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Anything That Moves is a disambiguation


In keeping with being modeled after the Poison Ivy of the mainstream comics, the animated version of Poison Ivy sexuality pretty much involves AnythingThatMoves, including some of her ''plants'' in some cases (and not just the ones she's anthropomorphized to look human). However, in both the comics and the cartoons, the only times we ever see Ivy do anything sexual is when she's hurting people: in both Harvey Dent's case and Batman's, she was kissing them in order to poison them. (In one comic where she kissed Supergirl, she was--you guessed it--trying to poison her too.) In other episodes where she uses her pheremones to seduce people (of both sexes), she's scamming them and leading them to their death and destruction. For all that she does love her plants collectively and want to preserve them as a species, she also uses and disposes of the individual ones just as heartlessly as she does her human victims: consider how many of them she used up in "Home and Garden" just to have a "family" on her own terms.

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In keeping with being modeled after the Poison Ivy of the mainstream comics, the animated version of Poison Ivy sexuality pretty much involves AnythingThatMoves, anyone, including some of her ''plants'' in some cases (and not just the ones she's anthropomorphized to look human). However, in both the comics and the cartoons, the only times we ever see Ivy do anything sexual is when she's hurting people: in both Harvey Dent's case and Batman's, she was kissing them in order to poison them. (In one comic where she kissed Supergirl, she was--you guessed it--trying to poison her too.) In other episodes where she uses her pheremones to seduce people (of both sexes), she's scamming them and leading them to their death and destruction. For all that she does love her plants collectively and want to preserve them as a species, she also uses and disposes of the individual ones just as heartlessly as she does her human victims: consider how many of them she used up in "Home and Garden" just to have a "family" on her own terms.
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** If that's true, then her being a smokin' hot blonde bombshell leads to UnfortunateImplications.

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** If that's true, then her being a smokin' hot blonde bombshell leads to very UnfortunateImplications.
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** If that's true, then her being a smokin' hot blonde bombshell leads to some very squicky UnfortunateImplications.

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** If that's true, then her being a smokin' hot blonde bombshell leads to some very squicky UnfortunateImplications.
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** If that's true, then her being a smokin' hot blonde bombshell leads to some very squicky UnfortunateImplications.

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[[WMG: Clayface had a VillainousBSOD some time after absorbing Annie.]]

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[[WMG: Clayface [[WMG:Clayface had a VillainousBSOD some time after absorbing Annie.]]



[[WMG: Scarecrow in ''TNBA'' is not Jonathan Crane.]]

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[[WMG: Scarecrow [[WMG:Scarecrow in ''TNBA'' is not Jonathan Crane.]]



[[WMG: [[Recap/TheNewBatmanAdventuresE11TheUltimateThrill Roxy Rocket]] was an early test subject for the toxin Scarecrow used in "Never Fear"]]

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[[WMG: [[Recap/TheNewBatmanAdventuresE11TheUltimateThrill [[WMG:[[Recap/TheNewBatmanAdventuresE11TheUltimateThrill Roxy Rocket]] was an early test subject for the toxin Scarecrow used in "Never Fear"]]



[[WMG: Gil Mason wakes up from his coma, but lost his memory of Batgirl's secret identity.]]

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[[WMG: Gil [[WMG:Gil Mason wakes up from his coma, but lost his memory of Batgirl's secret identity.]]


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[[WMG:Randa Duane from the "Heart of Steel" two-parter was modelled off how Karl Rossum believed his daughter would look like if she'd managed to live to adulthood.]]
Unlike the rest of H.A.R.D.A.C.'s duplicants, Randa doesn't seem to be modelled off of an actual human being, given that unlike Gordon, Bullock, Hill, and Rossum, her body isn't placed in suspended animation. Rather, she was an actual robot created by Rossum himself, based on how he believed his daughter would have grown up to look like if she hadn't been killed in that car crash.

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