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Batman: The Animated Series
TV Series

Batman: The Animated Series

1992Animation, Action, Adventure • 4 Seasons

Woke Score
1.3
out of 10

Series Overview

Heir to the Wayne family fortune, Bruce Wayne (Kevin Conroy) lives by day as a seemingly lavish playboy millionaire socialite, but by night assumes the role of his crime-fighting alter-ego: the caped crusader known as The Batman. Throughout the show, Batman receives help from sidekicks Dick Grayson/Robin (Loren Lester) and Barbara Gordon/Batgirl (Melissa Gilbert), as well as Police Commissioner James Gordon (Bob Hastings), in protecting the streets of Gotham City from a large rogue's gallery of criminals, lunatics, and nemeses.

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Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

1.6/10

No overview available.

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Season 2

1.2/10

The second season of Batman: TAS was titled The Adventures of Batman & Robin and initially aired in May 1994 to September 1995.

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Season 3

1.2/10

No overview available.

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Season 4

1/10

No overview available.

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Overall Series Review

Batman: The Animated Series stands as a definitive exploration of character-driven storytelling, anchored by a focus on duty, honor, and the struggle to maintain order in a crumbling city. Throughout its entire run, the series prioritizes the psychological depth of its cast, grounding their triumphs and failures in individual choices rather than external circumstances. Batman acts as the primary moral anchor, providing a template for discipline and responsibility that defines the show’s objective approach to justice. The series maintains a consistent commitment to the hero’s journey, treating characters as autonomous agents defined by their actions and merits. By avoiding sociopolitical narratives, the show keeps its focus on the fundamental conflict between good and evil. Whether depicting the internal tragedies of the villains or the tactical mentorship within the Bat-family, the narrative emphasizes the weight of personal accountability and the necessity of sacrifice in the pursuit of a greater good. As the series transitions through its various seasons and visual iterations, it remains steadfast in its dedication to timeless themes. The expansion of the Bat-family serves to reinforce the values of legacy and training, ensuring that the mission remains centered on competence and the preservation of civilization. Ultimately, the show succeeds by presenting a clear moral framework where heroism is earned through discipline, skill, and an unwavering commitment to objective truth.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics1.3/10

Oikophobia1.3/10

Feminism1.8/10

LGBTQ+1/10

Anti-Theism1/10

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