Guest Flyboy Report post Posted September 20, 2002 I give Flyboy a 6(sorry man), and I give myself a 2(sorry man). Fo sheez, Kotzenjunge It's allright... I was thinking more like a 1 for myself. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest pinnacleofallthingsmanly Report post Posted September 20, 2002 The burning question... which one is Dames, and why? The Peguin. Actually he could be the puppet Scarface (?) that the ventriloquist guy had. BTW, I was just fucking with you Flyboy, don't take it seriously. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Tony149 Report post Posted September 20, 2002 I know this isn't a villain, but I would say I'm more like Batman. I'm mysterious (at least online and to a certain extent in real-life). I don't hang around too many people, but if I meant you; we would probably get along. Although if I had to pick a villain...I would say the Joker. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest areacode212 Report post Posted September 20, 2002 yeah but he was in the animated series as well, c'mon he had at least 3 episodes and was a tad cooler than anyone who splices their dna with a freakin' orca. Though i like the name orca. Magpie sounds cool too. Oh Clock King wasn't too bad, but he wasn't official canon. Tonight I will post the Animated Series Villians! Wasn't official canon where? Wasn't he in the Injustice League? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest pinnacleofallthingsmanly Report post Posted September 20, 2002 The address of the website didn't work for me. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Sassquatch Report post Posted September 20, 2002 Can't believe I missed this thread... The Clock King made his first appearance in World's Finest #111 (1960). He was created long before the mid '60's live TV show came on the air and the King was most definitely NOT an original creation of Paul Dini's. The King would come back to attack Batman two more times in World's Finest and soon he vanished into comic book limbo along with Jigsaw, Longshot, and Dazzler. Do your homework before you speak. Paul has stated that 2/3's of his stories for BTAS were all based on the Batman comics themselves but he gave them his own spin and to condense the issues into a 30 minute cartoon show. Most of the series' episodes came from Batman #300 - #403 and Detective Comics #467 - #572. The episodes where guys like Two-Face, Dr. Hugo Strange, Clayface, Poison Ivy, Bane, etc made their debuts were also radically different than their comic book introductions. To some degree, the Dini episodes were better than the comic book versions because he gave them a new twist and a modern touch. The Two-Face debut episodes are perhaps two of the top 5 best BTAS episodes shown IMO. I gave a detailed analysis about what makes Harvey Dent tick and why he is a unique villain for Batman and comic book's in general. The Harvey Dent/Two-Face and Bruce Wayne/Batman relationship is one of the most fascinating and intriguing in comic books when you look at where each man came from and what caused two former best friends to become cold enemy's. I think all of us have a Two-Face in us because at one point or another in our lives, we wanted to get back at the people that caused us trouble but we did not actually go out and do what we thought. Dent was the same way except he was unable to filter his anger out and left it inside of him to fester and grow. When Two-Face was born, Dent no longer had that boundary that stopped him from going out and shooting a cop in the head that he thought was incapable of serving justice to scumbags. Dent's dark secrets were finally able to manifest itself into something of a reality for Harvey and he lost his grip with reality and let his coin make his decisions for himself. Freud would have creamed himself to get a hold of Harvey and study him. Hell, the same could be said for a lot of Batman's villains. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest danielisthor Report post Posted September 20, 2002 probably Allergist. allergies ruin half my year. Kill all plant life within a 20 mile radius of me please. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Ozymandias Report post Posted September 21, 2002 I'm King Tut. I'm generally normal and mild-mannered but I go off the fucking deep end every once in a while and flip out. (Yes, I'm aware he was a creation of the TV show and not the comic.) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Sassquatch Report post Posted September 21, 2002 Ivy is a very sexual person and her tendencies to use sex to get her way are documented. The post-Crisis Ivy is a character that most women could relate to when Jim Starlin was allowed to rewrite her origin. She loved the boys at a very early age. When Ivy was older, she got involved with the son of a rich man and the two were very intimate with one another. After the boy had finally taken Ivy's virginity away from her, he told her that he only was trying to get into her pants and how it was all just a game. He dumped Ivy and left town. That betrayal set off a chain of events where her love for plants turned into an obsession with them in order to fill the void she had in her after the man she loved led her on and used her. "Hell have no fury like a woman scorned." If I was a betting man, I'd say the guy who cherry robbed Ivy is probably hanging around dead somewhere in one of her garden's with a daisy sprouting from his pee hole... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites