First shown a year ago, season three finds the series re-locating to Gotham
One of the
more fascinating aspects of US episodic shows is their ability to morph into
something different. Ostensibly a series about some super heroes ought to be repetitive
and focussed mostly on action but the
season three opener Barbara Gordon, shoehorns most of its fight scenes
into the opening section. Now back in
Gotham and Robin once again, Jason remains as hot headed as ever plus he
appears to have cooked up some sort of mega inhaler of yellow stuff. Yet for
all his bravado in defying Batman to confront the Joker, he falls woefully
short. Flinching from the first body he finds and some manic laughter he’s easily
taken down and, it seems, killed by the villain whom we only see in silhouette.
This contrast vividly with the very cool re-introduction of the Titans as they
take out another villainous brigade with supple skills all to the soundtrack of
`Ca Plane Pour Moi`. It’s a great sequence, perfectly directed and edited. As a
season opener you couldn’t ask for more.
Now very
much helping keep San Francisco a safer place, the Titans’ confidence is soon
dented by news from Gotham of Jason’s death.Apart from a bizarre vision that
Kory appears to have after sipping what is clearly a very strong drink, much of
the rest of the episode sees Dick Grayson trying to make sense of Bruce Wayne’s
refusal to come to terms with his responsibility for the way he trains his
sidekicks, `weaponising` them as he puts it. I know Iain Glenn’s Bruce has had
a mixed reaction (though not as mixed as his accent!) but it seems in keeping with how you might expect a much older Wayne to deal
(or not) with such matters. Swathed in atmospheric, gloomy light the episode
doesn’t pack as much punch at those opening sequences and Dick’s investigations
into whatever Jason was brewing in his secret loft is not made interesting
enough. Some flashbacks of Jason would have been fun if only so we could see
his expletive ridden rant against a villain called the Hatter, simply related
here by Barbara Gordon. However there’s plenty of f-bombs to be enjoyed- is it
my imagination or has the swear count risen from last season?
Both Dick
and Barbara’s s accusations against
Bruce do feel like old ground. Here and in other versions, the whole concept of
Bruce Wayne is that he is as crazy as the villains he takes on. Instead of
stating this again, why not take a look as to why? Yet it's worth stopping till
the final scene in which it seems as if Bruce had finally unhinged totally,
gone out and killed the Joker before running off and effectively handing the
mantle of Batman to Dick with the parting message “be a better Batman”. We’re
not getting the Joker in this series it seems, probably due to the films or
related rights issues. Are we looking at a two-track season? There are some who
feel that repeatedly going back to Batman takes away from what is supposed to
be a different series, but I think it offers an interesting perspective on what
could happen to the Titans themselves if they are not careful. There are
several intriguing strands unravelled here and perhaps it's a good thing Bruce
has vanished for a while.
Red Hood is the name of the second episode and of
Gotham’s new antagonist. Seemingly making his moves inspired by chess plays,
this fresh opponent proves particularly tricky for Barbara Gordon and the
Titans. The gang has moved en masse to Gotham in something of a retooling of
the show and it remains to be seen whether they can spark with quite the same
life in this big bad city. Here at least the results are bitty with Red Hood’s
escapades -forcing people to do his bidding by kidnapping their kids- to entrap
the Titans seeming needlessly complex. Kory’s blackouts add an oddness to the
episode but I can’t help thinking the easy chemistry between the cast isn’t
quite as sharp as last season.
The big
reveal of who Red Hood is comes too soon and too easily because even though
he’s made something of an entrance into the criminal fraternity you somehow struggle
to believe that Jason Todd- for it is he- has either the ability or the cunning
to come up with all this in such a short space of time. It would have been
funnier if Dick had worked out who he was because he swore too much- Red Hood doesn’t
swear which just seems wrong!
There’s a dramatic
scale to the episode and the moody streets of Gotham are as enigmatic as in any
incarnation yet this feels like we’ve relocated to someone else’s series. Titans
began as an offshoot of Batman yet this season appears to re-position it as a
continuation. Still there is a rather good scene featuring the imprisoned
Scarecrow- played with a wily mischief by Vincent Karthesier (Pete Campbell
from Mad Men). I can’ help thinking he’ll get to escape his confinement
to liven matters up.
Considering
the way it ends, episode three `Hank and Dove` really needs to be far
more tense than it is. The scenario is a classic race against time as Hank is
tricked by Jason into meeting and ends up with a bomb attached to his heart.
The only way to stop it is to build a defusing device from blueprints. As
Connor works at supersonic speed to do this, Jason continues to manipulate the
others. On paper this is a scenario that should have the viewers on the edge of
their seats as the clock ticks, things don’t work out and our villain is
basking in the chaos he is creating. Certainly, there’s some mystery as Dick
digs up Jason’s grave to find it empty and then we see Jason, seemingly himself
again, making a desperate call to Hank. However the more matter progress the
less likely they seem.
There’s a
lack of sharpness to the end result, perhaps because of filming or editing
restrictions, certainly one scene has very oddly rendered backscreen. The
writing is a little leaden too though there are still some fine individual
performances. Alan Richson deals so well with keeping Hank’s macho exterior
while showing us his concern and its good that while the others are panicking
he tries to remain himself as he faces the possible end. Minka Kely is
excellent too as Dawn tries anything to save him and the cruelty of the final
trick is powerful and straight from the Joker’s playbook.
The ending
is a daring shocker, though seemingly killing off a second character after two
episodes in which another is nowhere near as dead as he seemed, is perhaps asking too much of the viewer. I can’t be the
only person watching this for the first time who thinks- maybe they’ll bring
Hank back later on too? So it could be that this is too soon in the season for
a milestone episode like this, we’ve hardly had time to get used to the idea of
Jason being the villain and it feels like we need more time to explore the how’s
and why’s, The character’s former teenage petulance and attitude seems to have
mutated into the characteristics of a scheming arch nemesis extraordinarily
quickly to be believable even in the context of the series. Unless the Scarecrow
is giving him the ideas somehow?
In `Blackfire`
with Dawn heading off for a while, Dick tells Commissioner Gordon he’s
intending to lie low for a few days. His idea of lying low is to kidnap Crane
in the hope it will lure Red Hood into a trap. Meanwhile Kory’s visions turns
out to be psychic projections from her sister Blackfire who has been
incarcerated by a quirky scientist who appears to be working on his own in a
massive underground government facility. This episode recaptures the livelier,
imaginative side of the show that has largely been absent so far. The team up
of Kory and Gor works especially well with both sparking off each other
enjoyably. Also showing promise is the uneasy trust between Dick and Crane. We
don’t yet know what the latter’s superpower may be, if he has one, at the
moment he’s a somewhat tramp like figure with a sly tone. Brenton Thwaites and
Vincent Karheisier are well matched, the latter offering some light and shade
to the villainous role.
I’m still unsure
of the whole Red Hood thing though a sequence at the end in a dark forest where
he and Nightwing battle it out is very well staged. The Kory plotline ends with
an odd development when, after failing to really get much co-operation from her
sister, she decides to get her out of the facility in any case. Probably to
become another Titan given how depleted the ranks are becoming!
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