was... It was time for Batman. 114 00:06:32,397 --> 00:06:35,858 The whole world was saying, "We want some Batman." 115 00:06:36,484 --> 00:06:38,861 And that was, well, even before the movie came out. 116 00:06:39,070 --> 00:06:40,530 Before Tim Burton's movie came out. 117 00:06:42,282 --> 00:06:43,700 TIMM: You know, when I first got into the business, 118 00:06:43,783 --> 00:06:45,118 when I got into the animation business, 119 00:06:45,201 --> 00:06:47,912 it was a pretty dark time for the industry as a whole. 120 00:06:48,955 --> 00:06:51,666 There were the three networks. That was all you had. 121 00:06:51,749 --> 00:06:53,668 And the animation was all Saturday morning, 122 00:06:53,751 --> 00:06:56,754 and a lot of it was because they had a requirement 123 00:06:56,838 --> 00:06:59,716 to fill a certain amount of children's programming. 124 00:07:01,551 --> 00:07:03,845 It was always very children-orientated, 125 00:07:03,928 --> 00:07:05,513 even the action-adventure shows. 126 00:07:05,597 --> 00:07:07,181 And they were very formularized. 127 00:07:07,265 --> 00:07:08,516 You had to have a... 128 00:07:09,017 --> 00:07:11,352 An interesting sidekick all the time, 129 00:07:11,436 --> 00:07:14,814 and almost always, you had to have a funny animal character. 130 00:07:14,897 --> 00:07:18,359 So, when you did a show like Super Friends or something, it... 131 00:07:19,152 --> 00:07:21,904 You know, as somebody who had grown up with DC comics, 132 00:07:21,988 --> 00:07:25,491 it was like, "Well... Not the way I would have done it." 133 00:07:27,869 --> 00:07:29,495 DINI: The network had a very skewed vision 134 00:07:29,579 --> 00:07:32,248 of what they felt kids wanted to see. 135 00:07:32,332 --> 00:07:35,585 So, it's all shows about kids and kid issues. 136 00:07:35,668 --> 00:07:36,794 And it's not really funny. 137 00:07:39,589 --> 00:07:43,343 BURNETT: I started animation in '81 at Hanna-Barbera. 138 00:07:43,801 --> 00:07:45,845 The landscape was that animation 139 00:07:45,928 --> 00:07:48,848 was pretty much dedicated to kids two to eleven. 140 00:07:48,931 --> 00:07:51,351 And almost all of it was on Saturday morning. 141 00:07:57,148 --> 00:07:59,692 They always had in mind, whatever show it was, 142 00:07:59,776 --> 00:08:02,362 "Is this going to be okay for two-year-olds?" 143 00:08:03,321 --> 00:08:07,617 And that's what held back, for me, a lot of the creativity. 144 00:08:08,076 --> 00:08:12,163 SIDNEY IWANTER: They had to worry about making sure that the toys were sold, 145 00:08:12,246 --> 00:08:17,251 but also keeping the various pressure groups off their backs. 146 00:08:17,335 --> 00:08:18,670 And there was plenty of that. 147 00:08:19,962 --> 00:08:21,297 Not just, like, the PTA, 148 00:08:21,381 --> 00:08:24,676 but there were various... Action for Children's Television. 149 00:08:24,759 --> 00:08:28,304 You know, a lot of these people were constantly being called up to Congress, 150 00:08:28,388 --> 00:08:30,431 you know, to explain themselves. 151 00:08:31,140 --> 00:08:34,227 Children's programming, back then it was really rough. 152 00:08:34,310 --> 00:08:35,478 Congress got involved. 153 00:08:35,603 --> 00:08:38,564 And you know how great things are when Congress gets involved. 154 00:08:38,815 --> 00:08:41,484 The answer is... No! 155 00:08:42,902 --> 00:08:47,115 DINI: They would say, "Make it goofy, make it wacky, make it zany." 156 00:08:47,407 --> 00:08:49,534 But they had no idea what that was. 157 00:08:49,617 --> 00:08:52,245 It was never funny. It was just sort of on. 158 00:08:52,787 --> 00:08:53,788 (CRASHES) 159 00:09:00,461 --> 00:09:03,089 BURNETT: We had a wonderful broadcast standards woman on this show. 160 00:09:03,172 --> 00:09:04,215 Avery Cobern. 161 00:09:04,632 --> 00:09:07,468 She understood this was an afternoon show. 162 00:09:07,927 --> 00:09:12,014 And that we would be appealing to an older bunch of kids. 163 00:09:12,181 --> 00:09:14,684 That there would be guns and there would be fistfights. 164 00:09:15,351 --> 00:09:16,352 (YELLS) 165 00:09:16,602 --> 00:09:20,231 If there was something awry, she would have an answer for us. 166 00:09:20,565 --> 00:09:23,359 AVERY COBERN: I've had to do this at countless parties. 167 00:09:23,526 --> 00:09:24,902 "What do you do?" 168 00:09:25,236 --> 00:09:27,780 "BS&P." "What is that?" 169 00:09:27,864 --> 00:09:32,160 And I... Usually, I tell them and they still don't get it. 170 00:09:32,785 --> 00:09:35,413 And then I wind up saying, "You know, I censor the shows." 171 00:09:40,042 --> 00:09:42,545 But, really, I don't think of it as that. 172 00:09:42,628 --> 00:09:48,384 I think of it as an editor would work with a writer on a book. 173 00:09:50,762 --> 00:09:55,099 IWANTER: She is an unsung hero of this thing because if we had had 174 00:09:55,892 --> 00:10:00,605 a normal broadcast standards person from, like, the '60s or '70s, 175 00:10:02,523 --> 00:10:05,735 I would've been flayed alive. 176 00:10:05,818 --> 00:10:11,574 You couldn't have someone hit someone with a frying pan. 177 00:10:11,824 --> 00:10:12,825 (WHAM) 178 00:10:14,118 --> 00:10:17,371 Because a child would have access to a frying pan. 179 00:10:17,455 --> 00:10:22,585 You know, you'd have to show seat belts when a child rode in a car. 180 00:10:23,044 --> 00:10:28,090 All of those examples of a general policy to keep kids safe. 181 00:10:29,050 --> 00:10:30,176 IWANTER: The idea came 182 00:10:30,802 --> 00:10:33,930 to try and create a Saturday morning network. 183 00:10:34,013 --> 00:10:37,141 That would... That was going to be the very first one created 184 00:10:37,391 --> 00:10:39,769 since the very early '50s. 185 00:10:40,394 --> 00:10:43,397 We have to have cartoons. We have to have advertisers. 186 00:10:43,815 --> 00:10:45,316 We have to have eyeballs. 187 00:10:45,858 --> 00:10:47,193 But what about the content? 188 00:10:47,819 --> 00:10:49,612 How's the content gonna be different? 189 00:10:50,738 --> 00:10:54,450 'Cause now you're talking 1990 and not 1952. 190 00:10:56,035 --> 00:11:00,122 COBERN: We decided that we were going to do something different. 191 00:11:00,206 --> 00:11:01,624 And it would be a show 192 00:11:01,874 --> 00:11:06,128 aimed at comic-book lovers in their tweens. 193 00:11:06,295 --> 00:11:08,422 We would go over every scene 194 00:11:09,006 --> 00:11:12,301 and all the action and talk about standards. 195 00:11:13,010 --> 00:11:15,346 I definitely had great respect 196 00:11:15,721 --> 00:11:18,474 for those people that were producing this show. 197 00:11:30,611 --> 00:11:31,988 I'd started working in the '80s 198 00:11:32,071 --> 00:11:36,450 and the very first show I worked on was a very... 199 00:11:37,785 --> 00:11:39,745 It was a puppy show for ABC. 200 00:11:43,499 --> 00:11:46,502 You know, they had the Wuzzles and the Gummi Bears. 201 00:11:47,169 --> 00:11:49,755 So, we're talking fairly light fare. 202 00:11:49,922 --> 00:11:51,716 The early part of the '80s, we were pushing the wheel. 203 00:11:52,216 --> 00:11:54,969 And we were doing what we could in Saturday morning 204 00:11:55,052 --> 00:11:58,973 but it was very restricted with the programming rules. 205 00:11:59,056 --> 00:12:00,766 With the broadcast standards. 206 00:12:01,183 --> 00:12:03,728 It began to get hard to come up with stories 207 00:12:03,811 --> 00:12:07,273 that would interest me, the writer, as well as the kids, 208 00:12:08,441 --> 00:12:10,192 because of the BS&P pressure. 209 00:12:11,652 --> 00:12:15,364 I had to make shows that were essentially, you know, action shows. 210 00:12:15,615 --> 00:12:18,159 But the action had to be so toned down that 211 00:12:18,534 --> 00:12:20,161 you could hardly call it an action show. 212 00:12:21,495 --> 00:12:24,040 We ended up with having the hero standing around talking a lot. 213 00:12:24,123 --> 00:12:27,418 You won't get away with this, you rotten rug jockey! 214 00:12:27,501 --> 00:12:30,338 Don't worry, General. We'll take care of him. 215 00:12:30,504 --> 00:12:31,756 RIBA: We had the army in there 216 00:12:31,839 --> 00:12:33,341 but they weren't allowed to have weapons. 217 00:12:33,674 --> 00:12:35,259 No guns were ever allowed. 218 00:12:35,343 --> 00:12:36,344 They could have shovels. 219 00:12:40,431 --> 00:12:45,102 RICH FOGEL: I worked on the last incarnation of Super Friends 220 00:12:45,186 --> 00:12:47,063 with Alan Burnett at Hanna-Barbera. 221 00:12:48,022 --> 00:12:52,693 And it was very frustrating trying to tell a superhero story 222 00:12:52,777 --> 00:12:55,196 at that time on the networks. 223 00:12:55,404 --> 00:12:57,990 Be careful, Robin. One slip and we're done for. 224 00:12:58,366 --> 00:12:59,951 I was about five shows into it 225 00:13:00,117 --> 00:13:04,997 and I said, "I'm going to have somebody shrink the superheroes 226 00:13:05,247 --> 00:13:06,749 "so that they fight small things." 227 00:13:07,041 --> 00:13:08,292 And that's a sign 228 00:13:08,709 --> 00:13:11,087 (CHUCKLES) that there's trouble. 229 00:13:11,253 --> 00:13:12,713 When you shrink your superheroes. 230 00:13:12,880 --> 00:13:14,840 Cause that's... You're desperate for stories. 231 00:13:16,175 --> 00:13:18,803 You won't be bugging me much longer. 232 00:13:18,886 --> 00:13:21,222 We had a scene where 233 00:13:21,305 --> 00:13:24,308 Robin kicks a spider off a table, that's gonna attack him. 234 00:13:27,645 --> 00:13:30,147 And we got the BS&P note, 235 00:13:31,148 --> 00:13:32,316 "Is the spider okay? 236 00:13:32,400 --> 00:13:34,777 "We have to show that the spider is okay." 237 00:13:35,152 --> 00:13:37,780 And so, we had a panel put in the storyboard 238 00:13:37,863 --> 00:13:40,116 where you see the spider crawling away. (CHUCKLES) 239 00:13:40,700 --> 00:13:42,785 That first year on Super Friends was just... 240 00:13:42,994 --> 00:13:45,705 I don't even wanna... I've never gone back to see them. 241 00:13:45,788 --> 00:13:47,498 I'm sorry, Dr. Gulliver, 242 00:13:47,581 --> 00:13:50,334 but there's got to be a better way than shrinking people. 243 00:13:50,793 --> 00:13:53,337 ROMANO: My introduction to the superhero world 244 00:13:53,421 --> 00:13:54,922 in animation was with Super Friends, 245 00:13:55,715 --> 00:13:57,883 which I just thought was goofy as hell. 246 00:13:57,967 --> 00:13:59,427 Forgive me, it just was. 247 00:13:59,552 --> 00:14:01,220 The drawings were not good. 248 00:14:01,303 --> 00:14:03,556 The voices were god-awful. 249 00:14:03,723 --> 00:14:05,224 (LAUGHS WICKEDLY) 250 00:14:05,516 --> 00:14:06,976 And the scripts were really pretty bad. 251 00:14:07,059 --> 00:14:11,564 You really had your hands tied in terms of how the stories worked out. 252 00:14:11,647 --> 00:14:13,024 You could not have conflict. 253 00:14:13,607 --> 00:14:16,569 You could not have violence of any sort. 254 00:14:16,694 --> 00:14:17,862 They didn't like punching. 255 00:14:17,945 --> 00:14:21,741 I mean, I'm talking about Superman hits a wall instead of a person, 256 00:14:21,824 --> 00:14:23,075 but that was too violent. 257 00:14:24,243 --> 00:14:27,163 FOGEL: The standards and practices were so restrictive 258 00:14:27,246 --> 00:14:30,416 that I remember in the last season of Super Friends, 259 00:14:30,499 --> 00:14:33,252 we introduced Darkseid into it. 260 00:14:33,461 --> 00:14:35,755 And there was a great deal of conversation about 261 00:14:35,838 --> 00:14:38,424 whether or not we could use the name "Darkseid" 262 00:14:38,674 --> 00:14:39,967 or whether it was too scary. 263 00:14:40,468 --> 00:14:41,844 That was the climate that we were in. 264 00:14:42,136 --> 00:14:43,679 The industry just wasn't thriving. 265 00:14:43,804 --> 00:14:47,892 (LAUGHING MANIACALLY) 266 00:14:55,232 --> 00:14:58,694 A lot of the earlier generation of, you know, the famous Nine Old Men, 267 00:14:58,778 --> 00:15:01,697 the star animators from going back to like, the Snow White days, 268 00:15:02,531 --> 00:15:04,950 a lot of them were, you know, retiring or dying off, 269 00:15:05,034 --> 00:15:08,162 and there wasn't... There didn't seem to be a whole new generation of people 270 00:15:08,245 --> 00:15:09,663 who were being mentored 271 00:15:09,747 --> 00:15:13,542 and, you know, brought into the business to further that. 272 00:15:13,626 --> 00:15:18,422 DINI: There was really nobody in the middle-age range doing animation. 273 00:15:18,506 --> 00:15:19,507 There were young guys 274 00:15:19,590 --> 00:15:24,011 like myself and Bruce Timm and Tom, I think, is a little older, 275 00:15:24,095 --> 00:15:26,430 in our 20s, and we were just starting our careers 276 00:15:26,555 --> 00:15:28,390 in, like, '79, '80, '81. 277 00:15:28,474 --> 00:15:30,184 And then there were the guys 278 00:15:30,267 --> 00:15:33,521 who had been on the original Disney features and at Warner Bros. 279 00:15:33,604 --> 00:15:35,523 And they were all in their late 70s and 80s, 280 00:15:35,606 --> 00:15:36,816 and they were looking to retire. 281 00:15:40,820 --> 00:15:42,279 TIMM: And then here at Warner Bros. 282 00:15:42,363 --> 00:15:46,075 In '89, I think, was when we first started doing Tiny Toons. 283 00:15:46,492 --> 00:15:48,828 That was our first big show as a... 284 00:15:49,328 --> 00:15:52,873 As a newly revamped studio for TV cartoons. 285 00:15:53,165 --> 00:15:54,959 And fortunately, it was a huge hit. 286 00:15:57,586 --> 00:16:00,339 RUEGGER: I met Jean MacCurdy when I was working at Hanna-Barbera 287 00:16:00,422 --> 00:16:02,341 and I had been there for a number of years. 288 00:16:02,424 --> 00:16:03,634 I had done a lot of Scooby. 289 00:16:04,009 --> 00:16:05,678 Jean MacCurdy was my boss there. 290 00:16:05,761 --> 00:16:08,514 She was in charge of all the writers at Hanna-Barbera. 291 00:16:09,056 --> 00:16:10,474 And at some point, she said, 292 00:16:10,558 --> 00:16:12,476 "I can't do this anymore, I'm out of here." 293 00:16:13,853 --> 00:16:16,939 Boom! She was gone and she was over at Warner Bros. 294 00:16:17,439 --> 00:16:20,651 And they had no real production facility 295 00:16:20,734 --> 00:16:22,611 going on at all at Warner Bros. 296 00:16:23,904 --> 00:16:28,242 Steven Spielberg and Terry Semel at Warner Bros. 297 00:16:28,325 --> 00:16:29,743 Got together one day and they said, 298 00:16:29,827 --> 00:16:33,205 "Hey, let's make sort of a junior version of Looney Tunes." 299 00:16:34,415 --> 00:16:36,208 (TINY TOONS THEME SONG PLAYING) 300 00:16:40,254 --> 00:16:43,340 I came to Warner Bros., it was late in November. 301 00:16:43,424 --> 00:16:44,800 It was right around Thanksgiving. 302 00:16:44,884 --> 00:16:48,762 And the first week, in January of 1989, 303 00:16:49,597 --> 00:16:51,265 there was a press conference with Spielberg announcing 304 00:16:51,348 --> 00:16:53,058 we were going to produce 65 half-hours. 305 00:16:53,184 --> 00:16:55,311 I had been there, what, six weeks. 306 00:17:00,191 --> 00:17:02,109 RUEGGER: And they went to MacCurdy, who was in charge 307 00:17:02,193 --> 00:17:03,527 of the animation department, 308 00:17:03,611 --> 00:17:05,237 which was really inactive. 309 00:17:05,446 --> 00:17:07,948 And they said, "Who do we get to make this?" 310 00:17:08,032 --> 00:17:11,785 They said, you know, "What's it gonna take to put this together?" 311 00:17:11,869 --> 00:17:14,788 Because at first they were talking about farming it out to HB. 312 00:17:15,164 --> 00:17:17,249 And I went, "No, no, no. You can do this here." 313 00:17:17,333 --> 00:17:20,502 And she said... She had the nerve to say, 314 00:17:20,586 --> 00:17:22,880 "Why don't you let us do it? 315 00:17:22,963 --> 00:17:25,966 "Why don't you let me start a division of animation?" 316 00:17:26,759 --> 00:17:29,345 And they said, "Well, that's pretty chancey." 317 00:17:29,428 --> 00:17:31,513 She said, "Let's give it a try, I know some really good people." 318 00:17:31,972 --> 00:17:33,265 And so, it was like, 319 00:17:33,349 --> 00:17:34,767 "How am I gonna do this? 320 00:17:34,850 --> 00:17:36,435 "I don't... I'm not real sure." 321 00:17:36,685 --> 00:17:39,772 And, you know, thank God for Tom Ruegger, 322 00:17:39,855 --> 00:17:41,482 who I'd worked with at Hanna-Barbera. 323 00:17:41,732 --> 00:17:44,235 Tom was willing to come on board and take it on, 324 00:17:44,360 --> 00:17:47,863 and really had a vision for what it should be. 325 00:17:48,447 --> 00:17:51,200 I was fortunate enough to be the first hire 326 00:17:51,700 --> 00:17:56,330 and was asked to come in and do development on Tiny Toons. 327 00:17:57,289 --> 00:17:58,999 At that point, Warner Bros... 328 00:17:59,875 --> 00:18:02,336 They just wanted to please Steven Spielberg. 329 00:18:02,544 --> 00:18:03,879 RADOMSKI: Spielberg was at his peak. 330 00:18:04,463 --> 00:18:08,509 So, Warner Bros. was all in on getting Steven... 331 00:18:08,592 --> 00:18:10,844 Maintaining Steven's happiness. 332 00:18:12,388 --> 00:18:14,848 RUEGGER: Please, Mr. Spielberg. 333 00:18:15,140 --> 00:18:17,142 We don't care if the show's a piece of junk. 334 00:18:17,309 --> 00:18:19,103 I don't care if this is on-budget or over-budget. 335 00:18:19,186 --> 00:18:21,647 Don't care if it's, you know, a hit or a failure. 336 00:18:21,730 --> 00:18:23,857 RUEGGER: We don't care if it's a disaster. 337 00:18:24,149 --> 00:18:27,444 MACCURDY: All we care about is keeping Steven Spielberg happy. 338 00:18:27,611 --> 00:18:29,822 But if Steven's happy at the end of the process, 339 00:18:29,905 --> 00:18:32,491 we'll be happy, because we'll have this great relationship. 340 00:18:34,410 --> 00:18:35,995 TIMM: You know, he was a big part of 341 00:18:36,078 --> 00:18:39,039 why Tiny Toons had a lot more money thrown at it 342 00:18:39,123 --> 00:18:41,083 than previous cartoons for TV. 343 00:18:42,876 --> 00:18:48,799 MACCURDY: They were so supportive in terms of money, time, all of that. 344 00:18:49,842 --> 00:18:51,760 And Steven attracted talent, 345 00:18:52,177 --> 00:18:56,682 and the fact that we wanted to be really competitive 346 00:18:56,765 --> 00:18:58,600 and were willing to pay to be competitive 347 00:18:59,310 --> 00:19:00,936 really made a big difference. 348 00:19:01,103 --> 00:19:02,479 We got good people. 349 00:19:02,730 --> 00:19:05,691 TIMM: Had a really decent-sized budget, we had a decent-sized schedule. 350 00:19:06,525 --> 00:19:08,777 And, of course, the writing and the animation was all really good. 351 00:19:09,028 --> 00:19:10,029 It was good. 352 00:19:24,668 --> 00:19:27,087 GLEN MURAKAMI: Tiny Toons had happened at Warner Bros. 353 00:19:27,171 --> 00:19:30,049 And that was kind of the golden age of... 354 00:19:30,591 --> 00:19:33,802 Like, the new revival of animation in the '90s. 355 00:19:35,220 --> 00:19:37,639 Frank Miller's Dark Knight had come out as a comic 356 00:19:38,057 --> 00:19:41,393 and then the Michael Keaton, Tim Burton Batman came out. 357 00:19:41,727 --> 00:19:45,731 So, things were pushing in a different direction, 358 00:19:45,814 --> 00:19:47,524 Batman-wise and comic-wise. 359 00:19:49,234 --> 00:19:50,736 USLAN: There was a revolution going on 360 00:19:50,944 --> 00:19:52,988 that was changing the movie industry, 361 00:19:53,072 --> 00:19:55,491 that was changing the television industry, 362 00:19:55,574 --> 00:19:57,910 that was changing the comic book industry. 363 00:19:58,535 --> 00:20:01,997 And the two culprits behind this 364 00:20:02,081 --> 00:20:06,377 were our first Batman live-action movie in 1989, 365 00:20:07,169 --> 00:20:09,129 followed by Batman: The Animated Series. 366 00:20:09,671 --> 00:20:13,550 And you can't talk about one without also talking about the other. 367 00:20:15,886 --> 00:20:20,849 Tim Burton's Batman feature film was a monster hit. Just huge. 368 00:20:20,974 --> 00:20:22,935 It was like printing money. 369 00:20:23,060 --> 00:20:25,729 The revolutionary aspects of this were amazing. 370 00:20:25,813 --> 00:20:29,108 Tim had to wrestle with the concept 371 00:20:29,191 --> 00:20:30,943 that any move he made 372 00:20:31,026 --> 00:20:33,904 could wind up having people unintentionally laugh. 373 00:20:34,363 --> 00:20:38,325 At the movie, at Batman, at the situations. 374 00:20:38,700 --> 00:20:41,703 That was pretty terrifying, but he figured it out. 375 00:20:41,954 --> 00:20:44,039 And I'll never forget the day he said to me, 376 00:20:44,206 --> 00:20:46,208 "You know, Micheal, in order to do this seriously, 377 00:20:46,708 --> 00:20:48,919 "this movie is not going to be about Batman." 378 00:20:49,378 --> 00:20:52,381 And I said, "What are you talking about?" 379 00:20:52,923 --> 00:20:55,426 He said, "No, this movie has got to be about Bruce Wayne." 380 00:20:58,137 --> 00:21:00,264 RIBA: It was very popular with kids. 381 00:21:00,597 --> 00:21:04,393 The stage was really set for Batman to appear in some form or another. 382 00:21:04,601 --> 00:21:06,895 Warners wanted to make the cartoon, Fox wanted to air it. 383 00:21:07,479 --> 00:21:11,900 And they realized that it was different than what had gone before. 384 00:21:11,984 --> 00:21:16,947 Every single genre movie since 1989, 385 00:21:17,531 --> 00:21:21,618 I don't care if it's a superhero, if it's a general comic book movie, 386 00:21:21,827 --> 00:21:23,912 if it's sci-fi, whatever. 387 00:21:24,580 --> 00:21:26,957 Every single one is still, to this day, 388 00:21:27,040 --> 00:21:29,084 being influenced by the vision of Tim Burton. 389 00:21:35,674 --> 00:21:39,344 TIMM: There was a lot of other adventure shows on TV. 390 00:21:40,012 --> 00:21:43,974 They were, pretty much all of them, were all toy tie-ins. 391 00:21:44,683 --> 00:21:46,643 RADOMSKI: Prior to that, a lot of the influence 392 00:21:46,727 --> 00:21:50,105 came out of companies that wanted to capitalize on 393 00:21:50,189 --> 00:21:53,275 brands that may have had some life in theatrical, 394 00:21:53,817 --> 00:21:55,944 and to build on that they could do an episodic series, 395 00:21:56,028 --> 00:21:59,156 which basically advertised the toys for a series. 396 00:21:59,239 --> 00:22:01,992 So, the focus on quality entertainment 397 00:22:02,075 --> 00:22:04,286 and storytelling was not at the forefront. 398 00:22:09,291 --> 00:22:11,877 GOODMAN: One thing I remember coming into work 399 00:22:11,960 --> 00:22:17,382 on the Batman: Animated Series was a sense of relief. 400 00:22:17,841 --> 00:22:21,220 That it was a new day in animation. 401 00:22:21,887 --> 00:22:25,766 I remember the other writers and artists on the series 402 00:22:26,391 --> 00:22:31,230 talking about this opportunity that Batman presented. 403 00:22:31,313 --> 00:22:34,233 That, kind of, the cuffs were off. 404 00:22:34,942 --> 00:22:37,694 I think even to us working on it, it was not... 405 00:22:38,570 --> 00:22:40,864 We didn't believe they were actually gonna do anything like... 406 00:22:41,240 --> 00:22:44,201 Like we ended up creating. 407 00:22:57,464 --> 00:22:59,841 TIMM: When we were finishing up the first season of Tiny Toons, 408 00:22:59,925 --> 00:23:03,762 my boss, Jean MacCurdy, had a big meeting with the entire crew 409 00:23:03,845 --> 00:23:06,557 and basically said, "Yeah, we're probably gonna do a second season. 410 00:23:06,640 --> 00:23:08,100 "We're still waiting to get a pick-up on that. 411 00:23:08,183 --> 00:23:10,102 "And in the meantime, we're gonna develop other new shows, 412 00:23:10,185 --> 00:23:13,021 "and one of the things we're thinking about developing is Batman, 413 00:23:13,105 --> 00:23:14,648 "as an animated property." 414 00:23:16,191 --> 00:23:19,820 KEVIN ALTIERI: Warner Bros. is doing a new Batman. 415 00:23:19,903 --> 00:23:21,446 Well, I've heard that one before. 416 00:23:21,613 --> 00:23:24,032 "Oh, boy. Here comes another Super Friends." 417 00:23:24,116 --> 00:23:27,244 These guys have been doing Tiny Toons. 418 00:23:27,536 --> 00:23:28,745 I love Tiny Toons, 419 00:23:28,870 --> 00:23:31,540 but it's goofy comedy, it's Tiny Toons. 420 00:23:31,748 --> 00:23:34,126 It started off very experimental at the beginning. 421 00:23:34,209 --> 00:23:37,296 Jean MacCurdy wanted to see who on the crew 422 00:23:37,379 --> 00:23:39,298 would be interested in doing a Batman show. 423 00:23:39,381 --> 00:23:40,841 And Eric Radomski came up with this 424 00:23:40,924 --> 00:23:44,386 really stunning background design 425 00:23:44,469 --> 00:23:47,973 where he was using very vibrant colors on black paper 426 00:23:48,056 --> 00:23:51,101 to sort of mute the look and give it a darker look. 427 00:23:51,560 --> 00:23:53,312 RADOMSKI: Because of the Tim Burton influence, 428 00:23:53,562 --> 00:23:58,567 I chose to present the piece I felt was influenced by 429 00:23:58,650 --> 00:24:00,611 the dark noir sort of beginnings in... 430 00:24:02,321 --> 00:24:05,490 Picking up on Tim Burton's direction of that first film. 431 00:24:05,574 --> 00:24:10,245 His influence on my, sort of, perspective of the character 432 00:24:10,329 --> 00:24:12,581 was probably the most influential. 433 00:24:12,789 --> 00:24:17,085 Because I wasn't particularly a comic book reader, as a kid. 434 00:24:17,628 --> 00:24:19,212 Eric's not really a comic book fan. 435 00:24:19,588 --> 00:24:22,549 He is not like me. He's not a lifelong comic book fan. 436 00:24:22,633 --> 00:24:26,386 All he knew about Batman was the Adam West show and the Tim Burton movie. 437 00:24:26,470 --> 00:24:29,681 And he was not even a fan of the Adam West show when he was a kid. 438 00:24:29,765 --> 00:24:34,645 RADOMSKI: Growing up to see Adam West in a campy television series, 439 00:24:34,728 --> 00:24:37,606 you know, kind of left me uninterested. 440 00:24:37,689 --> 00:24:40,442 TIMM: But he loved the first Tim Burton movie. 441 00:24:40,525 --> 00:24:42,944 That's why he was into doing the Batman show. 442 00:24:43,153 --> 00:24:44,529 Yeah, it's true. 443 00:24:44,613 --> 00:24:47,407 The opportunity to bring some influence into animation 444 00:24:47,908 --> 00:24:51,787 that could at least be in line with what Tim Burton's movie was, 445 00:24:52,371 --> 00:24:54,748 was just unique and that's kind of... 446 00:24:55,874 --> 00:24:58,752 Why my direction came out the way that it did in the very beginning 447 00:24:58,835 --> 00:24:59,961 was that was the main... 448 00:25:00,087 --> 00:25:03,465 The main influence for me for what this could be. 449 00:25:03,548 --> 00:25:06,677 And if they were willing to consider that, 450 00:25:06,760 --> 00:25:08,637 that was the only piece that I'd submitted. 451 00:25:20,899 --> 00:25:21,942 (GUNSHOT) 452 00:25:22,025 --> 00:25:23,026 USLAN: Bruce Timm 453 00:25:23,652 --> 00:25:27,823 is the hero to those of us who love and care about Batman. 454 00:25:28,198 --> 00:25:33,537 Because he was the right person at the right moment in time. 455 00:25:34,329 --> 00:25:38,750 He was able to see the door opening 456 00:25:38,834 --> 00:25:41,503 and jump in and pull it wide open. 457 00:25:43,213 --> 00:25:45,757 DINI: And Bruce Timm, I think he's been drawing Batman all his life, 458 00:25:45,841 --> 00:25:47,592 in some form or another. 459 00:25:47,759 --> 00:25:50,303 And he just went to his office, drew a model sheet. 460 00:25:50,429 --> 00:25:51,805 Within, like, about an hour or so, 461 00:25:51,888 --> 00:25:53,974 I filled up an entire 81 /2"by 11" page 462 00:25:54,057 --> 00:25:55,851 of just different Batman designs. 463 00:25:55,934 --> 00:25:58,603 So, the next time Jean had one of these big meetings, 464 00:25:58,687 --> 00:26:00,230 I showed up with this sheet of Batman drawings 465 00:26:00,313 --> 00:26:01,982 and she went, "Wow, that's really cool." 466 00:26:02,149 --> 00:26:04,776 He brought it to me. You know, I didn't... 467 00:26:05,318 --> 00:26:07,404 He's the one who said, "Here, this is what I would do." 468 00:26:07,863 --> 00:26:09,531 Okay. That looks good. 469 00:26:09,781 --> 00:26:12,701 You know? It wasn't hard. (CHUCKLES) 470 00:26:12,951 --> 00:26:16,204 It isn't hard to recognize something that's working. 471 00:26:17,122 --> 00:26:18,707 And he was working. It was good. 472 00:26:19,249 --> 00:26:20,292 It's like, "Yeah, if we do a Batman cartoon, 473 00:26:20,375 --> 00:26:21,585 "that's exactly what he should look like." 474 00:26:21,710 --> 00:26:23,086 And she said, "Yep, that's him. 475 00:26:23,336 --> 00:26:25,046 "Why don't you and Eric work together?" 476 00:26:25,464 --> 00:26:26,465 They were both great. 477 00:26:26,923 --> 00:26:29,301 And it was an interesting pairing 478 00:26:29,384 --> 00:26:32,596 because they're very different personalities and styles. 479 00:26:33,555 --> 00:26:36,057 But each very passionate about what they did. 480 00:26:36,725 --> 00:26:39,352 Bruce Timm and Eric Radomski barely knew each other. 481 00:26:39,436 --> 00:26:40,979 They, you know, they had seen each other 482 00:26:41,062 --> 00:26:42,773 but they were working on different things. 483 00:26:43,023 --> 00:26:45,734 RADOMSKI: Jean literally called us together, 484 00:26:45,817 --> 00:26:49,946 basically said, "We like both of your take on, 485 00:26:50,030 --> 00:26:52,949 "you know, at least an art direction for this show." 486 00:26:53,200 --> 00:26:55,160 She took Eric's background concepts 487 00:26:55,243 --> 00:26:56,787 and married them with my character designs. 488 00:26:56,912 --> 00:26:59,581 Said, "I want you guys to make a Batman short. 489 00:26:59,831 --> 00:27:03,043 RADOMSKI: "Would you be interested in producing a sample piece 490 00:27:03,126 --> 00:27:07,005 "that we could see what this might look like as a show?" 491 00:27:08,089 --> 00:27:10,175 "Two minutes long, whatever. Two, three minutes long. 492 00:27:10,884 --> 00:27:14,137 "Here's a certain amount of money. Go for it, you know. 493 00:27:14,221 --> 00:27:15,680 "Do exactly what you want it to do 494 00:27:16,097 --> 00:27:18,183 "and we'll show it to Fox 495 00:27:18,308 --> 00:27:19,893 "and hopefully, that'll light a fire under them 496 00:27:19,976 --> 00:27:21,269 "and say, 'Yeah, let's make this show. "' 497 00:27:21,561 --> 00:27:22,687 MACCURDY: I remember Bruce 498 00:27:23,355 --> 00:27:26,817 with his, you know, Tiny Toons storyboards 499 00:27:27,234 --> 00:27:30,821 and him being very happy that he could now do this instead. 500 00:27:30,904 --> 00:27:32,614 I remember that. (CHUCKLES) 501 00:27:32,989 --> 00:27:36,868 RADOMSKI: I think it was maybe six weeks to animate the whole piece. 502 00:27:37,327 --> 00:27:39,162 And then we did a... 503 00:27:39,663 --> 00:27:44,334 Just a very basic mix on it with existing music and sound effects. 504 00:27:44,417 --> 00:27:48,463 And Bruce and I participated by recording some of the fight sequences 505 00:27:48,547 --> 00:27:50,715 because we couldn't afford real actors at the time. 506 00:27:51,258 --> 00:27:55,220 So, we were in the booth doing our grunts and groans and fisticuffs. 507 00:27:55,762 --> 00:28:00,267 And by the time we got it done, they'd already signed the deal, so... 508 00:28:00,767 --> 00:28:02,894 But what was good about it was that it gave Eric and I 509 00:28:02,978 --> 00:28:03,979 kind of a calling card. 510 00:28:04,437 --> 00:28:07,107 Wow, it was... I'd never seen anything like that. 511 00:28:07,190 --> 00:28:10,318 Nobody had seen anything like that, with the cinematic quality of it. 512 00:28:10,402 --> 00:28:12,737 Even though it was just, you know, a minute or two long, 513 00:28:12,988 --> 00:28:15,490 it captures everything about Batman. 514 00:28:15,866 --> 00:28:18,243 Everyone took a real liking to it. 515 00:28:18,577 --> 00:28:23,039 TIMM: If we can do that on a weekly basis, that would be awesome. 516 00:28:23,123 --> 00:28:27,335 Out of the blue, Jean had called Eric and I into her office and said, 517 00:28:27,419 --> 00:28:28,837 "How would you guys like to produce the show?" 518 00:28:29,671 --> 00:28:33,383 I think both of us didn't really know what the producing job was. 519 00:28:33,675 --> 00:28:37,888 TIMM: I was a storyboard artist on Tiny Toons when that meeting happened. 520 00:28:38,221 --> 00:28:40,181 So, at that point... 521 00:28:40,891 --> 00:28:44,060 I really had no deeper ambitions 522 00:28:44,352 --> 00:28:46,479 or wider ambitions than just, you know, 523 00:28:46,563 --> 00:28:49,858 art directing the Batman cartoon, if it came to be. 524 00:28:50,400 --> 00:28:52,777 RADOMSKI: Well, you know, we were certainly dumbfounded, 525 00:28:52,861 --> 00:28:55,447 and at the same time, it was like, "Yeah, sure." 526 00:28:55,530 --> 00:28:57,490 TIMM: "Okay. "So, you know... 527 00:28:58,408 --> 00:28:59,409 Like, it was... 528 00:29:00,535 --> 00:29:02,829 You know, I'd have to be stupid to say no. 529 00:29:03,038 --> 00:29:05,665 Until you walk out of the room and literally go, 530 00:29:05,749 --> 00:29:08,919 "How in the hell are we gonna do this?" We've never produced a show. 531 00:29:09,002 --> 00:29:10,003 We don't know... 532 00:29:10,337 --> 00:29:12,672 Certainly don't know budgets and schedules and, you know, 533 00:29:12,756 --> 00:29:14,799 what's going to be involved and who's going to be involved, 534 00:29:15,300 --> 00:29:16,885 and what is our real role. 535 00:29:17,010 --> 00:29:21,056 Because we were literally two artists that were just production artists, 536 00:29:21,139 --> 00:29:22,515 you know, yesterday, 537 00:29:22,599 --> 00:29:25,185 and today they're asking us to produce this series. 538 00:29:37,530 --> 00:29:39,532 TIMM: We had a green light and we had a deadline. 539 00:29:39,616 --> 00:29:41,284 So, we had to kind of get going. 540 00:29:41,409 --> 00:29:45,664 Because we were, I think, too new to realize 541 00:29:45,747 --> 00:29:48,458 the potential disaster it could have been, 542 00:29:48,959 --> 00:29:50,627 we just trudged forward. 543 00:29:51,169 --> 00:29:53,880 Ended up working with a lot of people that I'd never worked with before. 544 00:29:54,339 --> 00:29:57,592 But, you know, we had to take chances and fortunately, a lot of it paid off. 545 00:30:00,679 --> 00:30:02,514 The art is useless if the stories aren't any good. 546 00:30:04,265 --> 00:30:06,476 And when we first started, we didn't even have a story editor. 547 00:30:08,186 --> 00:30:09,980 RADOMSKI: Jean was able to step in 548 00:30:10,438 --> 00:30:12,065 and understood where we were coming from. 549 00:30:12,190 --> 00:30:15,443 And actually, that brought us Alan Burnett in the beginning, 550 00:30:15,527 --> 00:30:19,614 because we needed... Bruce and I, neither of us had experience as writers. 551 00:30:20,240 --> 00:30:23,159 Alan is just a god. 552 00:30:23,451 --> 00:30:25,954 BURNETT: Jean MacCurdy and I go back a few years. 553 00:30:26,037 --> 00:30:28,456 I was a page at NBC 554 00:30:28,623 --> 00:30:32,085 and got an internship at children's programs, 555 00:30:32,335 --> 00:30:35,588 and the person who hired me was Jean MacCurdy, 556 00:30:35,797 --> 00:30:38,508 who was the manager of children's programs at that time. 557 00:30:38,633 --> 00:30:40,468 Alan Burnett has been part of my life 558 00:30:40,552 --> 00:30:43,680 my entire creative life, I suppose, or television life. 559 00:30:43,763 --> 00:30:48,476 So, when I got to Hanna-Barbera, Alan was there, as a writer. 560 00:30:48,560 --> 00:30:51,354 And one of the shows that we were gonna develop 561 00:30:51,438 --> 00:30:53,440 and try to sell was Super Friends. 562 00:30:54,065 --> 00:30:57,527 NARRATOR: Dedicated to truth, justice and peace... 563 00:30:57,819 --> 00:31:02,365 And Alan and I both felt that it needed to be serious. 564 00:31:03,033 --> 00:31:06,578 That it should be... It couldn't be Adam West. 565 00:31:06,703 --> 00:31:10,623 That we needed to do something that really took the characters seriously. 566 00:31:11,082 --> 00:31:14,169 So, we tried to convince ABC that this would be the way to go. 567 00:31:15,295 --> 00:31:16,713 And they didn't want to do that. 568 00:31:16,796 --> 00:31:19,799 I had another vision of what kids would like. (LAUGHS) 569 00:31:21,885 --> 00:31:23,178 She knew that he was a big comic book fan. 570 00:31:23,261 --> 00:31:24,721 And specifically, a big Batman fan. 571 00:31:25,346 --> 00:31:28,349 And she had since, I think from the very beginning of the show, 572 00:31:28,433 --> 00:31:31,394 had tried to get him over to come work here. 573 00:31:31,686 --> 00:31:33,855 And he was over at Disney, you know, doing... 574 00:31:35,148 --> 00:31:36,149 One of the duck shows. 575 00:31:36,232 --> 00:31:37,609 (QUACKING) 576 00:31:37,692 --> 00:31:39,986 And I kept saying to him, "That's ridiculous. 577 00:31:40,070 --> 00:31:41,446 "You shouldn't be doing that." 578 00:31:41,780 --> 00:31:45,158 Wait a second. DuckTales? Really? Come on. 579 00:31:45,241 --> 00:31:46,242 You know, it's like... 580 00:31:46,326 --> 00:31:49,037 I mean, I like DuckTales, but are you kidding me? 581 00:31:49,120 --> 00:31:51,706 It wasn't until he got the assurances that 582 00:31:52,707 --> 00:31:55,502 we would be able to tell the kinds of stories 583 00:31:55,585 --> 00:31:57,378 in an honest way 584 00:31:57,462 --> 00:31:59,130 that he committed to come on board. 585 00:32:02,175 --> 00:32:03,885 (EXPLOSION) 586 00:32:03,968 --> 00:32:06,346 BURNETT: Jean MacCurdy promised me I'd have 587 00:32:07,347 --> 00:32:08,932 guns and I'd have fistfights. 588 00:32:09,891 --> 00:32:11,518 Because I wouldn't come over otherwise. 589 00:32:11,726 --> 00:32:13,937 And I didn't believe her. I really didn't. 590 00:32:14,395 --> 00:32:16,648 And then they had a trailer, 591 00:32:17,107 --> 00:32:20,819 and there's guns going off and fistfighting, and it was great. 592 00:32:21,027 --> 00:32:24,197 And even then, I said to Jean, 593 00:32:24,280 --> 00:32:27,242 "Are you... This is okay? We can do this?" 594 00:32:27,867 --> 00:32:29,619 And she said, "Yes. Yes, we can." 595 00:32:31,996 --> 00:32:32,997 Almost. 596 00:32:33,164 --> 00:32:36,709 We had a policy against showing gun use. 597 00:32:36,876 --> 00:32:39,170 We never showed impact 598 00:32:39,254 --> 00:32:42,215 but you hear the bullets and you see the reaction. 599 00:32:42,465 --> 00:32:43,466 Mom. 600 00:32:43,675 --> 00:32:44,676 Dad. 601 00:32:44,759 --> 00:32:47,720 COBERN: It was very moving, very dramatic. 602 00:32:48,304 --> 00:32:50,640 But more mature, more adult 603 00:32:50,723 --> 00:32:53,768 than you would see in any other show up to then. 604 00:32:59,232 --> 00:33:01,067 BATMAN: Stop! No! 605 00:33:01,985 --> 00:33:02,986 (GROUND RUMBLES) 606 00:33:04,571 --> 00:33:05,572 (GASPS) 607 00:33:13,955 --> 00:33:15,540 (SCREAMING) No! 608 00:33:17,292 --> 00:33:18,751 MACCURDY: I wanted Alan, 609 00:33:19,335 --> 00:33:21,880 and he was like, "No, I'm under contract." Blah, blah, blah. 610 00:33:22,463 --> 00:33:25,425 BURNETT: But I did not come over to Warner Bros. until the very last... 611 00:33:25,508 --> 00:33:28,386 I didn't make a decision till the very last day of my deal. 612 00:33:28,469 --> 00:33:30,180 And I finally said, "Okay, I'm gonna come over." 613 00:33:30,847 --> 00:33:33,183 And, so, I was glad that I did. 614 00:33:33,266 --> 00:33:34,642 He's made his move. 615 00:33:36,978 --> 00:33:39,606 TIMM: And so, he took a chance and came on board, 616 00:33:39,689 --> 00:33:42,984 and from that point on, it pretty much saved the show. 617 00:33:43,318 --> 00:33:44,611 His vision of the show was 618 00:33:44,694 --> 00:33:47,989 really, really close to what Eric and I both wanted it to be. 619 00:33:49,782 --> 00:33:52,327 BURNETT: And it was true. I could finally have... 620 00:33:53,077 --> 00:33:55,622 A noir-ish show. 621 00:33:56,247 --> 00:33:58,416 With guns and fights. 622 00:33:59,292 --> 00:34:00,501 Impactful stuff. 623 00:34:00,919 --> 00:34:06,049 DINI: He seemed to have a vision of the show that was very sharp and very smart. 624 00:34:06,132 --> 00:34:10,762 And it was really the words to Bruce's visuals, 625 00:34:10,845 --> 00:34:15,475 and to Eric's, you know, stylizations. It really was like the missing piece. 626 00:34:15,558 --> 00:34:18,978 He was a little older than us and had more experience, and obviously, 627 00:34:19,062 --> 00:34:21,147 had his career as a writer prior. 628 00:34:21,564 --> 00:34:25,360 But he understood what we were trying to do with the series, 629 00:34:25,443 --> 00:34:27,612 as well as, he was a huge Batman fan. 630 00:34:27,695 --> 00:34:32,742 So, he, I think he was able to assure the executives at the time 631 00:34:32,825 --> 00:34:34,369 that we had a solid team. 632 00:34:34,452 --> 00:34:38,539 It wasn't just two rogue, you know, young first-time producers 633 00:34:38,623 --> 00:34:41,251 saying, "Leave us alone. Let us do whatever we want to do." 634 00:34:41,376 --> 00:34:43,878 DINI: So, thank God for Alan. He put the whole thing... 635 00:34:44,087 --> 00:34:46,923 He put all the pieces together and got it up and running, 636 00:34:47,257 --> 00:34:49,926 and humming like a fine machine. 637 00:34:53,388 --> 00:34:54,389 And so, the rest is history. 638 00:34:55,056 --> 00:34:58,643 We, you know, we were hiring people, like, not off the street, 639 00:34:59,143 --> 00:35:02,146 but people who didn't have much experience or whatever. 640 00:35:02,355 --> 00:35:05,316 Glen Murakami was a guy who, he'd never worked in the business. 641 00:35:05,400 --> 00:35:09,737 He'd never actually held a paying art job before. 642 00:35:09,821 --> 00:35:12,490 But he was a comic book fan and he worked in a comic book shop. 643 00:35:12,573 --> 00:35:18,579 I will say it's the first time I felt like I found "my people." 644 00:35:18,997 --> 00:35:22,542 I mean, growing up and being into comic books and movies 645 00:35:22,625 --> 00:35:24,961 and illustration and stuff like that, 646 00:35:25,044 --> 00:35:27,839 I think that was the first time I found a collection of people 647 00:35:27,922 --> 00:35:33,094 who all saw all of it the same way that I did. 648 00:35:33,720 --> 00:35:36,347 I think everyone was striving for the same goal. 649 00:35:36,431 --> 00:35:39,726 Everyone wanted to make the best show that they could. 650 00:35:39,934 --> 00:35:42,270 So, that's pretty unique. 651 00:35:42,353 --> 00:35:46,607 I was too, kind of, naive to know any better. 652 00:35:46,691 --> 00:35:51,237 It came as just a team effort, 653 00:35:51,321 --> 00:35:52,739 to say, "We've got to get this thing done. 654 00:35:52,822 --> 00:35:54,657 "I've got ideas, you've got ideas, 655 00:35:54,741 --> 00:35:57,452 "they clearly like what we did together, let's see what we can do." 656 00:36:01,205 --> 00:36:02,248 (SCREAMING) 657 00:38:46,370 --> 00:38:48,789 The shock of my life was, I was sitting down 658 00:38:48,873 --> 00:38:52,960 and Bruce shows me that trailer that they did. 659 00:38:53,294 --> 00:38:54,587 And I was, like... 660 00:38:55,046 --> 00:38:57,548 "You gotta be kidding me. You're doing Fleischer's Superman? 661 00:38:57,632 --> 00:38:58,925 "You've gotta be kidding me." 662 00:38:59,342 --> 00:39:01,093 You know, just sign me up. 663 00:39:05,806 --> 00:39:08,267 JEAN MACCURDY: Warner Brothers had seven-minute Fleischer shorts 664 00:39:08,351 --> 00:39:12,104 of Superman that I thought were awesome. 665 00:39:12,647 --> 00:39:16,567 You know, Jean liked those Fleischer cartoons. 666 00:39:16,651 --> 00:39:21,489 And she watched them on Moviolas down in the Warner Brothers' basement. 667 00:39:23,908 --> 00:39:25,368 MACCURDY: They were dramatic, 668 00:39:25,451 --> 00:39:27,078 and the look of them, everything about them. 669 00:39:27,536 --> 00:39:30,623 TOM RUEGGER: Eric and Bruce wanted to make a series 670 00:39:30,706 --> 00:39:33,000 like the Fleischer Superman. 671 00:39:33,918 --> 00:39:38,005 But they wanted to make it for the '90s. They wanted to make it even darker. 672 00:39:38,130 --> 00:39:41,592 And I think maybe I said something about Fleischer to them. I probably did, 673 00:39:41,676 --> 00:39:43,052 because Fleischer was always something that haunted me. 674 00:39:43,135 --> 00:39:44,804 I don't know why, but it just did. 675 00:39:44,887 --> 00:39:47,598 It was funny because Eric and I were both really big fans 676 00:39:47,682 --> 00:39:49,308 of the Fleischer Superman cartoons. 677 00:39:49,392 --> 00:39:53,604 But we didn't actually want to just recreate that look. 678 00:39:53,813 --> 00:39:57,775 We kind of wanted to put our own spin on the superhero world, 679 00:39:57,858 --> 00:40:02,029 incorporating film noir and German Expressionism and Art Deco. 680 00:40:04,490 --> 00:40:06,325 But we specifically were trying to do something 681 00:40:06,409 --> 00:40:09,036 that wasn't exactly Fleischer-inspired. 682 00:40:09,161 --> 00:40:11,622 And then one day we were meeting with Jean MacCurdy, 683 00:40:11,956 --> 00:40:13,416 and she just kinda said, 684 00:40:13,499 --> 00:40:16,210 "You know, the show should look like a Fleischer Superman cartoon." 685 00:40:16,711 --> 00:40:18,421 We were just, like, 686 00:40:19,171 --> 00:40:20,589 "Yes, it should." 687 00:40:20,881 --> 00:40:22,633 I was like, "Yeah, we were trying to not do that, 688 00:40:22,717 --> 00:40:24,719 "but it totally makes sense to do that." 689 00:40:24,844 --> 00:40:25,845 So, yeah, why fight it? 690 00:40:26,345 --> 00:40:29,265 So, I may have mentioned Fleischer to them, but... 691 00:40:29,890 --> 00:40:32,977 I mean, it sobers Timm, those designs that I... 692 00:40:33,394 --> 00:40:35,396 He would have done that that way anyway. 693 00:40:35,521 --> 00:40:37,773 I didn't know that I had to say it out loud. 694 00:40:37,857 --> 00:40:39,692 (CHUCKLES) He knew what he wanted to do. 695 00:40:39,775 --> 00:40:42,194 I thought it was an upgrade of the Fleischer stuff. 696 00:40:42,987 --> 00:40:45,698 And I thought, "Damn, that's good. That's great." 697 00:40:45,906 --> 00:40:48,159 Visually, that thing was handled. 698 00:40:48,242 --> 00:40:52,163 Bruce and Eric, and the entire artistic staff and the director... 699 00:40:52,246 --> 00:40:55,207 I mean, they had this thing. Visually, it was like... 700 00:40:55,541 --> 00:40:56,709 It was poetry in motion. 701 00:40:56,792 --> 00:41:02,465 I mean, they knew how to tell a story without dialogue, without sound. 702 00:41:03,591 --> 00:41:05,634 (SIREN WAILING IN DISTANCE) 703 00:41:08,846 --> 00:41:11,223 TIMM: Dark Deco is a term that I came up with 704 00:41:11,307 --> 00:41:12,933 on the spur of the moment once, 705 00:41:13,017 --> 00:41:15,978 just because it was combining two different things. 706 00:41:16,062 --> 00:41:18,147 The dark look of the show 707 00:41:18,230 --> 00:41:23,235 was something that Eric and I were both really into trying to achieve. 708 00:41:23,319 --> 00:41:26,322 We both wanted to bring kind of 709 00:41:26,405 --> 00:41:30,201 an old time-y, film noir kind of sensibility to the visuals. 710 00:41:31,077 --> 00:41:33,454 And that meant dark. That meant, like, you know, 711 00:41:34,121 --> 00:41:37,708 just having the show take place almost all the time at night. 712 00:41:38,125 --> 00:41:40,169 Working with a lot of silhouette 713 00:41:40,336 --> 00:41:43,214 was going to be part and parcel of the show. 714 00:41:44,131 --> 00:41:46,717 MIKE CARLIN: A darker setting lends itself to 715 00:41:46,801 --> 00:41:51,013 just the graphic side of what a comic book is. 716 00:41:51,097 --> 00:41:54,683 And Eric had come up with this brilliant plan 717 00:41:55,142 --> 00:41:59,939 of doing all the backgrounds on black paper, on black board. 718 00:42:00,481 --> 00:42:01,482 STAN BERKOWITZ: I really liked it. 719 00:42:01,565 --> 00:42:05,111 I mean, the idea of doing everything on the black paper was very stylish. 720 00:42:05,403 --> 00:42:08,072 BURNETT: It really looks like it's painted on black velvet. 721 00:42:08,155 --> 00:42:09,949 And it's just beautiful. 722 00:42:10,449 --> 00:42:13,202 RUEGGER: You're not pulling drawings out of the light, 723 00:42:13,327 --> 00:42:16,705 you're pulling the drawing out of the darkness, 724 00:42:16,789 --> 00:42:18,833 which is, of course, where Batman lives. 725 00:42:19,208 --> 00:42:23,003 Having been a painter for the two years prior to producing, 726 00:42:23,087 --> 00:42:25,172 it was like, "I don't want to paint that entire city 727 00:42:25,256 --> 00:42:26,715 "over and over and over again." 728 00:42:26,799 --> 00:42:30,136 And especially at night, because all of that dark imagery, 729 00:42:30,219 --> 00:42:31,262 you've gotta paint in. 730 00:42:31,345 --> 00:42:34,682 So, it just occurred to me, what if we started with the dark environment 731 00:42:34,765 --> 00:42:36,809 and we just brought light into it? 732 00:42:36,892 --> 00:42:39,103 And the Deco aspect of it came, 733 00:42:39,186 --> 00:42:44,525 basically, just from me being a fan of architecture of that era. 734 00:42:45,484 --> 00:42:47,736 GLEN MURAKAMI: Batman was created in the '40s. 735 00:42:47,820 --> 00:42:51,949 So, it's almost like it just never stopped being the '40s. 736 00:42:52,032 --> 00:42:54,952 There's cell phones and there's VCRs, but it's Art Deco. 737 00:42:55,161 --> 00:43:00,124 It's like Batman lives in this forever Art Deco world. 738 00:43:00,207 --> 00:43:02,126 So that's the way we handled it. 739 00:43:02,209 --> 00:43:05,171 I mean, the cars, some of those cars look like they'd come from 740 00:43:05,254 --> 00:43:07,590 the giant cars of the '40s. 741 00:43:07,673 --> 00:43:10,843 But then there's helicopters in the sky 742 00:43:10,926 --> 00:43:13,762 that don't look like they were from the past at all, 743 00:43:13,846 --> 00:43:15,097 but something from the future. 744 00:43:15,181 --> 00:43:18,142 They turn on the TV and it's black and white, you know. 745 00:43:18,225 --> 00:43:19,643 So, it's like it's black and white, 746 00:43:19,727 --> 00:43:22,855 but yet you have this incredible Batmobile and Batwing, 747 00:43:22,938 --> 00:43:25,232 and these very hi-tech gadgets. 748 00:43:25,774 --> 00:43:28,652 AMES KIRSHEN: There were computers and portable phones, 749 00:43:28,777 --> 00:43:31,697 and there was technology of the time 750 00:43:32,072 --> 00:43:36,035 but done and executed in a way that was more kinda reminiscent 751 00:43:36,118 --> 00:43:37,536 of this very classic look and feel. 752 00:43:40,164 --> 00:43:43,792 FRANK PAUR: A lot of film noir was the feeling you wanted to have 753 00:43:43,959 --> 00:43:46,754 with all the heavy blacks and the shadows. 754 00:43:46,837 --> 00:43:51,008 That high-contrast photography, especially in the '30s and '40s, 755 00:43:51,091 --> 00:43:53,469 and Orson Welles was the king of it. 756 00:43:53,552 --> 00:43:59,266 Just where you'd get that shadow, just jet-black black. 757 00:43:59,850 --> 00:44:01,268 We did that. 758 00:44:01,477 --> 00:44:05,356 It was the Universal monster movies, and The Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari 759 00:44:05,439 --> 00:44:08,108 and Fritz Lang, Metropolis, 760 00:44:08,192 --> 00:44:10,861 as well as M, and Citizen Kane. 761 00:44:12,238 --> 00:44:14,156 MICHAEL USLAN: The whole concept of film noir, 762 00:44:14,240 --> 00:44:19,119 that all influenced the writers and the artists 763 00:44:19,203 --> 00:44:20,871 and the editors of Batman comics. 764 00:44:21,247 --> 00:44:25,918 All of that were just as influential on the people involved 765 00:44:26,001 --> 00:44:28,045 with Batman: The Animated Series. 766 00:44:28,170 --> 00:44:31,006 And you can see it. You can see it clear as day. 767 00:44:31,215 --> 00:44:33,717 BOB GOODMAN: We definitely were informed by noir fiction, 768 00:44:33,801 --> 00:44:35,344 and pulp stories. 769 00:44:35,427 --> 00:44:39,139 And Hitchcock was kind of a guiding light of how to tell a visual story. 770 00:44:39,223 --> 00:44:41,058 How to tell a clean visual story. 771 00:44:41,141 --> 00:44:43,936 How to deliver mood with camera. 772 00:44:44,019 --> 00:44:48,023 This was a Warner Brothers gangster movie show 773 00:44:48,107 --> 00:44:49,316 that had a superhero in it. 774 00:44:49,400 --> 00:44:52,236 And noir, not just stylistically, but thematically, 775 00:44:52,319 --> 00:44:54,780 where we were focusing on villains, 776 00:44:54,863 --> 00:44:58,033 and focusing on somebody who felt wronged 777 00:44:58,117 --> 00:45:00,119 and wanted vengeance. 778 00:45:00,202 --> 00:45:04,540 And sympathetic people that actually were the criminals. 779 00:45:04,623 --> 00:45:06,667 And that's a very noir trait. 780 00:45:06,750 --> 00:45:12,172 It's not just about dark shadows and cool buildings. 781 00:45:12,256 --> 00:45:16,927 It's about the people, and the darkness in society. (CHUCKLES) 782 00:45:17,177 --> 00:45:18,554 It's really cool. 783 00:45:18,804 --> 00:45:20,639 TIMM: We, early on, decided we wanted to have 784 00:45:20,723 --> 00:45:23,100 individual title cards for each episode. 785 00:45:23,183 --> 00:45:25,185 This is something they used to do back in the old days 786 00:45:25,269 --> 00:45:26,770 in classic cartoons. 787 00:45:26,854 --> 00:45:29,481 When they would have those wonderful lobby cards, you know. 788 00:45:29,607 --> 00:45:33,819 And going back even further than that, hand-painted lobby cards, you know. 789 00:45:33,902 --> 00:45:35,988 So, that kind of stuff was a great throwback. 790 00:45:58,427 --> 00:46:00,512 TIMM: We thought, okay, why not? We got nothing better to do. 791 00:46:00,596 --> 00:46:03,515 There's a little bit of time left in those 24 hours of every day, 792 00:46:03,599 --> 00:46:05,559 why not throw in a title card as well? 793 00:46:05,643 --> 00:46:08,771 So, fortunately, Eric was really into the whole idea, 794 00:46:08,979 --> 00:46:11,065 and he ended up designing... 795 00:46:12,608 --> 00:46:14,526 I'd say, most of those title cards himself. 796 00:46:15,861 --> 00:46:18,989 Hats off to him, 'cause those, to this day, are still, like, 797 00:46:19,073 --> 00:46:21,992 some of the coolest title cards you've ever seen in a cartoon. 798 00:46:23,869 --> 00:46:27,373 When we came down to designing the title sequence for the show, 799 00:46:28,832 --> 00:46:32,336 Eric and I, I don't remember whose idea it was, 800 00:46:32,419 --> 00:46:34,546 but between the two of us, 801 00:46:34,630 --> 00:46:38,217 one of us said, "Well, why don't we just redo that pilot film 802 00:46:38,300 --> 00:46:39,927 "that we did that sold the show?" 803 00:46:40,260 --> 00:46:43,347 With Batman fighting some thugs on a rooftop, kind of thing. 804 00:46:43,430 --> 00:46:47,726 CARLIN: It was dark and gritty and scary. 805 00:46:47,851 --> 00:46:49,311 It's all shadows. 806 00:46:49,395 --> 00:46:51,605 You don't hardly see anything 807 00:46:51,689 --> 00:46:55,067 until Batman's lit up by a bolt of lightning. 808 00:46:55,734 --> 00:46:58,278 TIMM: I think, all along we had planned at some point, 809 00:46:58,362 --> 00:47:02,658 to put Batman as a title, the series title on it. 810 00:47:02,825 --> 00:47:04,827 And at some point we were just, like, 811 00:47:04,910 --> 00:47:07,579 "What image do we want to cover up with that title, 812 00:47:07,663 --> 00:47:09,206 "because they all look cool?" 813 00:47:09,623 --> 00:47:11,041 I don't think we need the title. 814 00:47:11,125 --> 00:47:13,502 You know who that guy is on that building. 815 00:47:13,585 --> 00:47:14,795 That lightning's... 816 00:47:14,878 --> 00:47:16,422 (MIMICS LIGHTNING STRIKE) ...around him. 817 00:47:16,588 --> 00:47:17,673 You know who that is. 818 00:47:18,090 --> 00:47:20,426 CARLIN: It just said, "This is something you've never seen before." 819 00:47:20,509 --> 00:47:24,471 And you almost had to do it because it was so compelling. 820 00:47:25,556 --> 00:47:27,266 And so, that title sequence is... 821 00:47:27,349 --> 00:47:30,060 It still holds up. It's phenomenal. 822 00:47:35,232 --> 00:47:40,529 I think a lot of people think to adapt a comic book into animation, 823 00:47:40,612 --> 00:47:44,783 they're trying to achieve the look of the comic book. 824 00:47:45,117 --> 00:47:49,246 RICH FOGEL: Previous attempts to try and do comic book things 825 00:47:49,830 --> 00:47:52,124 in animation, 826 00:47:52,833 --> 00:47:58,630 they try to emulate the models from the comic books very closely, 827 00:47:58,714 --> 00:48:00,424 that had a lot of anatomy in them, 828 00:48:00,507 --> 00:48:03,510 a lot of muscles, a lot of curves and everything like that. 829 00:48:03,761 --> 00:48:07,473 And one of the genius things that Bruce and Eric did 830 00:48:07,556 --> 00:48:10,184 to bring this to the screen was, they simplified it. 831 00:48:10,517 --> 00:48:13,937 Bruce was aware it needs to be animated, 832 00:48:14,021 --> 00:48:15,898 it needs to move around a lot. 833 00:48:15,981 --> 00:48:18,192 How simple can we make everything? 834 00:48:19,026 --> 00:48:23,071 Every line you draw has to be duplicated thousands and thousands of times. 835 00:48:24,114 --> 00:48:26,450 RUEGGER: And then you're painting them all up. 836 00:48:26,533 --> 00:48:28,786 This is back when we were still doing cel animation. 837 00:48:28,869 --> 00:48:29,870 Oh, my gosh. 838 00:48:29,953 --> 00:48:33,040 So, it really behooves you to simplify your character design 839 00:48:33,123 --> 00:48:35,375 so they don't have a lot of muscles and rendering and all that stuff. 840 00:48:35,459 --> 00:48:40,714 Voila! We do that 19,999 more times, and we have a 20-minute show. 841 00:48:46,804 --> 00:48:50,557 TIMM: The villains all had their own unique design challenges. 842 00:48:51,558 --> 00:48:56,897 Some of them, I had a pretty clear idea of what I wanted to do with. 843 00:48:57,022 --> 00:48:59,107 The Two-Face character, 844 00:48:59,191 --> 00:49:01,235 I pretty much nailed him right out of the gate. 845 00:49:03,695 --> 00:49:08,325 The most obvious thing I did with Two-Face was to simplify his clothes. 846 00:49:08,408 --> 00:49:11,578 Because in the comics, he traditionally has, like, 847 00:49:11,662 --> 00:49:14,581 a purple suit on one side and an orange suit on the other. 848 00:49:14,665 --> 00:49:18,585 And the purple side has, like, a plaid. 849 00:49:18,669 --> 00:49:19,962 Because in comics you can do that. 850 00:49:20,045 --> 00:49:21,797 You really want to emphasize 851 00:49:21,880 --> 00:49:24,633 how different the two sides of his personality is. 852 00:49:25,092 --> 00:49:27,344 And, so I was looking at that in the comics and I went, 853 00:49:27,469 --> 00:49:28,512 "Well, I'm not going to animate... 854 00:49:28,637 --> 00:49:30,430 "I don't want anybody to try to animate plaid. 855 00:49:30,514 --> 00:49:31,932 "That's just way too many lines to animate." 856 00:49:32,391 --> 00:49:35,269 And purple and orange is really ugly to look at 857 00:49:35,352 --> 00:49:37,271 as a color combination. 858 00:49:37,396 --> 00:49:39,189 This is intentionally ugly. 859 00:49:39,273 --> 00:49:41,733 But it was just... I couldn't stand to look at it. 860 00:49:41,859 --> 00:49:43,277 And I thought, "Well, wait a minute. 861 00:49:43,360 --> 00:49:45,863 "You can't get any more opposite than black and white. 862 00:49:46,071 --> 00:49:49,908 So I'll make his bad side dark, 863 00:49:49,992 --> 00:49:53,495 and I'll make his supposedly good side blindingly white. 864 00:49:53,745 --> 00:49:56,290 And it was such an obvious idea. 865 00:49:56,373 --> 00:49:57,457 It was kind of like, in retrospect, 866 00:49:57,583 --> 00:49:59,459 kind of surprising nobody had ever done it before, 867 00:49:59,835 --> 00:50:02,087 but it worked really great for our show. 868 00:50:05,424 --> 00:50:07,551 The funny thing about the Bruce Timm style, 869 00:50:07,634 --> 00:50:11,179 it is so appealing, and so many people seem to think they can get it. 870 00:50:11,263 --> 00:50:13,682 It's a very tough thing to actually do. 871 00:50:14,725 --> 00:50:16,143 DICK SEBAST: When I looked at the characters 872 00:50:16,226 --> 00:50:19,271 and saw how simple the designs were, 873 00:50:19,354 --> 00:50:24,276 I thought, "Well, I guess this will work. I don't know. We'll see." 874 00:50:24,651 --> 00:50:27,905 Ultimately, it was a brilliant stroke. 875 00:50:29,156 --> 00:50:34,661 The Bruce Timm style really is... You know, it's curves against lines. 876 00:50:34,745 --> 00:50:38,999 I mean, people at Disney were doing it for years and years in feature. 877 00:50:39,082 --> 00:50:42,586 We just utilized it down in TV animation. 878 00:50:43,086 --> 00:50:46,590 I was working at the Don Bluth studios in the early '80s 879 00:50:46,673 --> 00:50:49,259 on the video games and on The Secret of NIMH. 880 00:50:49,343 --> 00:50:52,930 The whole Don Bluth aesthetic was very much classical Disney. 881 00:50:53,138 --> 00:50:56,099 That's where I first heard concepts like straights against curves 882 00:50:56,183 --> 00:50:58,518 and talking about different masses 883 00:50:58,602 --> 00:51:02,856 and stylizing the shapes so they'll animate well, et cetera. 884 00:51:02,940 --> 00:51:04,816 People loved it. They ate it up. 885 00:51:04,900 --> 00:51:06,735 An interesting thing about Bruce Timm, though, 886 00:51:06,818 --> 00:51:08,695 is, you know, Bruce Timm is self-taught. 887 00:51:08,779 --> 00:51:12,282 That's the thing that I just find wacky and remarkable. 888 00:51:12,366 --> 00:51:15,243 And maybe that's what's made him so unique, 889 00:51:16,119 --> 00:51:19,039 that he didn't have anybody tell him how to do it and what to do, 890 00:51:19,456 --> 00:51:21,708 which is also always an issue with Bruce. 891 00:51:23,251 --> 00:51:25,337 For years when I was just drawing for my own amusement, 892 00:51:25,462 --> 00:51:27,839 I was, uh... I pretty much taught myself how to draw 893 00:51:27,923 --> 00:51:31,718 from mostly copying my favorite artists 894 00:51:31,843 --> 00:51:32,844 and comic books. 895 00:51:33,303 --> 00:51:36,974 TIMM: Later on, when I got into the animation business, 896 00:51:37,099 --> 00:51:40,227 Dan DeCarlo was one of those artists who got passed around a lot, 897 00:51:40,310 --> 00:51:45,065 and I really started paying attention to his comics and the way he drew, 898 00:51:45,148 --> 00:51:48,402 uh, girls, especially... Uh, their facial features... 899 00:51:48,485 --> 00:51:51,279 And so, there's definitely a little bit of DNA, 900 00:51:51,405 --> 00:51:54,241 Dan DeCarlo DNA in the way I draw the female characters 901 00:51:54,324 --> 00:51:55,367 in The Batman show. 902 00:51:55,450 --> 00:51:57,035 I think you can see it in the smiles 903 00:51:57,119 --> 00:51:59,246 and the kind of heart-shaped faces, et cetera. 904 00:51:59,496 --> 00:52:02,791 Alex Toth was another artist that I had kind of gotten to later 905 00:52:02,916 --> 00:52:04,710 in my career. 906 00:52:04,793 --> 00:52:07,963 He had designed a lot of stuff for the Hanna-Barbera cartoons 907 00:52:08,046 --> 00:52:10,090 in the '60s, you know, specifically, Space Ghost. 908 00:52:11,299 --> 00:52:13,885 When I eventually got to design Batman for animation, 909 00:52:13,969 --> 00:52:16,346 he was kind of a subliminal design in the back of my head. 910 00:52:16,430 --> 00:52:19,933 I wasn't specifically trained to draw like Alex Toth, 911 00:52:20,058 --> 00:52:22,269 but there's a ghost of an Alex Toth drawing, 912 00:52:22,352 --> 00:52:24,604 the Space Ghost drawing underneath my Batman drawing, 913 00:52:24,688 --> 00:52:28,734 even though I wasn't subconsciously, you know, channeling Alex Toth, 914 00:52:28,817 --> 00:52:32,029 but it was just kind of there, and it kind of came out. 915 00:52:32,112 --> 00:52:33,822 RIBA: With his animation expertise 916 00:52:33,905 --> 00:52:37,117 and his comic book background of people like Kirby and Toth 917 00:52:37,200 --> 00:52:38,535 and his experience of both, you know, 918 00:52:38,660 --> 00:52:41,329 all melted into this Bruce Timm style. 919 00:52:41,830 --> 00:52:44,291 And once I eventually got to do The Batman animated show, 920 00:52:44,374 --> 00:52:47,169 all that stuff all kind of just rushed together 921 00:52:47,252 --> 00:52:50,213 and became The Batman style. 922 00:52:50,338 --> 00:52:53,633 IWANTER: It wasn't your typical Filmation look or Hanna-Barbera look. 923 00:52:53,759 --> 00:52:56,845 It was a design look that had never been seen 924 00:52:57,220 --> 00:52:59,056 on Saturday morning. 925 00:53:04,019 --> 00:53:06,688 MURAKAMI: I used to have nightmares of... 926 00:53:06,772 --> 00:53:08,523 My nightmares were very literal. 927 00:53:08,648 --> 00:53:12,736 My nightmares were taking artwork to Bruce's office to show him. 928 00:53:13,695 --> 00:53:15,113 Here's my design. 929 00:53:15,405 --> 00:53:19,659 Bruce had a long corner office, 930 00:53:20,327 --> 00:53:23,288 and he kept it very dark. 931 00:53:23,830 --> 00:53:26,208 MURAKAMI: And back then he could smoke in the office. 932 00:53:26,291 --> 00:53:30,337 So, you'd knock on the door and the room would be filled with smoke. 933 00:53:30,420 --> 00:53:33,715 And you'd have to walk across this long room 934 00:53:33,799 --> 00:53:36,009 to get to him at the end of his desk. 935 00:53:36,176 --> 00:53:37,844 And it was filled with toys, 936 00:53:37,928 --> 00:53:40,472 but it was dark and stuff like that, and smoke. 937 00:53:40,806 --> 00:53:43,016 And he would look at the drawing, he would sigh, 938 00:53:43,100 --> 00:53:46,228 and then he would reach down and pull a piece of paper 939 00:53:46,311 --> 00:53:49,815 and put it over my drawing and, like, redo my drawing. 940 00:53:49,940 --> 00:53:53,944 And then I'd look at it and I'd go, "Okay." Like, he'd make it better. 941 00:53:54,027 --> 00:53:58,365 And then I'd have to take that walk of shame back to my desk 942 00:53:58,448 --> 00:53:59,741 to redo the drawing. (CHUCKLES) 943 00:53:59,825 --> 00:54:01,159 But he was right. 944 00:54:01,243 --> 00:54:05,580 I mean, that was like a good learning experience. 945 00:54:05,705 --> 00:54:09,376 And little by little, I think he could see that I was getting it. 946 00:54:09,459 --> 00:54:11,837 And then, little by little, he would start going, 947 00:54:11,920 --> 00:54:15,132 "Okay, don't do this." "Okay, do this." 948 00:54:15,674 --> 00:54:18,301 And, um, I apprenticed. 949 00:54:18,426 --> 00:54:20,554 You know, I graduated up, 950 00:54:20,637 --> 00:54:24,391 but I think that's rare to apprentice like that. 951 00:54:24,516 --> 00:54:28,937 I mean, I learned a ton just by going through that process. 952 00:54:29,604 --> 00:54:32,566 TIMM: There was just so much of the show to design, 953 00:54:32,649 --> 00:54:36,736 and before I had my own in-house crew to help me design the characters, 954 00:54:36,862 --> 00:54:38,572 we had to kind of get going quickly. 955 00:54:38,738 --> 00:54:41,908 I actually listed some of my favorite comic book artists. 956 00:54:41,992 --> 00:54:44,286 I just reached out to them. They had nothing to lose. 957 00:54:44,369 --> 00:54:47,080 So, I reached out to both Mike Mignola and to Kevin Nowlan. 958 00:54:47,497 --> 00:54:50,959 Like, I didn't know either one of them, but through DC comics 959 00:54:51,042 --> 00:54:52,794 who we were working with on the show, 960 00:54:52,878 --> 00:54:55,130 I got their phone numbers, and I just called them up and said, 961 00:54:55,213 --> 00:54:57,257 "Hey, I'm doing this Batman animated show, 962 00:54:57,382 --> 00:54:58,717 "I'm a big fan of your work, 963 00:54:58,800 --> 00:55:00,927 "Would you like to do some dot design work for the show?" 964 00:55:01,011 --> 00:55:02,637 And they both said, "Okay, sure." 965 00:55:05,724 --> 00:55:08,226 TIMM: Mike ended up designing Mr. Freeze. 966 00:55:11,313 --> 00:55:13,273 The designs he came up with for Mr. Freeze 967 00:55:13,356 --> 00:55:16,860 is very much an old school, kind of robotic, you know. 968 00:55:17,152 --> 00:55:21,406 To me, it looks like Lon Chaney in the old man-made monster movie. 969 00:55:22,616 --> 00:55:25,869 FOGEL: You try and scrape off all of the barnacles of the story telling 970 00:55:25,952 --> 00:55:28,413 that have accumulated over the years, 971 00:55:28,496 --> 00:55:31,917 because there have been so many stories told about these characters, 972 00:55:32,000 --> 00:55:34,961 and try and get back to the essence of what they are. 973 00:55:35,086 --> 00:55:37,672 All that anybody knew about Mr. Freeze at that time 974 00:55:37,797 --> 00:55:40,425 was that he was the joke-y guy in the old Batman show. 975 00:55:40,550 --> 00:55:42,177 He made weird ice puns, you know. 976 00:55:42,928 --> 00:55:47,474 TIMM: And he was either dry-as-ice George Sanders, 977 00:55:47,557 --> 00:55:49,351 or he was crazy Otto Preminger. 978 00:55:51,228 --> 00:55:53,396 I said, "Bob, what if we took a character like that 979 00:55:53,480 --> 00:55:55,357 "and added emotional depth to him?" 980 00:55:55,732 --> 00:55:58,318 GOODMAN: You look at Heart of Ice, it looks so good. 981 00:55:58,401 --> 00:56:01,655 It's one of the best episodes, if not the best episode of the series. 982 00:56:01,780 --> 00:56:05,700 And it took a character, Mr. Freeze, 983 00:56:05,867 --> 00:56:08,995 that previously didn't have this origin, 984 00:56:09,079 --> 00:56:12,624 didn't have this emotional story... 985 00:56:12,999 --> 00:56:17,170 And when Paul did what he did there, 986 00:56:17,254 --> 00:56:19,714 it changed the landscape, you know. 987 00:56:19,798 --> 00:56:21,883 It changed people's understanding of Mr. Freeze, 988 00:56:22,050 --> 00:56:27,430 and the depth of which we were looking at these villains, forever. 989 00:56:32,227 --> 00:56:33,603 BURNETT: I didn't know Paul well. 990 00:56:33,687 --> 00:56:35,313 In fact, I hardly knew him at all. 991 00:56:35,647 --> 00:56:37,023 We'd passed on the hallway. 992 00:56:37,148 --> 00:56:40,026 And I knew him from the fact that he worked for Lucas, 993 00:56:40,110 --> 00:56:41,486 everybody knew that. 994 00:56:41,569 --> 00:56:45,991 That was the big buzz, that Paul Dini's writing the Ewoks show, 995 00:56:46,199 --> 00:56:48,285 because everybody wanted something like that. 996 00:56:48,827 --> 00:56:53,081 And he was disenchanted at that time for various reasons, 997 00:56:53,164 --> 00:56:56,126 and was thinking of making a career move, leaving Warner Brothers. 998 00:56:56,376 --> 00:56:59,504 BURNETT: And I wanted him to stay on because he was a good writer. 999 00:56:59,713 --> 00:57:02,924 I was sort of over on Tiny Toons, and sort of somewhere else, 1000 00:57:03,008 --> 00:57:05,093 and I kind of left the studio for a while 1001 00:57:05,593 --> 00:57:07,262 to work on some other stuff. 1002 00:57:07,387 --> 00:57:10,098 And I wasn't really sure if I wanted to go back, 1003 00:57:10,181 --> 00:57:12,017 or to what degree I wanted to go back. 1004 00:57:13,268 --> 00:57:15,061 BURNETT: And I said, you can't go. 1005 00:57:15,145 --> 00:57:16,354 There's gotta be something you want to do. 1006 00:57:16,479 --> 00:57:18,481 He said, "Well, I have this idea, 1007 00:57:18,690 --> 00:57:21,443 "nice idea for Mr. Freeze's story." 1008 00:57:22,193 --> 00:57:26,489 And he told me a sentence or two, and I said, "Write it, do it." 1009 00:57:27,365 --> 00:57:30,660 A day or so later, he came back with the outline. 1010 00:57:30,869 --> 00:57:34,289 I'm reading the story, and it was Heart Of Ice, 1011 00:57:34,372 --> 00:57:37,042 and it was just great. 1012 00:57:37,709 --> 00:57:40,420 It was exactly what I wanted. 1013 00:57:41,212 --> 00:57:42,339 And so he started writing it, 1014 00:57:42,464 --> 00:57:45,258 and he was, you know, he was in, he was back in. 1015 00:57:46,092 --> 00:57:49,012 DINI: By that time, he said, "Just come back and start writing." 1016 00:57:49,095 --> 00:57:50,805 And like, "Yeah, all right. This is great now." 1017 00:57:50,889 --> 00:57:52,265 It's a lot of fun. 1018 00:57:52,766 --> 00:57:54,768 BURNETT: Thank God, 1019 00:57:54,893 --> 00:57:59,856 because he wrote some of the most important scripts for that show. 1020 00:58:10,617 --> 00:58:13,620 PAUR: Mr. Freeze has never been more 1021 00:58:14,204 --> 00:58:16,623 understandable, more relatable to. 1022 00:58:17,082 --> 00:58:21,127 They found a humanness in the villains. 1023 00:58:21,586 --> 00:58:25,465 They found a why, and they let us know the why. 1024 00:58:30,345 --> 00:58:33,473 DINI: How much can you feel for a character like Victor Fries? 1025 00:58:33,556 --> 00:58:35,100 Can you empathize with him? 1026 00:58:35,850 --> 00:58:38,395 Can you love a character like Harley Quinn, 1027 00:58:38,520 --> 00:58:39,687 who makes bad decisions? 1028 00:58:39,813 --> 00:58:42,023 Who still keeps going back to this maniac. 1029 00:58:42,148 --> 00:58:45,402 Can you empathize a little bit with the Riddler 1030 00:58:45,485 --> 00:58:48,905 and his ongoing need to try and prove himself over Batman? 1031 00:58:49,781 --> 00:58:52,409 The idea is to make every character human. 1032 00:58:52,534 --> 00:58:53,701 Even the bad guys. 1033 00:58:53,785 --> 00:58:55,703 BERKOWITZ: Part of that was Paul, part of that was Alan, 1034 00:58:55,787 --> 00:58:59,666 and part of it was, the two of them made sure they that had a lot of writers 1035 00:58:59,749 --> 00:59:05,338 who were inclined to take the character seriously 1036 00:59:05,422 --> 00:59:07,715 and not write in stereotypes. 1037 00:59:08,091 --> 00:59:11,803 You know, not have some crazy villain doing crazy stuff. 1038 00:59:12,512 --> 00:59:14,389 The villains wanted things. 1039 00:59:14,472 --> 00:59:17,183 They wanted human things. 1040 00:59:17,809 --> 00:59:20,395 DINI: Those made me care about the characters a little bit more. 1041 00:59:21,062 --> 00:59:23,731 You know, it's important, because that sets it up for the next generation. 1042 00:59:23,815 --> 00:59:25,775 They can take it a step further 1043 00:59:25,859 --> 00:59:28,528 and make the characters a little more human, 1044 00:59:28,611 --> 00:59:31,656 a little more funny, a little more interesting. 1045 00:59:38,538 --> 00:59:42,667 In our show, we were able to end something 1046 00:59:43,209 --> 00:59:45,170 without necessarily a happy ending. 1047 00:59:46,254 --> 00:59:47,755 The villain gets his comeuppance, 1048 00:59:47,839 --> 00:59:51,426 but because we've related to the character and we felt sorry for them, 1049 00:59:51,509 --> 00:59:53,428 it's a tragedy. 1050 00:59:53,636 --> 00:59:57,807 Uh, again, very noir. Very, very noir. 1051 01:00:01,060 --> 01:00:01,186 All the villains are not just treated as like, toss-away characters. 1052 01:00:01,186 --> 01:00:05,440 All the villains are not just treated as like, toss-away characters. 1053 01:00:05,523 --> 01:00:06,733 It was a soap opera. 1054 01:00:06,816 --> 01:00:10,653 PAUR: And it opened up the possibilities of animation 1055 01:00:10,737 --> 01:00:13,114 not just being for children. 1056 01:00:13,907 --> 01:00:17,035 That you could really get involved into the characters. 1057 01:00:18,870 --> 01:00:23,958 ALTIERI: Harvey Dent, that was such a great character. 1058 01:00:25,919 --> 01:00:28,213 One of the fastest storyboards I've ever done 1059 01:00:28,588 --> 01:00:30,131 was the ending of that one, 1060 01:00:30,215 --> 01:00:35,220 where Grace is coming down the hallway, and he screams. 1061 01:00:35,303 --> 01:00:38,598 It's Richard Moll doing that death-defying scream. 1062 01:00:38,681 --> 01:00:42,060 (SCREAMING) 1063 01:00:43,394 --> 01:00:47,398 When I saw that played in an audience at a convention once, 1064 01:00:47,482 --> 01:00:52,153 and at the end, when Grace, like, goes"'Harvey." 1065 01:00:52,237 --> 01:00:54,197 And he turns to the camera, 1066 01:00:54,822 --> 01:00:58,701 I heard this girl in the audience just started sobbing uncontrollably. 1067 01:00:59,410 --> 01:01:02,539 Like, it is. It's so sad, it's so tragic. 1068 01:01:03,831 --> 01:01:06,000 Harvey. (MOANS) 1069 01:01:07,043 --> 01:01:10,004 Villains suffer, not because they're villains, 1070 01:01:10,088 --> 01:01:12,590 they suffer because of something they wanted. 1071 01:01:12,966 --> 01:01:15,843 And it's not just some cheerful, happy ending, usually. 1072 01:01:16,511 --> 01:01:18,263 Goodbye, Grace. 1073 01:01:25,353 --> 01:01:28,189 One of the things that was unique about the working environment 1074 01:01:28,273 --> 01:01:31,943 on The Batman show, was that we were working as a unit. 1075 01:01:32,068 --> 01:01:33,194 That we were all together. 1076 01:01:33,278 --> 01:01:35,280 The writers and the artists were all together. 1077 01:01:35,363 --> 01:01:37,448 And that made a huge difference. 1078 01:01:37,532 --> 01:01:41,286 It meant that if there was something that was unclear in the script, 1079 01:01:41,369 --> 01:01:44,330 the director could come down and say, "Hey, what did you mean by this?" 1080 01:01:44,664 --> 01:01:48,585 So, there was a lot more interaction between the art and the writing staff 1081 01:01:48,668 --> 01:01:50,086 than there were on most shows. 1082 01:01:50,378 --> 01:01:51,462 The show was just... 1083 01:01:51,546 --> 01:01:54,632 It was a juggernaut. It was just huge. 1084 01:01:54,924 --> 01:01:57,468 And we were putting out, I think, three scripts a month 1085 01:01:57,552 --> 01:01:58,553 or something like that. 1086 01:01:58,970 --> 01:02:00,430 Oh! It was chaos. (LAUGHS) 1087 01:02:01,347 --> 01:02:03,391 I mean, we really were... 1088 01:02:03,474 --> 01:02:05,351 You know, falling by the seat of our pants. 1089 01:02:06,269 --> 01:02:07,312 MAN: It's Sherman Oaks. 1090 01:02:07,395 --> 01:02:08,855 This is the animation studio for Warner Brothers, 1091 01:02:08,938 --> 01:02:10,523 where they put together the Batman cartoon. 1092 01:02:10,607 --> 01:02:12,442 And as you can see, 1093 01:02:12,525 --> 01:02:14,944 Batman himself trying a beating up on one of the animators. 1094 01:02:15,028 --> 01:02:17,405 Warner Brothers started at the Sherman Oaks Galleria. 1095 01:02:18,573 --> 01:02:21,117 The large... It was the Imperial Bank building. 1096 01:02:21,200 --> 01:02:24,329 It was the way we referred to it. It was, like, a 14-story building 1097 01:02:24,412 --> 01:02:26,956 right next to what used to be a shopping mall. 1098 01:02:27,040 --> 01:02:30,376 TIMM: It was amazing that it was an office building. 1099 01:02:30,460 --> 01:02:34,172 I heard a lot of people used to complain that it was a ratty old dump, 1100 01:02:34,255 --> 01:02:36,883 and... (SIGHS) I don't know. I'm used to working in ratty old dumps 1101 01:02:36,966 --> 01:02:38,968 almost every studio I've ever worked in. 1102 01:02:39,052 --> 01:02:41,471 TIMM: They were all kind of low-rent. 1103 01:02:41,554 --> 01:02:44,307 We shared a floor with a real wild group of people. 1104 01:02:45,058 --> 01:02:48,019 I mean, I remember there was a fist-fight one night. Ay-yai-yai. 1105 01:02:48,603 --> 01:02:51,022 TIMM: It's a big bunch of offices, 1106 01:02:51,105 --> 01:02:54,192 and there was a big bullpen area where there's a lot of cubicles and stuff. 1107 01:02:54,275 --> 01:02:57,945 It looks like it could be, you know, any corporation. 1108 01:02:58,863 --> 01:03:00,198 Except that there's, you know, 1109 01:03:00,281 --> 01:03:03,034 usually a lot of artwork tacked up all over the walls, everywhere. 1110 01:03:03,868 --> 01:03:06,037 MACCURDY: Everybody was making it up as we went along. 1111 01:03:06,120 --> 01:03:07,330 I mean, that was part of the fun of it. 1112 01:03:07,413 --> 01:03:08,873 It was figuring out how to do it 1113 01:03:08,956 --> 01:03:11,834 and how to get the best out of people. 1114 01:03:11,918 --> 01:03:13,086 And to let people... 1115 01:03:13,211 --> 01:03:15,713 I was a real firm believer in letting people work 1116 01:03:15,797 --> 01:03:18,132 on what it is that they wanted to work on. 1117 01:03:18,216 --> 01:03:19,425 What they liked. 1118 01:03:19,884 --> 01:03:23,388 MACCURDY: And because that's when you're gonna get good work. 1119 01:03:23,888 --> 01:03:25,598 PAUR: There was a lot of fun. 1120 01:03:25,807 --> 01:03:28,935 There was a lot of discord at times. 1121 01:03:29,018 --> 01:03:30,770 There were a lot of fights, 1122 01:03:30,853 --> 01:03:32,772 because everybody cared about the characters. 1123 01:03:33,147 --> 01:03:35,650 MACCURDY: Animators and cartoons, I think... 1124 01:03:36,567 --> 01:03:37,985 They're very rebellious. 1125 01:03:38,069 --> 01:03:40,405 And you need something to rebel against, 1126 01:03:40,488 --> 01:03:43,574 in order to help feed that creative juice. 1127 01:03:43,700 --> 01:03:45,743 I don't like this. It's kind of stupid. 1128 01:03:45,827 --> 01:03:48,329 I mean, look. Have him jumping out of a third floor window, 1129 01:03:48,413 --> 01:03:49,872 and he's walking away. 1130 01:03:49,997 --> 01:03:52,125 Why don't we have him sit there and break his ankle? 1131 01:03:52,208 --> 01:03:53,751 And we see him in a cast... 1132 01:03:53,835 --> 01:03:56,796 A lot of them wouldn't do that. And I would say, "Why not?" 1133 01:03:56,879 --> 01:03:59,090 And then maybe we get something else out of it 1134 01:03:59,173 --> 01:04:04,887 that's completely unrelated to what we're even talking about. 1135 01:04:04,971 --> 01:04:07,557 It just evolved from that discussion. 1136 01:04:07,640 --> 01:04:10,184 But the point was, we would have those discussions. 1137 01:04:10,351 --> 01:04:13,020 There was a lot of that type of... 1138 01:04:13,438 --> 01:04:15,940 Sort of creative energy... 1139 01:04:16,733 --> 01:04:18,860 That was fun. It was fun. 1140 01:04:18,943 --> 01:04:20,111 We had a good time. 1141 01:04:22,155 --> 01:04:27,326 PAUR: We had some strongly-talented people on the series. 1142 01:04:28,536 --> 01:04:31,164 You know, playing pranks on people, while they're working, 1143 01:04:31,956 --> 01:04:38,755 Seeing images of Dan Riba stumbling down the hallway 1144 01:04:38,838 --> 01:04:41,507 into these booths in a Batman costume. 1145 01:04:41,632 --> 01:04:43,760 Getting in a fight with Eric, you know. 1146 01:04:44,177 --> 01:04:46,053 Stupid stuff like that. 1147 01:04:46,179 --> 01:04:47,722 This is generally a very congenial place, 1148 01:04:47,805 --> 01:04:49,140 people here really get along. 1149 01:04:49,223 --> 01:04:51,476 It's lots of fun. Well... 1150 01:04:51,768 --> 01:04:54,312 Oh, you saw this last hour, there they go again. 1151 01:04:54,395 --> 01:04:56,230 It's Batman and the writer. (CHUCKLES) 1152 01:04:56,397 --> 01:04:57,774 MACCURDY: And, you know, it's funny, 1153 01:04:57,857 --> 01:05:01,986 we finally built a fancy studio over at Sherman Oaks, over there. 1154 01:05:02,737 --> 01:05:04,739 That's when we started to lose it, I think, 1155 01:05:04,822 --> 01:05:09,285 'cause it was better when it was still sort of, the Termite Terrace feel. 1156 01:05:10,870 --> 01:05:12,121 We weren't successful. 1157 01:05:12,205 --> 01:05:15,875 You know, you kind of want to be the scrappy kids. 1158 01:05:16,000 --> 01:05:17,960 We always had Disney as our foil. 1159 01:05:18,044 --> 01:05:20,171 Um, yeah. 1160 01:05:20,671 --> 01:05:23,090 We always thought we were much better. (CHUCKLES) 1161 01:05:23,966 --> 01:05:26,886 We made a very good series... 1162 01:05:27,261 --> 01:05:30,848 I'm not bragging... I'm telling you, after the fact that 1163 01:05:30,932 --> 01:05:34,477 everybody put their heart and soul into it and worked together, 1164 01:05:34,560 --> 01:05:38,773 and we succeeded in making a series that I'm so proud of. 1165 01:05:40,775 --> 01:05:43,569 Let's go 38 to 40... 1166 01:05:44,612 --> 01:05:46,447 Seven. Just that far. 1167 01:05:46,697 --> 01:05:49,826 We had Andrea Romano as our recording director. 1168 01:05:50,284 --> 01:05:53,120 BURNETT: And she also cast the show. 1169 01:05:53,204 --> 01:05:55,498 KEVIN CONROY: The real secret of the show was the casting. 1170 01:05:55,581 --> 01:06:00,711 Andrea studied acting in college, in New York. 1171 01:06:00,795 --> 01:06:03,756 And then she became a stage manager, I think, 1172 01:06:03,840 --> 01:06:05,049 and then she became an agent, 1173 01:06:05,132 --> 01:06:08,678 and then she eventually became director of animation. 1174 01:06:08,761 --> 01:06:12,098 So, she understands what actors go through. 1175 01:06:12,181 --> 01:06:13,641 She understands the process. 1176 01:06:14,141 --> 01:06:17,687 CONROY: So, recording sessions were always really wonderful. 1177 01:06:17,770 --> 01:06:20,106 A wonderful experience that everyone looked forward to. 1178 01:06:20,189 --> 01:06:21,440 TIMM: You know, I had a meeting with her, 1179 01:06:21,941 --> 01:06:22,024 BRUCE TIMM CO-CREATOR 1180 01:06:22,108 --> 01:06:24,610 and kind of told her the kind of... 1181 01:06:25,194 --> 01:06:27,154 Overall feel that we wanted the show to have. 1182 01:06:27,238 --> 01:06:31,784 It would be very much, you know, realistic and straight, and serious, 1183 01:06:31,868 --> 01:06:35,788 and not high-pitched and super-high energy, 1184 01:06:35,872 --> 01:06:38,708 you know, like, say, Tiny Toons. 1185 01:06:38,791 --> 01:06:39,876 I think we mentioned that... 1186 01:06:39,959 --> 01:06:43,504 We said, "Yeah, ideally it would sound like a movie from the 1940s." 1187 01:06:43,588 --> 01:06:45,339 (SNAPPING FINGERS) "You know, that kind of fast-paced, 1188 01:06:45,423 --> 01:06:47,925 "but realistic, kind of naturalistic." 1189 01:06:48,551 --> 01:06:50,136 And she seemed to get it immediately. 1190 01:06:50,219 --> 01:06:52,179 She was, like, "I know exactly what you want." 1191 01:06:52,513 --> 01:06:56,517 ROMANO: For a show like Batman, I need killer actors. 1192 01:06:56,767 --> 01:07:02,773 Ideally, actors with stage credits, because it's that energy that's needed. 1193 01:07:03,065 --> 01:07:05,443 I had never done an animated voice before. 1194 01:07:05,943 --> 01:07:08,696 CONROY: I had never auditioned for an animated voice before. 1195 01:07:09,155 --> 01:07:11,157 I was a stage actor. 1196 01:07:11,240 --> 01:07:12,366 I went to Juilliard, 1197 01:07:12,450 --> 01:07:14,076 I worked on Broadway, I worked off Broadway, 1198 01:07:14,160 --> 01:07:16,287 I worked for Joe Path at the public... I was a New York actor. 1199 01:07:17,079 --> 01:07:18,873 ROMANO: For the single character of Batman itself, 1200 01:07:18,956 --> 01:07:22,043 I know I listened to well over 500 voices. Well over. 1201 01:07:22,460 --> 01:07:24,295 So many actors. 1202 01:07:24,629 --> 01:07:26,464 We didn't fall in love with anybody. 1203 01:07:26,839 --> 01:07:30,801 And when you're casting something as awesome as Batman, 1204 01:07:30,885 --> 01:07:34,430 for a series called Batman, you want to fall in love with them. 1205 01:07:34,513 --> 01:07:35,681 You really want to fall in love with them. 1206 01:07:35,765 --> 01:07:38,142 CONROY: I had done commercial voice-overs in New York, 1207 01:07:38,267 --> 01:07:39,727 so I had a voice-over agent. 1208 01:07:39,936 --> 01:07:43,356 And he said, "They're putting together a new show over at Warner Brothers. 1209 01:07:43,439 --> 01:07:44,941 "I know you haven't done any animation, 1210 01:07:45,024 --> 01:07:47,735 "but why don't you go over and give it a shot? It's Batman." 1211 01:07:47,818 --> 01:07:48,945 And I said, "No." 1212 01:07:49,028 --> 01:07:51,697 I said, "Batman's been around forever. It was on when I was a kid." 1213 01:07:52,114 --> 01:07:53,866 CONROY: I didn't go with any preconceptions. 1214 01:07:53,950 --> 01:07:56,369 I didn't go with any preconceived notions 1215 01:07:56,452 --> 01:07:58,371 or anticipation of who I was gonna meet. 1216 01:07:58,454 --> 01:08:01,290 I didn't know who Bruce Timm was, I didn't know who Andrea Romano was. 1217 01:08:01,540 --> 01:08:05,169 I was just an actor going into an audition. 1218 01:08:05,711 --> 01:08:09,340 So, we bring him in on the callbacks, and he walks through the door, 1219 01:08:09,423 --> 01:08:12,176 and he asked a couple of very intelligent questions. 1220 01:08:12,259 --> 01:08:15,805 And then we let him audition for the voice of Batman. 1221 01:08:16,097 --> 01:08:20,017 And it was truly the eureka moment that you wish for. 1222 01:08:20,101 --> 01:08:21,936 Bruce and I looked at each other and just... 1223 01:08:22,019 --> 01:08:24,897 You could see the stress of months of auditions 1224 01:08:24,981 --> 01:08:28,234 just fall from our faces, because we had found Batman. 1225 01:08:28,359 --> 01:08:30,820 It was remarkable. 1226 01:08:33,322 --> 01:08:36,826 The trick over this long arc has been to not let it get stale. 1227 01:08:36,909 --> 01:08:38,661 CONROY: And I learned this early on. 1228 01:08:38,744 --> 01:08:40,746 Batman is not the disguise. 1229 01:08:42,373 --> 01:08:46,585 Batman is who he went to, it's what he became, 1230 01:08:47,712 --> 01:08:50,131 because of the tragedy of his childhood. 1231 01:08:50,256 --> 01:08:52,091 It's where he found safety. 1232 01:08:52,883 --> 01:08:55,261 It's where he is most comfortable. 1233 01:08:55,386 --> 01:08:57,013 In that cave. 1234 01:08:59,015 --> 01:09:03,728 And the suit of armor he puts on, the role he plays for the world, 1235 01:09:04,145 --> 01:09:05,855 -is Bruce Wayne. -(CAT YOWLING) 1236 01:09:06,355 --> 01:09:07,898 That's the performance. 1237 01:09:09,233 --> 01:09:11,694 And so, once I found that about the character, 1238 01:09:12,695 --> 01:09:14,739 it really made sense to me. 1239 01:09:14,822 --> 01:09:17,575 It kept the Batman voice 1240 01:09:18,534 --> 01:09:20,703 from sounding artificial. 1241 01:09:21,787 --> 01:09:24,957 And it kept Bruce Wayne from... 1242 01:09:25,041 --> 01:09:29,545 It made him such a different persona. 1243 01:09:30,129 --> 01:09:33,424 Kevin Conroy is just phenomenal. But it's not just him. 1244 01:09:33,591 --> 01:09:34,800 I remember, my agent called 1245 01:09:34,884 --> 01:09:37,219 and left a message on my answering machine. 1246 01:09:37,303 --> 01:09:39,013 And he's, like, "Oh, my God. You're her. 1247 01:09:39,096 --> 01:09:40,347 "You're the girl. You're the girl that's a bat. 1248 01:09:40,431 --> 01:09:41,432 STRONG: "You're Batgirl!" 1249 01:09:41,515 --> 01:09:42,767 And he was screaming, I was screaming, 1250 01:09:42,850 --> 01:09:43,976 and I was, like, "Oh, my God!" 1251 01:09:44,060 --> 01:09:47,396 It was such a huge thrill to book it. 1252 01:09:48,064 --> 01:09:49,065 I was excited about it. 1253 01:09:49,148 --> 01:09:51,734 But it was really, like, "This is a really good job. 1254 01:09:51,817 --> 01:09:53,778 "A really nice job, and I hope it lasts." 1255 01:09:53,861 --> 01:09:56,113 LESTER: You know, that'd be nice, to do a few episodes. 1256 01:09:56,197 --> 01:09:58,491 Here we are, talking about it 25 years later. 1257 01:09:58,574 --> 01:10:00,117 We're still talking about that show. 1258 01:10:00,826 --> 01:10:01,911 I had no idea. 1259 01:10:01,994 --> 01:10:04,246 I had no idea that something like that was gonna happen. 1260 01:10:04,872 --> 01:10:08,542 MACCURDY: Andrea Romano was able to... You know, she's amazing, 1261 01:10:08,626 --> 01:10:12,713 in terms of not only her ability to figure out who to put where, 1262 01:10:13,089 --> 01:10:15,591 but to get to them and to convince them to do it. 1263 01:10:16,300 --> 01:10:19,220 STRONG: Every week there'd be some incredible guest star. 1264 01:10:19,303 --> 01:10:21,847 Efrem Zimbalist Jr., and of course, Arleen Sorkin. 1265 01:10:21,972 --> 01:10:25,017 It was just an amazing magical time. 1266 01:10:25,601 --> 01:10:28,938 CARLIN: Who thinks of going to Paul Williams to be the Penguin? 1267 01:10:29,271 --> 01:10:33,567 It was perfect. And it just sounded like a weird place, 1268 01:10:33,692 --> 01:10:35,444 because they were pulling guys, 1269 01:10:35,820 --> 01:10:40,366 Efrem Zimbalist Jr. was a great idea, you know. The guy had a voice. 1270 01:10:41,075 --> 01:10:45,454 But it's like he wasn't a voice actor up until that point. 1271 01:10:46,038 --> 01:10:47,790 And neither was Mark Hamill. 1272 01:10:48,624 --> 01:10:52,795 Actors all live, to a certain extent, in a fantasy world. 1273 01:10:52,878 --> 01:10:58,509 And to me, doing Batman was a lifelong dream in the sense that, 1274 01:10:58,592 --> 01:11:01,637 I always thought that the character actors had the most fun. 1275 01:11:01,929 --> 01:11:04,807 ROMANO: Oddly enough, as fate would have it, 1276 01:11:04,890 --> 01:11:07,476 Tim Curry, who was voicing the Joker for me, 1277 01:11:07,560 --> 01:11:10,396 was not a favorite of one of the new producers who came on the show. 1278 01:11:11,147 --> 01:11:14,316 And truth be told, I never would have replaced Tim Curry. 1279 01:11:14,400 --> 01:11:16,569 I loved Tim. I thought he was doing a beautiful job. 1280 01:11:16,652 --> 01:11:18,612 But I could never please this producer. 1281 01:11:18,696 --> 01:11:20,114 So, now I have to find the Joker, 1282 01:11:20,531 --> 01:11:26,328 but we're at least two or three, maybe four episodes into animation 1283 01:11:26,412 --> 01:11:28,164 with Tim Curry's voice. 1284 01:11:28,289 --> 01:11:31,041 So, the animation is done, the mouth flaps exist. 1285 01:11:31,125 --> 01:11:34,336 There's an energy, there's a performance, there's a timing 1286 01:11:34,420 --> 01:11:38,090 that I have to find an actor who can bring their own Joker to it 1287 01:11:38,174 --> 01:11:42,511 and mouth flap match Tim. 1288 01:11:42,595 --> 01:11:46,807 And sing, because the character sang in the Christmas episode. 1289 01:11:46,891 --> 01:11:48,601 So, I auditioned, auditioned, auditioned people, 1290 01:11:48,684 --> 01:11:50,436 and I went, "You know what, I've gotta give Mark a shot." 1291 01:11:50,519 --> 01:11:52,605 This might just be the answer to our prayers. 1292 01:11:52,688 --> 01:11:55,191 Mark Hamill, oh, my God. Do you think we can get him? 1293 01:11:55,816 --> 01:12:00,029 ROMANO: Mark walked in, and he was incredible. 1294 01:12:00,487 --> 01:12:05,117 One of the things it said at the top of the audition script, 1295 01:12:05,201 --> 01:12:07,161 "Don't think Nicholson." 1296 01:12:07,286 --> 01:12:10,497 What a relief that was. 1297 01:12:10,581 --> 01:12:12,124 HAMILL: Because I figured 1298 01:12:12,208 --> 01:12:15,085 if you're gonna just try and imitate Jack Nicholson, 1299 01:12:15,169 --> 01:12:16,962 you're gonna really suffer. 1300 01:12:17,046 --> 01:12:19,924 Because as wonderful as he is in the movie, 1301 01:12:20,007 --> 01:12:22,927 Jack is Jack. All we can do is imitate him. 1302 01:12:23,010 --> 01:12:24,553 That's not something I wanted to do. 1303 01:12:24,929 --> 01:12:28,349 I remember hearing his audition for the Joker, and it was the laugh. 1304 01:12:28,432 --> 01:12:32,144 Once I heard the laugh, I was going, like, "Oh, God, that's it." 1305 01:12:32,228 --> 01:12:33,395 (JOKER LAUGHING) 1306 01:12:34,021 --> 01:12:35,898 HARLEY QUINN: You're really sick. You know that, boss? 1307 01:12:35,981 --> 01:12:37,274 Mmm-hmm. 1308 01:12:37,775 --> 01:12:39,443 It just sent goosebumps down my spine. 1309 01:12:39,526 --> 01:12:43,280 He has so inhabited that role, 1310 01:12:43,364 --> 01:12:47,493 and it would just, sort of, physically take over his body as he did it. 1311 01:12:47,576 --> 01:12:50,454 It was an amazing transformation to watch. 1312 01:12:50,537 --> 01:12:54,875 If the world decides to build a Mount Rushmore for the Joker, 1313 01:12:56,168 --> 01:13:01,090 it's going to be Jack Nicholson, Heath Ledger and Mark Hamill. 1314 01:13:01,882 --> 01:13:05,386 USLAN: Because Mark is the definitive voice of the Joker. 1315 01:13:05,469 --> 01:13:09,765 The Joker that you hear today on the cartoon by Mark Hamill, 1316 01:13:09,848 --> 01:13:13,310 is exactly the Joker he did for us when he walked in and auditioned for us. 1317 01:13:13,394 --> 01:13:16,105 DINI: It was manic, it was funny, 1318 01:13:16,188 --> 01:13:18,691 and there was a little element of tragedy to it. 1319 01:13:18,774 --> 01:13:23,362 It was just a little bit of, like, "This guy is a lost soul." 1320 01:13:23,570 --> 01:13:25,447 And he doesn't care. 1321 01:13:25,572 --> 01:13:28,284 And that's what made it scary. 1322 01:13:28,951 --> 01:13:30,327 ROMANO: It was as if from childhood 1323 01:13:30,411 --> 01:13:32,663 he had thought about how he would voice the Joker. 1324 01:13:32,746 --> 01:13:34,331 If he ever got the chance to do it. 1325 01:13:34,581 --> 01:13:37,835 Everyone was doing these incredible villain characters. 1326 01:13:38,335 --> 01:13:40,713 DINI: Arleen, wonderful as Harley. 1327 01:13:42,089 --> 01:13:44,842 I brought her up and said, "Hey, I'm kind of basing this character 1328 01:13:44,925 --> 01:13:46,635 "on my friend. She's a comedic actor. 1329 01:13:46,719 --> 01:13:48,262 "I thought of getting her to do the voice." 1330 01:13:48,345 --> 01:13:50,764 And Andrea was saying, "Okay, I'll give her a shot." 1331 01:13:50,848 --> 01:13:53,183 She came in and she had this sort of 1332 01:13:53,267 --> 01:13:55,686 warped Billie Holiday quality to her voice. 1333 01:13:55,769 --> 01:13:58,230 And the fact that she hadn't done voice-over, 1334 01:13:58,355 --> 01:14:01,150 that made her want to experiment and try different things, 1335 01:14:01,233 --> 01:14:04,945 and she brought in a newness to... 1336 01:14:06,530 --> 01:14:10,492 To her performance and to that character, and it really clicked. 1337 01:14:11,785 --> 01:14:13,245 RUEGGER: Harley Quinn's a great example. 1338 01:14:13,329 --> 01:14:17,082 What a character created by Paul Dini and Bruce Timm. 1339 01:14:17,166 --> 01:14:24,089 And here she is, this sort of zany sidekick to the Joker. 1340 01:14:24,506 --> 01:14:28,302 It came from Batman: The Animated Series, and they're... 1341 01:14:28,385 --> 01:14:31,055 Warner Brothers is thinking of giving her her own movie franchise. 1342 01:14:31,305 --> 01:14:32,723 RUEGGER: I mean... 1343 01:14:33,515 --> 01:14:37,978 This thing really did create some lasting images 1344 01:14:38,062 --> 01:14:39,521 and some lasting characters. 1345 01:14:39,605 --> 01:14:42,232 So, it's fun to have actors of that caliber, you know. 1346 01:14:42,316 --> 01:14:45,903 And we had, like, almost the entire crew lined up, 1347 01:14:45,986 --> 01:14:47,738 like a radio play. 1348 01:14:48,322 --> 01:14:51,867 A great thing about recording for Warner Brothers, 1349 01:14:51,950 --> 01:14:54,286 and Andrea Romano, specifically, 1350 01:14:54,370 --> 01:14:57,748 is they really like to get all the actors together in a room. 1351 01:14:57,831 --> 01:14:59,333 ROMANO: I can't say that I insisted upon it, 1352 01:14:59,416 --> 01:15:02,836 but I really tried to always make that happen 1353 01:15:02,920 --> 01:15:04,296 on every series I directed. 1354 01:15:04,630 --> 01:15:07,549 Because a major part of acting is reacting. 1355 01:15:08,342 --> 01:15:10,719 CONROY: So, you have the other actors to bounce things off of. 1356 01:15:10,803 --> 01:15:13,931 I wouldn't be nearly as good in what I do 1357 01:15:14,014 --> 01:15:17,684 if I didn't have Mark Hamill feeding me as the Joker. 1358 01:15:18,644 --> 01:15:21,397 So, typically, when there's a group cast record, 1359 01:15:21,480 --> 01:15:23,565 all the actors will be in a semi-circle 1360 01:15:23,649 --> 01:15:26,318 facing the booth so that we can see the director. 1361 01:15:26,568 --> 01:15:29,571 Everyone's in the room together. It's just one big room. 1362 01:15:29,655 --> 01:15:32,616 And you have music stands, you've got a microphone, 1363 01:15:32,699 --> 01:15:33,992 and you got headsets on. 1364 01:15:34,368 --> 01:15:36,620 So, we would all be sitting there, all of us, 1365 01:15:36,703 --> 01:15:38,664 except for Mark Hamill, who would always stand. 1366 01:15:39,164 --> 01:15:41,125 LESTER: I always knew Mark was in the show because I'd come in 1367 01:15:41,208 --> 01:15:43,293 and there would be one microphone stand standing. 1368 01:15:43,377 --> 01:15:44,878 I'd say, "Oh, Mark's in this episode." 1369 01:15:44,962 --> 01:15:47,297 You're really listening to each other and playing off each other, 1370 01:15:47,381 --> 01:15:49,174 it's a very collaborative world. 1371 01:15:49,550 --> 01:15:53,011 I would say a line, and maybe the other actor would pause 1372 01:15:53,095 --> 01:15:54,638 before saying something. 1373 01:15:54,721 --> 01:15:56,223 And that would give me pause 1374 01:15:56,306 --> 01:15:58,517 and make me think about what are they thinking. 1375 01:15:58,934 --> 01:16:04,815 This is what you do in every realm where good acting is involved. 1376 01:16:05,023 --> 01:16:08,152 LESTER: And that situation where we were all in the room together, 1377 01:16:08,569 --> 01:16:10,112 that lent itself to that. 1378 01:16:10,654 --> 01:16:14,116 ROMANO: I wanted to make sure that there was a sensitivity to these pieces, 1379 01:16:14,241 --> 01:16:17,119 and that's why you'll see where there are emotional scenes 1380 01:16:17,202 --> 01:16:19,788 that are played, I let them breathe. 1381 01:16:19,872 --> 01:16:21,999 I wanted them to breathe, I want to take more time. 1382 01:16:22,082 --> 01:16:23,500 I wanted the actors to make me cry. 1383 01:16:23,584 --> 01:16:25,752 And they almost always did. 1384 01:16:25,836 --> 01:16:28,881 And if they didn't, I felt like I hadn't done my job right. 1385 01:16:28,964 --> 01:16:32,426 Andrea knew what to say to get the actors to give the performance. 1386 01:16:32,509 --> 01:16:34,428 That she and the other people in the booth 1387 01:16:34,511 --> 01:16:35,971 were expecting or envisioned. 1388 01:16:36,054 --> 01:16:37,931 So, feel free to ask questions as we go along, 1389 01:16:38,015 --> 01:16:39,224 I'll describe the action that 1390 01:16:39,308 --> 01:16:41,477 I think it's important for you to know, and we'll just go scene by scene. 1391 01:16:42,186 --> 01:16:45,689 LESTER: So, remember the animation is done later. 1392 01:16:45,772 --> 01:16:47,566 We do the voice first. 1393 01:16:47,649 --> 01:16:52,279 And all we get is a script with words on it. 1394 01:16:52,446 --> 01:16:57,826 When we record, it's up to Andrea to paint the pictures for us. 1395 01:16:57,910 --> 01:16:59,411 And that's what she would do. 1396 01:16:59,495 --> 01:17:02,122 She would really paint the pictures of what was going on, 1397 01:17:02,206 --> 01:17:03,916 'cause she'd seen the storyboards. 1398 01:17:03,999 --> 01:17:08,921 And she would tell us, you know, "Okay, you're in a helicopter, 1399 01:17:09,004 --> 01:17:12,090 "and the mountain is coming right at you." 1400 01:17:12,174 --> 01:17:14,301 These kinds of things 1401 01:17:14,384 --> 01:17:18,305 you couldn't necessarily picture or get from the script. 1402 01:17:18,388 --> 01:17:19,932 There would be brief descriptions, 1403 01:17:20,015 --> 01:17:21,517 but she would really paint the picture of it, 1404 01:17:21,600 --> 01:17:26,438 and if it wasn't quite the right sound, especially in the fights... 1405 01:17:26,522 --> 01:17:28,357 There are different kinds of fights. 1406 01:17:28,440 --> 01:17:30,776 There's a difference between an "Uh" and an "Oh!" 1407 01:17:30,859 --> 01:17:34,530 So, she would say, "Okay, now you're getting kicked in the stomach." 1408 01:17:34,613 --> 01:17:35,822 (GRUNTS) 1409 01:17:35,906 --> 01:17:37,449 Mmm. And she sees the storyboard, 1410 01:17:37,533 --> 01:17:39,952 "Now you're getting really kicked hard in the stomach." 1411 01:17:40,035 --> 01:17:41,954 So, you know, 1412 01:17:42,037 --> 01:17:44,665 those are things that we would not be able to do 1413 01:17:44,748 --> 01:17:47,793 unless we had a wonderful captain at the helm, 1414 01:17:47,876 --> 01:17:49,920 and she, you know, was it. 1415 01:17:51,713 --> 01:17:55,342 ROMANO: I would never ask an actor to do something that I wouldn't do. 1416 01:17:55,425 --> 01:17:56,635 So, I was right there with them. 1417 01:17:56,718 --> 01:18:00,097 I would cry with them, I would get angry with them. 1418 01:18:00,180 --> 01:18:01,557 I would yell with them. 1419 01:18:01,640 --> 01:18:03,976 I would do everything... I would do it first 1420 01:18:04,059 --> 01:18:06,812 so that they could see that it's okay to... 1421 01:18:06,895 --> 01:18:11,066 To do it that broad. It's okay to cry, to yell, to be... 1422 01:18:11,149 --> 01:18:12,818 You know, all those things. 1423 01:18:13,193 --> 01:18:18,198 These are super-real, authentic, emotional pieces that we're working on. 1424 01:18:19,157 --> 01:18:23,245 STRONG: And that's part of why this show is so well-loved by the fans. 1425 01:18:23,328 --> 01:18:25,038 They felt that authenticity. 1426 01:18:25,581 --> 01:18:30,168 It was very collaborative how we came to the energy of this show, 1427 01:18:30,335 --> 01:18:33,547 and where the quiet moments needed to be. 1428 01:18:33,630 --> 01:18:36,049 ROMANO: And those are the moments that I really love to direct, 1429 01:18:36,133 --> 01:18:40,470 where you just take that breath, that moment, 1430 01:18:41,388 --> 01:18:43,056 and then a huge fight scene happens. 1431 01:18:43,140 --> 01:18:44,600 (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING) 1432 01:18:45,976 --> 01:18:47,894 Bruce is very upfront. 1433 01:18:47,978 --> 01:18:51,690 He did not want wall-to-wall music on his shows. 1434 01:18:52,441 --> 01:18:53,525 You know. 1435 01:18:53,609 --> 01:18:56,778 Sometimes I wish that we had just a little bit more. 1436 01:18:57,863 --> 01:19:00,949 But he was right in saying that we need breathing space. 1437 01:19:01,033 --> 01:19:03,785 PAUR: Absolutely. Especially in these types of shows. 1438 01:19:04,161 --> 01:19:05,996 -The film noir. -(SIREN BLARING) 1439 01:19:06,538 --> 01:19:09,833 Sometimes you just need a sound, a simple sound effect, you know. 1440 01:19:09,916 --> 01:19:12,461 The dripping of the water, you know, 1441 01:19:12,544 --> 01:19:16,089 a rat scurrying across the sewer line or something. 1442 01:19:16,506 --> 01:19:17,591 That's all you needed. 1443 01:19:17,674 --> 01:19:21,261 You just let the echo take it. And that's... That's the music. 1444 01:19:21,345 --> 01:19:24,264 That little sound effect carrying over in an echo, 1445 01:19:24,348 --> 01:19:27,809 plays as music, because it serves the same purpose. 1446 01:19:29,061 --> 01:19:33,315 Music was equally as important, and as wonderful and brilliant 1447 01:19:33,398 --> 01:19:36,276 as all of the other elements that came together 1448 01:19:36,360 --> 01:19:39,071 and to say that we knew that would happen, 1449 01:19:39,154 --> 01:19:41,657 would be a complete lie. 1450 01:19:41,740 --> 01:19:45,118 Because all of those things made... 1451 01:19:45,202 --> 01:19:49,039 Made the series become the iconic series that it has become. 1452 01:19:52,918 --> 01:19:57,506 For the first time in almost any animated show like that, 1453 01:19:57,589 --> 01:20:00,884 we had real orchestral music. 1454 01:20:01,426 --> 01:20:03,095 PAUR: It wasn't a synthesizer. 1455 01:20:03,220 --> 01:20:04,471 (SUSPENSEFUL ORCHESTRAL MUSIC PLAYING) 1456 01:20:05,013 --> 01:20:07,391 It was real instrumentation. 1457 01:20:08,558 --> 01:20:13,021 We had Shirley Walker, who is just one of the greatest composers ever. 1458 01:20:13,397 --> 01:20:17,192 In my mind, she is such a delightful person as well. 1459 01:20:17,609 --> 01:20:22,739 She was phenomenal. She came up with a theme for Batman 1460 01:20:23,573 --> 01:20:25,033 that is just haunting. 1461 01:20:25,117 --> 01:20:26,660 To this day it's a haunting theme. 1462 01:20:26,868 --> 01:20:28,078 When we did Tiny Toons, 1463 01:20:28,161 --> 01:20:30,455 we needed to make the music really important. 1464 01:20:30,539 --> 01:20:32,582 RUEGGER: And Steven wanted to spend all the money on the music. 1465 01:20:32,666 --> 01:20:33,959 We were spending a fortune. 1466 01:20:34,042 --> 01:20:36,878 MACCURDY: Steven said to me, "Well, we have to have a full orchestra." 1467 01:20:37,587 --> 01:20:38,839 For these cartoons. 1468 01:20:38,922 --> 01:20:42,843 And I was, "Oh, nobody does that." 1469 01:20:43,301 --> 01:20:46,346 You know, you record these little sound bites, Steven, 1470 01:20:46,430 --> 01:20:48,765 and then you just cut them in wherever you need them 1471 01:20:48,849 --> 01:20:50,183 and you use them over and over again. 1472 01:20:50,267 --> 01:20:52,561 He was, like, "No. We are not going to do that." 1473 01:20:52,644 --> 01:20:56,732 And I was, like, "Oh. Okay." (CHUCKLES) 1474 01:20:56,815 --> 01:20:58,859 I wasn't sure what that meant, but it meant a lot of money. 1475 01:20:59,526 --> 01:21:02,237 And so when we started Batman, there was, like, 1476 01:21:02,320 --> 01:21:04,656 "Well, we have to have an orchestra." I mean, that's what we do. 1477 01:21:04,906 --> 01:21:09,286 That is now what Warner animation does. We do full orchestra. 1478 01:21:09,536 --> 01:21:11,371 (CHUCKLING) So, it was, like... 1479 01:21:11,580 --> 01:21:13,248 And, so, thank you, Steven. 1480 01:21:13,707 --> 01:21:15,208 Got us an orchestra. 1481 01:21:15,292 --> 01:21:19,671 Shirley Walker wanted this Batman Animated Series very much. 1482 01:21:20,881 --> 01:21:24,050 She really kind of stepped forward and said, 1483 01:21:24,134 --> 01:21:27,971 "You gotta let me score this series." 1484 01:21:28,054 --> 01:21:29,264 MACCURDY: She was just... 1485 01:21:29,347 --> 01:21:32,309 She was... Oh, God, makes me get teary. 1486 01:21:32,392 --> 01:21:34,019 She was really a gift. 1487 01:21:34,102 --> 01:21:36,146 Um, she was something else. 1488 01:21:36,354 --> 01:21:39,316 MACCURDY: Talk about a strong woman. (CHUCKLES) 1489 01:21:39,399 --> 01:21:40,901 You know, in that business. 1490 01:21:40,984 --> 01:21:45,489 And she had worked for Danny Elfman, and God, the talent 1491 01:21:45,572 --> 01:21:46,990 and the sound that comes out of her... 1492 01:21:47,073 --> 01:21:48,325 It was something else. 1493 01:21:55,624 --> 01:21:58,376 I have very, very specific memories of 1494 01:21:58,710 --> 01:22:01,546 the very first time she conducted an orchestra 1495 01:22:01,630 --> 01:22:04,341 to our picture, over at the lot. 1496 01:22:08,178 --> 01:22:09,471 Eric and I went over there, 1497 01:22:09,554 --> 01:22:10,931 and we were sitting there in the control booth, 1498 01:22:11,014 --> 01:22:12,766 and she's out there conducting the orchestra. 1499 01:22:12,849 --> 01:22:14,976 She runs the film and we hear the orchestra, 1500 01:22:15,060 --> 01:22:18,855 you know, power up, and it's playing that dynamic opening music 1501 01:22:18,939 --> 01:22:20,982 to the first episode, On Leather Wings. 1502 01:22:21,066 --> 01:22:22,943 It was, like, trombones and strings... 1503 01:22:23,026 --> 01:22:24,820 It was, like, really dark and spooky and gothic, 1504 01:22:24,903 --> 01:22:26,238 and I was just, like, "Wow!" 1505 01:22:26,321 --> 01:22:27,781 I was, like, "This sounds great. 1506 01:22:27,864 --> 01:22:30,617 "I've never heard a TV cartoon that sounds like this." 1507 01:22:30,700 --> 01:22:33,119 It's like... Yeah, it was something. 1508 01:22:36,998 --> 01:22:38,667 (MUSIC PLAYING) 1509 01:22:41,503 --> 01:22:43,004 RADOMSKI: And she then whispers to me. 1510 01:22:43,088 --> 01:22:46,341 She's like, "Over half of these people are LA Philharmonic players, 1511 01:22:46,424 --> 01:22:48,260 "and this is day job for them." 1512 01:22:48,552 --> 01:22:51,638 And you just... I don't even know how you describe it, 1513 01:22:51,721 --> 01:22:53,348 other than to go, "How did I get so lucky?" 1514 01:22:53,431 --> 01:22:54,724 I mean, this is just incredible. 1515 01:22:54,808 --> 01:22:56,893 And then, of course the starting of the music, 1516 01:22:56,977 --> 01:22:58,687 and it's just chills. 1517 01:22:58,770 --> 01:23:00,146 (ORCHESTRAL MUSIC PLAYS) 1518 01:23:02,566 --> 01:23:05,694 When I heard the score for that first episode... 1519 01:23:06,403 --> 01:23:09,906 I mean, it just brought tears to your eyes. 1520 01:23:10,448 --> 01:23:11,992 It was just so beautiful. 1521 01:23:12,117 --> 01:23:15,412 And it was just... I couldn't believe that they had, like... 1522 01:23:15,954 --> 01:23:17,455 They assembled, like, an orchestra. 1523 01:23:17,539 --> 01:23:20,709 It was, like, one of the great moments of my life. (LAUGHS) 1524 01:23:21,376 --> 01:23:23,628 (ORCHESTRAL MUSIC PLAYING) 1525 01:23:26,631 --> 01:23:29,092 The first episode we got a tape. 1526 01:23:29,175 --> 01:23:33,179 And it was a VHS tape sent to DC's offices. 1527 01:23:33,305 --> 01:23:36,141 We all stopped working and we went to the conference room, 1528 01:23:36,224 --> 01:23:39,561 and we watched On Leather Wings, like regular people. 1529 01:23:40,186 --> 01:23:47,110 CARLIN: And we were thrilled because it took the comics seriously 1530 01:23:47,569 --> 01:23:52,699 and translated it in a way that we weren't embarrassed by. 1531 01:23:52,949 --> 01:23:55,577 And that is not always the case. (CHUCKLES) 1532 01:23:55,660 --> 01:23:58,204 So, we were nervous to watch it, 1533 01:23:58,663 --> 01:24:03,543 and we didn't know what a Bruce Timm was or a Paul Dini was at that time. 1534 01:24:03,919 --> 01:24:05,921 But we were just thrilled. 1535 01:24:06,004 --> 01:24:09,215 And after that, we would watch them as they came in, 1536 01:24:09,591 --> 01:24:12,010 and just enjoy the show as fans. 1537 01:24:12,093 --> 01:24:14,888 And, uh, there's nothing better for us 1538 01:24:14,971 --> 01:24:17,599 than to be able to watch something and say, 1539 01:24:17,682 --> 01:24:20,894 "We don't have to apologize for this at all." 1540 01:24:21,645 --> 01:24:23,980 And that, again, does not happen all the time. 1541 01:24:24,814 --> 01:24:26,775 MACCURDY: All shows have a lifespan. 1542 01:24:27,192 --> 01:24:28,985 We started to run out of stories. 1543 01:24:29,069 --> 01:24:31,738 We start to run out of a new vision. 1544 01:24:31,821 --> 01:24:35,533 It's very hard to sustain something too long. 1545 01:24:35,617 --> 01:24:38,912 And it'll become detrimental when you do. 1546 01:24:39,913 --> 01:24:41,748 MACCURDY: These have lifespans, I believe. 1547 01:24:42,999 --> 01:24:45,752 FOGEL: The period of time when we were doing this series, 1548 01:24:45,835 --> 01:24:48,171 this was where you wanted to be in animation. 1549 01:24:48,254 --> 01:24:51,341 This was where everybody wanted to be in animation. 1550 01:24:51,424 --> 01:24:54,761 And the big reason for that is Jean MacCurdy. 1551 01:24:54,844 --> 01:24:58,723 She was the best animation executive, bar none. 1552 01:24:59,975 --> 01:25:02,102 MACCURDY: I started as a secretary, 1553 01:25:02,185 --> 01:25:05,355 and 30 years later I retire as president of the animation division. 1554 01:25:06,272 --> 01:25:09,651 I think I was the first division president. Female division president 1555 01:25:09,734 --> 01:25:12,278 of Warner Brothers. I'm proud of that, you know. 1556 01:25:12,404 --> 01:25:15,407 I have more appreciation for that now, 1557 01:25:15,490 --> 01:25:17,659 being out of it, than I did when it was happening. 1558 01:25:17,742 --> 01:25:19,285 You're just doing your job. 1559 01:25:19,369 --> 01:25:21,371 Listen, I had a great time. 1560 01:25:21,871 --> 01:25:24,374 I have no regrets. 1561 01:25:26,501 --> 01:25:30,880 I worked with fabulous people. And generous people. 1562 01:25:31,381 --> 01:25:33,758 Jean had our back all the time. All the damn time. 1563 01:25:33,842 --> 01:25:35,844 We could not have made the show 1564 01:25:36,511 --> 01:25:38,513 without her running interference for us. 1565 01:25:38,596 --> 01:25:39,973 BERKOWITZ: Yeah, she was the enabler. 1566 01:25:40,056 --> 01:25:44,477 She was the good parent, and there was no disciplinary parent. 1567 01:25:45,353 --> 01:25:47,814 Do whatever you want. We amused her. 1568 01:25:47,897 --> 01:25:51,609 I think that we were like little clowns that amused her. 1569 01:25:51,693 --> 01:25:54,654 MACCURDY: We were all so young. You know what I mean? 1570 01:25:54,863 --> 01:25:56,322 We were all young. 1571 01:25:56,656 --> 01:25:59,868 And there's something to be said for that. (LAUGHS) 1572 01:25:59,951 --> 01:26:05,248 There's a juice there, and a need to make your statement... 1573 01:26:05,832 --> 01:26:08,710 And you have a real... (HUFFS) 1574 01:26:09,044 --> 01:26:10,754 Fierce feeling and... 1575 01:26:10,837 --> 01:26:14,466 You're right, you know, even when you're not. 1576 01:26:14,758 --> 01:26:16,301 And sometimes it works out. 1577 01:26:16,384 --> 01:26:18,428 TIMM: We got a lot of push back from people, you know, 1578 01:26:18,511 --> 01:26:20,847 saying, "Who are these two young punks 1579 01:26:20,930 --> 01:26:22,682 "telling us this is how they want to do the show?" 1580 01:26:22,766 --> 01:26:24,309 I was, like, "Well, that's not how you make a show." 1581 01:26:26,895 --> 01:26:29,898 PAUL: You gotta be gutsy. You gotta break your own rules, 1582 01:26:29,981 --> 01:26:31,524 and see where they get you. 1583 01:26:31,608 --> 01:26:34,486 Take some chances and risk upsetting a few people, 1584 01:26:34,569 --> 01:26:37,113 but, you know, more often than not 1585 01:26:37,197 --> 01:26:38,656 you'll come up with something kind of fun. 1586 01:26:38,740 --> 01:26:42,702 The thing I miss the most are the people and the interaction. 1587 01:26:42,786 --> 01:26:44,788 The interaction not only with the people themselves, 1588 01:26:44,871 --> 01:26:46,289 but with that creative process. 1589 01:26:46,873 --> 01:26:51,753 MACCURDY: It's watching people who got sold with the concept 1590 01:26:51,836 --> 01:26:55,298 and visualizing it, and bringing it to life. 1591 01:26:55,799 --> 01:26:58,384 That's a rush. That is a real rush. 1592 01:26:58,551 --> 01:26:59,928 (STUTTERS) 1593 01:27:00,512 --> 01:27:01,763 That I miss. 1594 01:27:02,931 --> 01:27:07,185 I don't miss all the peripheral shenanigans 1595 01:27:07,268 --> 01:27:13,316 that go on around showbiz, but, uh, that part of it I miss. 1596 01:27:13,399 --> 01:27:15,568 AVERY COBERN: I got to work so closely 1597 01:27:15,652 --> 01:27:18,988 with such creative people as Alan and Sidney, 1598 01:27:19,280 --> 01:27:23,535 and it was just wonderful 1599 01:27:24,119 --> 01:27:28,331 to be creative in my job, 1600 01:27:28,414 --> 01:27:33,920 and to work with these people who were at the top of their form, 1601 01:27:34,003 --> 01:27:36,923 and had this vision. 1602 01:27:37,006 --> 01:27:42,554 COBERN: These visions of what animation could be, and... 1603 01:27:43,596 --> 01:27:46,933 Yeah, it was a highlight of my career, for sure. 1604 01:27:47,976 --> 01:27:51,396 People think of cartoons or comic books as, 1605 01:27:51,479 --> 01:27:53,648 "Oh, that's just a cartoon or a comic book." 1606 01:27:53,731 --> 01:27:56,734 That's... "It's disposable. It's kids stuff." 1607 01:27:56,818 --> 01:27:58,695 And we just played it straight. 1608 01:27:58,778 --> 01:28:01,030 I think we were all fans of it, and we loved it. 1609 01:28:01,447 --> 01:28:05,160 I'm trying to make it not a big mystical thing, 1610 01:28:05,243 --> 01:28:08,079 I think we just played it straight. 1611 01:28:12,000 --> 01:28:14,544 DINI: When entertainment is done well, 1612 01:28:14,627 --> 01:28:18,339 it works on a level for kids and adults. 1613 01:28:19,132 --> 01:28:21,301 I really think it's something that they embrace 1614 01:28:21,384 --> 01:28:22,969 and carry throughout the years. 1615 01:28:25,763 --> 01:28:27,640 TIMM: You know, I see people at conventions all the time. 1616 01:28:27,724 --> 01:28:29,309 The people are, like, in their 30s, 1617 01:28:29,392 --> 01:28:32,312 saying, "Oh, yeah. When I was a kid, your Batman was like..." 1618 01:28:32,395 --> 01:28:34,480 "That's right. That was my first exposure to Batman." 1619 01:28:34,564 --> 01:28:35,773 And it's, like, "We'll, that's kind of cool." 1620 01:28:35,857 --> 01:28:38,359 'Cause, like, my first exposure to Batman was Adam West. 1621 01:28:38,693 --> 01:28:41,404 TIMM: So, it's kind of neat to be kind of somebody's first. 1622 01:28:42,780 --> 01:28:43,990 And when I go to Cons, 1623 01:28:44,073 --> 01:28:47,744 it's another opportunity for me to give back and say thanks, 1624 01:28:47,827 --> 01:28:49,078 and they get so excited to meet me. 1625 01:28:49,454 --> 01:28:53,750 STRONG: I mean, I've had people pass out, cry and shake all the time. 1626 01:28:53,833 --> 01:28:57,670 You know, I was at a Con six months ago, and there was a girl talking to me, 1627 01:28:57,921 --> 01:29:00,882 and I looked over and I saw her mom really crying. 1628 01:29:00,965 --> 01:29:02,508 Again, I've seen people cry many times, 1629 01:29:02,592 --> 01:29:04,719 but there was something unusual about her. 1630 01:29:04,802 --> 01:29:06,387 So, I went over and I said, "Are you okay?" 1631 01:29:06,471 --> 01:29:10,141 And she said, "My daughter's autistic, and she hasn't spoken in five years. 1632 01:29:10,225 --> 01:29:12,435 "When she knew you were coming, she didn't shut up for two weeks." 1633 01:29:12,518 --> 01:29:15,480 And I'm, like, "Wow!" Like, that's heavy. 1634 01:29:15,563 --> 01:29:17,690 That's heavy, that knowing she was gonna meet me 1635 01:29:17,982 --> 01:29:21,361 brought her back out. And I take that role seriously. 1636 01:29:23,571 --> 01:29:27,700 I'm happy and amazed that the show has had a lasting power 1637 01:29:27,784 --> 01:29:28,826 that it has. 1638 01:29:28,910 --> 01:29:30,203 That it's still popular. 1639 01:29:32,038 --> 01:29:33,581 USLAN: We have learned over the years 1640 01:29:33,665 --> 01:29:40,588 that other people can come in with other creative perspectives 1641 01:29:41,089 --> 01:29:46,094 on what a superhero should be or not be. 1642 01:29:46,177 --> 01:29:49,097 And they are not always quite as successful, 1643 01:29:49,180 --> 01:29:51,724 or true to the integrity of a character. 1644 01:29:52,684 --> 01:29:55,061 So often you have artists 1645 01:29:55,687 --> 01:29:58,773 who have the vision, who have the foresight, 1646 01:29:58,856 --> 01:30:00,566 and want to break the molds. 1647 01:30:00,650 --> 01:30:05,697 And then you also have people who are trained in the world of business 1648 01:30:05,780 --> 01:30:07,240 not wanting to rock the boat 1649 01:30:07,323 --> 01:30:11,619 when you have a formula that has proven successful in the past. 1650 01:30:12,036 --> 01:30:17,458 So, you've got a resistance to change to boldness and to daring. 1651 01:30:18,334 --> 01:30:21,087 And it is only 1652 01:30:21,170 --> 01:30:26,301 when both sides of the Gemini coin come together 1653 01:30:27,176 --> 01:30:33,349 and listen to each other and be prepared to take risks, 1654 01:30:33,433 --> 01:30:37,937 calculated risks, that innovative things get done. 1655 01:30:38,271 --> 01:30:40,523 So, until somebody breaks the mold 1656 01:30:40,606 --> 01:30:43,526 and gets the ability to do something new and different, 1657 01:30:43,609 --> 01:30:45,236 it doesn't get done, it's not successful. 1658 01:30:45,903 --> 01:30:49,782 That is why this is so important. 1659 01:30:50,158 --> 01:30:52,994 Why the Batman Animated Series 1660 01:30:53,494 --> 01:30:55,663 broke through boundaries. 1661 01:30:56,331 --> 01:30:58,166 And these were hefty boundaries. 1662 01:30:59,292 --> 01:31:02,253 And got people on the other side of the coin 1663 01:31:02,337 --> 01:31:05,715 to say, "Okay, let's give it a go. Let's try it. 1664 01:31:05,840 --> 01:31:10,928 "You are making a compelling argument, we appreciate your vision, 1665 01:31:11,012 --> 01:31:13,598 "and we want to be supportive of your vision. 1666 01:31:13,765 --> 01:31:17,518 "Let's take a calculated risk on this and go with it." 1667 01:31:17,602 --> 01:31:21,189 And the rewards were incredible. 1668 01:31:21,689 --> 01:31:23,733 SEBAST: They always say this is regarded as 1669 01:31:23,816 --> 01:31:27,862 one of the best adaptations of a comic book ever done, you know. 1670 01:31:27,945 --> 01:31:30,114 Or the best, in many cases... 1671 01:31:30,198 --> 01:31:32,075 A lot of people feel it is. 1672 01:31:32,158 --> 01:31:35,495 And it's an incredible honor to have worked on that, you know, 1673 01:31:35,578 --> 01:31:36,996 and to know you were part of it. 1674 01:31:37,789 --> 01:31:40,666 And hopefully, in some small way, contributed to that. 1675 01:31:42,502 --> 01:31:42,585 DINI: A child grows up with it. 1676 01:31:42,668 --> 01:31:45,380 There are certain elements of it they really like. They... 1677 01:31:47,673 --> 01:31:49,884 You know, they'll take with them into their college years, 1678 01:31:49,967 --> 01:31:53,096 they'll have a job, and then they'll see a figurine of a character 1679 01:31:53,179 --> 01:31:54,472 and they'll put it on their desk at work. 1680 01:31:54,764 --> 01:31:56,516 -(FOOTSTEPS) -(SIREN WAILING IN DISTANCE) 1681 01:31:57,850 --> 01:32:00,812 IWANTER: I wonder if any of the shows 1682 01:32:00,895 --> 01:32:04,399 that have been on over the last, maybe, 10 years, 1683 01:32:04,732 --> 01:32:06,734 will have generated 1684 01:32:06,818 --> 01:32:11,072 that kind of passion, a quarter of a century from now. 1685 01:32:11,531 --> 01:32:13,366 IWANTER: I don't know whether that'll happen. 1686 01:32:13,449 --> 01:32:17,578 I call a lot of the stuff today, tonnage. 1687 01:32:17,995 --> 01:32:19,247 It's forgettable. 1688 01:32:19,330 --> 01:32:22,291 Uh, and it's not the fault of the writers. 1689 01:32:22,375 --> 01:32:25,586 It's not the fault of the animators. 1690 01:32:26,254 --> 01:32:31,175 But I do think it's the fault of people who are above them, 1691 01:32:31,259 --> 01:32:34,637 who are in marketing and merchandising, and are fearful. 1692 01:32:34,720 --> 01:32:38,349 They second-guess the writers. They second-guess the artists. 1693 01:32:38,516 --> 01:32:41,185 Most importantly, they second guess the audience. 1694 01:32:41,519 --> 01:32:44,439 And you can't have a successful show 1695 01:32:44,522 --> 01:32:47,859 if you're second-guessing your demographic. 1696 01:32:48,526 --> 01:32:51,737 'Cause you'll never achieve anything of merit. 1697 01:32:57,452 --> 01:33:00,997 TIMM: It was great to see words that we had come up with, you know, 1698 01:33:01,080 --> 01:33:03,833 written down on a page and hear those lines come to life. 1699 01:33:03,916 --> 01:33:07,003 And it's amazing how often people will say to me 1700 01:33:07,086 --> 01:33:10,673 that it's what got them into not just Batman, but into comics. 1701 01:33:10,756 --> 01:33:12,091 They've become comic book fans. 1702 01:33:12,216 --> 01:33:15,803 It was like the Batman Animated Series was their gateway drug. 1703 01:33:16,179 --> 01:33:17,680 So I was, like, "Well, that's kind of cool." 1704 01:33:17,889 --> 01:33:20,224 But, as to why... (SOFTLY) I don't know. 1705 01:33:20,308 --> 01:33:22,310 Like I said, I think you kind of had to be there. 1706 01:33:27,148 --> 01:33:28,900 RADOMSKI: When you embrace the fact 1707 01:33:28,983 --> 01:33:31,360 of the amount of talent that was involved, 1708 01:33:31,444 --> 01:33:37,658 and sacrifices that everyone made to make this series into what it became, 1709 01:33:38,117 --> 01:33:42,413 um, it's just... Uh, it's personally overwhelming 1710 01:33:42,622 --> 01:33:49,462 to know that this is still as popular, if not more, 25 years later, 1711 01:33:49,545 --> 01:33:52,548 and it really, again, is just a testament to 1712 01:33:52,632 --> 01:33:54,300 the true passion of people. 1713 01:33:55,051 --> 01:33:57,220 The artists that worked on the show, 1714 01:33:57,303 --> 01:34:00,723 had for the content and for, you know, 1715 01:34:00,806 --> 01:34:05,102 for the goal, because it took that team effort to pull this off 1716 01:34:05,186 --> 01:34:08,231 and keep it consistent for the time that it took, 1717 01:34:08,314 --> 01:34:10,316 um, to produce this show. 1718 01:34:15,029 --> 01:34:20,409 BURNETT: After he died, I was asked to go to a memorial lunch 1719 01:34:20,493 --> 01:34:22,286 for Bob Kane's passing. 1720 01:34:22,620 --> 01:34:27,917 It was the secret dining room that studios have. 1721 01:34:28,584 --> 01:34:35,258 Paul Levitz, one of the smartest guys I've ever met, ever, said 1722 01:34:35,841 --> 01:34:39,887 this wonderful little memorial statement 1723 01:34:39,971 --> 01:34:44,475 about how Bob Kane had created this character, 1724 01:34:45,351 --> 01:34:51,107 who had a core that was so strong, 1725 01:34:51,649 --> 01:34:57,196 and so deep that he... 1726 01:34:58,281 --> 01:35:01,200 It was... Other writers could come in 1727 01:35:01,701 --> 01:35:04,954 and add their vision to this character. 1728 01:35:05,079 --> 01:35:07,873 And change the world, create the world, 1729 01:35:08,165 --> 01:35:13,546 do things with him and then let him go for the next person to come in. 1730 01:35:13,963 --> 01:35:15,840 That really is a remarkable thing, 1731 01:35:15,923 --> 01:35:20,011 and the way Paul said it was beautiful. 1732 01:35:20,595 --> 01:35:26,642 And that's how I felt about us, the Batman group at Warner Brothers. 1733 01:35:27,101 --> 01:35:31,480 Suddenly this Batman's character came to us. 1734 01:35:31,564 --> 01:35:35,693 Having had all this added to them over the years by other creators. 1735 01:35:35,776 --> 01:35:37,486 And now it was our turn. 1736 01:35:37,695 --> 01:35:44,619 BURNETT: And we took our turn, and he goes away for the next person. 1737 01:35:45,286 --> 01:35:48,164 So, it's quite... I mean, Batman is 1738 01:35:49,248 --> 01:35:54,962 an amazing character with legs that will go forever. 146570

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