I concluded my GROTESQUES AND ARABESQUES post without formulating a “bachelor thread” for the
Batman comics-series, because I wanted to rethink the matter somewhat
more in relation to the influential 1966 teleseries. I’m never
going to attempt to review all the Batman comic books, but I have
considered doing an episode-by-episode myth-analysis of the
teleseries. To do so, I would need to determine what aspects of the
comic’s “bachelor-thread" the series-writers chose to follow, and
what aspects they replaced with others.
My original thought for the Batman
comic in toto was going to be something like, “the darkness of
trauma, though usually breeding monsters, may also breed a slayer of
monsters.” I even had this approximate notion in mind as I began
GROTESQUES AND ARABESQUES, but in the midst of crafting the essay, I
began to think a lot more about how Robin had altered the aesthetic
of the series. Though he as much as Batman suffered a trauma that
caused him to become a crusader against evil, Robin certainly does
not become a “creature of the night.” If anything, his bright,
colorful costume suggests the stubborn renewal of life and light
after the temporary reign of darkness. The legendary Robin Hood was
almost certainly the exemplar on which the teen hero was modeled, but
arguably over time the more important connotation was that of the
robin as “the first bird of spring.”
Robin’s vernal presence certainly doesn’t dispel the monsters of fear and darkness, of course. He debuts after Batman’s encounters with a handful of early, somewhat crude grotesques—Professor Hugo Strange, the Monk, and the Duc D’Orterre—but the Boy Wonder is on the scene for all the major grotesques: the Joker, Clayface, Scarecrow, Two-Face. And because of the visual and narrative interplay of the grim Dark Knight and his playful “squire,” the writers began coming up with more villains who were more sprightly in nature, foremost being the Penguin. (As noted elsewhere, it took the writers a while to come up with a well defined version of Catwoman.)
Robin’s vernal presence certainly doesn’t dispel the monsters of fear and darkness, of course. He debuts after Batman’s encounters with a handful of early, somewhat crude grotesques—Professor Hugo Strange, the Monk, and the Duc D’Orterre—but the Boy Wonder is on the scene for all the major grotesques: the Joker, Clayface, Scarecrow, Two-Face. And because of the visual and narrative interplay of the grim Dark Knight and his playful “squire,” the writers began coming up with more villains who were more sprightly in nature, foremost being the Penguin. (As noted elsewhere, it took the writers a while to come up with a well defined version of Catwoman.)
So, having made Robin’s presence more
essential to the overall developm ent of the Bat-mythos, the
bachelor-thread for the overall series must balance the elements of
darkness and brightness. Additionally, although the heroes are
victims of trauma, many of the villains are less traumatized than
simply maladjusted, usually by virtue of greed. Obsession rather than
trauma as such seems to define the Bat-mythos. Batman himself starts
the ball rolling by extending his chosen identity to such tools as
the Batarang and the Batmobile; the Joker follows suit with a poison
that causes his victims to laugh themselves to death, and so on. So
perhaps a trial thread might read something like, “Though the
Greeks wanted to find beauty only in bright things and ugliness in
dark ones, virtue and vice have equal propensities to be either light
or dark, depending on the nature of the obsession.” This
thread-concept would even remain in operation during the era I call
“Candyland Batman,” when Batman himself is very nearly the only
character who projects any grotesque affects, and nearly every new
villain is conceived along the lines of the Penguin’s arabesque
obsessions, thus leading to crooks who base their crimes on the use
of kites and freeze-rays and polka dots.
The idea of obsession, incidentally,
glosses my earlier ruminations on the nature of artifice. Most if not
all familiar literary tropes incite in their ardent readers a
heightened feeling like that of obsession, but one channeled through
the matrix of game-playing. The very attraction of a literary trope
lies in the fact that it is artificial, like the rules of any game.
Truly ardent lovers of mystery-fiction never tire of the consummatory
pleasures they receive from the masterful resolution of a whodunit,
while an outsider to such pleasures can only wonder, as did Edmund
Wilson, “who cares who murdered Roger Ackroyd?” Obviously the
love of the game runs deeper in some than in others. A Gary Groth
may start out loving the aggressive fantasies of superheroes and
barbarians, only to lose his taste for those pleasures, and to spend
most of his career lecturing other readers on the childish nature of
their fantasies.
When such fantasies are seen through a
distancing lens, such as that of the campy irony present in the
Batman teleseries, some audiences are pleased to think that they’ve
escaped the hidebound rule of the old game, and entered a more
challenging, more adult form of play. This would seem to the case
with a 2014 essay by Noah Berlatsky, in which the author could not
imagine why Bat-fans didn’t want to toss out old; childish Batman
in favor with new, ironic Batman. I answered his question with my
essay-series THE BATTLE FOR BAT-LEGITIMACY, but for the purpose of this
essay, I want to look at how the teleseries attempted to rewrite the
rules of the comic book’s scenario.
The essence of the word “irony” is
that of saying one thing and meaning something else. William Dozier
and his collaborators were certainly not the first pop-culture
dabblers in this domain. Al Capp’s LI’L ABNER, though dominantly
a broad comedy, is full of instances where characters revisit
familiar story-tropes to indirectly make fun of them.The most famous
of these appeared when simple-minded Abner would geek out on the gory
misdeeds of his comic-strip hero Fearless Fosdick, a blatant send-up
of DICK TRACY. There had been various superhero spoofs in comics and
in cartoons before ’66 BATMAN. But Dozier and Co had the inspired
notion to adapt the overall mythos of an established
superhero-serial, playing it straight for kid-viewers but injecting
any number of sly asides to please the adult audience.
This was, of course, a game no less
restrictive than the rules of the Bat-comic, and nothing shows this
more than the pastel-filled visual approach of the ’66 show. At the
time of the show’s airing, DC’s two Bat-features had just made an
attempt to reject the aesthetics of Candyland Batman, since the books
weren’t selling as well as desired. This shift in editorial policy
led to a very modest revival of grotesque/Gothic imagery, as seen in
the May ’66 appearance of the Death-Man.
However, though Dozier et al borrowed from a few stories that appeared during the post-Candyland phase, the show-runners were largely married to the aesthetics of Candyland Batman, where villains with weird obsessive traits popped up for no particular reason, almost existing purely to counter Batman’s own crime-fighting obsession. Mister Freeze was one of the few TV-villains to be given a particular reason for his criminal career. Usually, though, if there wasn’t something about a villain’s modus operandi that really begged for explanation, the writers dispensed with even simple melodramatic motivations.
However, though Dozier et al borrowed from a few stories that appeared during the post-Candyland phase, the show-runners were largely married to the aesthetics of Candyland Batman, where villains with weird obsessive traits popped up for no particular reason, almost existing purely to counter Batman’s own crime-fighting obsession. Mister Freeze was one of the few TV-villains to be given a particular reason for his criminal career. Usually, though, if there wasn’t something about a villain’s modus operandi that really begged for explanation, the writers dispensed with even simple melodramatic motivations.
In the universe of ’66 BATMAN—a
admixture of both adventure-tropes and ironized versions of them—
both the heroes and their villains still had their obsessions, but
they barely tied in to any life-events (Batman mentions the cause of
his crimefighting obsession once or twice, almost as an afterthought;
Robin, like the majority of villains, gets no origin at all.) Thus
the rules of the show were far more formalized than those of the
comic book. For instance, during the first two seasons, the two-part
episodes all have cliffhangers at the end of the first segment.
Building on producers’ statements about their audience, presumably
the idea was that kids would be worried about the heroes’ survival
while adults would wonder what absurd trick the writers would use to
save the good guys. Since all episodes in those seasons had to have a
cliffhanger, every villain had to nurture the impossible dream of
devising a deathtrap good enough to extinguish the Dynamic Duo. In
such a ritualized world, neither darkness nor dark obsessions really
exist. So my makeshift Bat-bachelor thread, when passed through the
devouring gullet of the ’66 Bat-serial, becomes: “Virtue and vice
alike take the form of pastel, often psychedelic arabesques, and
virtuous arabesques only triumph over those of vice because the rules
say that they must.”
That said, Dozier et al knew that they
couldn’t quite undercut all the rules of the comics-feature, or
they couldn’t be sure of winning over the kids. Thus, Batman and
Robin’s fights are never burlesqued as one sees in most superhero
spoofs. The gigantic sound-effects provide a distancing effect for
adults, but do not efface the effects of two heroes who are just so
good with their dukes that they can outfight three or four
plug-uglies at once. Similarly, though Robin no longer serves the
purpose of “brightening” Batman’s Gothic domain, he still
fulfills the same role of the junior hero receiving tutelage from his
elder. Though the duo’s goody-good personas are often subverted,
the familial affection between the two is played straight.
To conclude, if I was ever to perform a
critical analysis of ’66 BATMAN, I would have to look at each
episode to see how well it balanced the use of adventure-tropes with
irony-tropes, and whether or not the balance attained the higher
levels of mythic discourse—just as a sustained analysis of all
Batman stories might emphasize the balance between dark grotesques
and colorful arabesques.
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