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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/91hlwhizjyl_ri.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:''Holy animated tribute! They're back!'']]
3
4''Batman: Return of the Caped Crusaders'' is a 2016 DirectToVideo animated movie which is part of the WesternAnimation/DCUniverseAnimatedOriginalMovies. A [[MilestoneCelebration 50th anniversary]] tribute to the [[TheSixties 1960s]] ''Series/{{Batman|1966}}'' series, it sees three of the show's original actors reprising their roles: Creator/AdamWest as [[Franchise/{{Batman}} the Caped Crusader]], Creator/BurtWard as [[ComicBook/{{Robin}} the Boy Wonder]], and Creator/JulieNewmar as ComicBook/{{Catwoman}}.
5
6It's back to the 1960s as Batman and Robin spring into action when Gotham City is threatened by a quartet of Batman's most fiendish foes -- Penguin, The Joker, Riddler, and Catwoman. The four supervillains have combined their wicked talents to hatch a plot so nefarious that the Dynamic Duo will need to go to outer space (and back) to foil their arch enemies and restore order in Gotham City.
7
8The trailer can be seen [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5r6a8bOahFQ here]]. The movie was released on Digital HD on 11 October 2016, and on Blu-ray and DVD on 1 November 2016.
9
10A sequel, ''WesternAnimation/BatmanVsTwoFace'', came out in 2017.
11----
12!!''Batman: Return of the Caped Crusaders'' provides examples of:
13* ActorAllusion: When under the influence of Catwoman's Batnip, [[Creator/AdamWest Batman]] [[spoiler:clones himself and replaces all of Gotham's authority figures with his clones. One of the clones becomes [[WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy the]] [[WesternAnimation/TheBatman Mayor]].]]
14* AdaptationNameChange: In a retroactive sense, this animated film gives Chief O'Hara's forename as Miles, when his first name was never revealed in the original show and the mainline comic's interpretations of the character established his given name as Clancy.
15* AdaptationalBadass: Most characters get a mild version of this, since animation means they can do more impressive stunts and have bigger, flashier fights than their live-action predecessors. Surprisingly, the one who gets it most might be [[spoiler:King Tut, who had zero fighting skills on the original show but here has enough StoutStrength to take out ''three'' evil Batmen.]]
16** Batman himself gets a bit of this as the storyline makes him do things that would never have been allowed in the original series.
17* ArtStyleDissonance: The art direction and animation style of the film is similar to that of the recent DC films and shows. The campy content, on the other hand, is as far as you can get from its direct predecessor in the DC Animated Movies, ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheKillingJoke''.
18* AttentionWhore: [[spoiler:Evil Batman]] describes this as his motivation for taking over ''Gotham Palace'' and rigging everyone's TV sets to explode if they don't watch.
19* BackportedDevelopment: Alfred being depicted as someone who's worked for the Waynes since Bruce's childhood and who therefore has a very close bond with him. This was an idea that was only introduced in the comics as late as Frank Miller's ''Year One'' story-arc published a good ''twenty years'' after the series originally aired, and was thus never a part of the original series or even the comics of the time.[[note]]Of course, the New Earth continuity for Alfred has been canon and the dominant depiction across all media for over three decades by this point, so many fans would complain if he ''wasn't'' depicted as being someone who was "always there"...[[/note]]
20* BadassBystander: Unlike in the original series where the ordinary Gotham civilian tended to cower in fear ineffectually until Batman and Robin showed up, the audience at the Gotham Palace tries to charge and capture the four villains until the police arrive, something NO OTHER GOTHAM CIVILIANS who aren't superheroes, in ANY continuity, have ever tried to do.
21* BatDeduction: Wouldn't be a true tribute without it.
22* BatmanCanBreatheInSpace: Played painfully straight as Catwoman gets blown out of an airlock with zero ill effects. (That said, in the original series Catwoman had an almost supernatural ability to avoid death, [[spoiler:which is likely revisited at the end of this film, and confirmed in the sequel which has her alive and well.]])
23* BigBadDuumvirate: The Joker, the Penguin, the Riddler, and Catwoman team up, just like they did in the [[Film/BatmanTheMovie film of the series]].
24* BroadStrokes: Not story-wise (since the original show never had much in the way of continuity), but definitely in how much the animated characters resemble their live-action predecessors. Batman and Robin are fairly dead ringers for how West and Ward looked back in the 1960s, but more minor characters like Commissioner Gordon take almost entirely after the comics versions. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking And Batgirl is nowhere to be seen]].[[note]]This last one though may have been out of respect -- Yvonne Craig had died in August, 2015, and it's possible that the producers felt it would have been insulting to her memory to have her PutOnABus or to have recast her part so relatively soon after her death. And having Batgirl die would have completely broken the spirit of the '60s show they were trying to evoke.[[/note]]
25* {{Camp}}: The whole film is an attempt to recapture the campy essence of the 1960s series with modern animation.
26* ConservationOfNinjutsu: [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]], to the point of near-aversion, in the big Bat-fight between [[spoiler:the army of evil Batmen and the army of second-string villains Robin and Catwoman have assembled. The Batmen mop up the villains without too much difficulty, and each villain takes out one or two Batmen at most before falling.]]
27* ContinuityCavalcade: The army that [[spoiler:Robin and Catwoman assemble to fight Evil Batman]] consists of ''fourteen'' second-string villains from the original show, from almost-A-listers like Egghead and King Tut to one-shots like Archer and Minstrel.
28* ContinuityNod: Dick Grayson claims that their greatest foes have RE-united. Nodding to the first time they united in [[Film/BatmanTheMovie the 1966 movie]].
29** The credits reference the famous "Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb" scene and the Batusi.
30* ContinuousDecompression: When Catwoman is ThrownOutTheAirlock, the air continues to rush out for long after it should have ended.
31* ConveyorBeltODoom: Batman and Robin are strapped to a giant meal tray by the villainous foursome. The Joker then activates the conveyor belt the tray is on and it starts heading towards a giant oven (with "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Giant Oven]]" written on it). It doesn't prevent Robin from indulging in [[{{Pun}} punny]] CasualDangerDialogue on their seemingly hopeless situation, just as he did in the original live-action series.
32* CoolCar: The 1960s [[VehicularThemeNaming Batmobile]] is back too. The Joker and Catwoman also have themed cars; the Jokermobile can be turned around during chases to face pursuers and fire a grenade launcher at them.
33* CrazyPrepared: [[spoiler:Evil Batman]] knew Robin and Catwoman would be trying to trick him into taking [[spoiler: the Bat-Antidote]]. So what does he do? Well, create an [[spoiler:Bat-Anti-Antidote]] of course!
34** [[spoiler:Robin knew that Evil Batman might capture him and Catwoman and most likely use the radiation from the rocket silo (Evil Batman raised its edges so they couldn't swing out of it) to kill them, so he sprayed himself and Catwoman with the Bat-Isotope.]]
35** [[spoiler:''Batman even has a backup plan for when he turns evil!'' Batman and Alfred have an agreement — given their long history together, the only logical reason that Batman would ever fire Alfred is if he weren't acting of his own free will. Therefore Alfred would have standing orders to gather ingredients for a mind-control antidote.]]
36* DayOfTheJackboot: [[spoiler:Evil Batman inflicts this on Gotham, installing his clones into every single government job, and several ''non''-government ones.]]
37* DeadArtistsAreBetter: [[spoiler:When Penguin complains that the SadClown painting Joker stole wasn't that valuable, Joker responds that it'll be worth a lot more when he bumps off the artist who made it.]]
38* DiscOneFinalBoss: Subverted. The Joker, the Riddler, and the Penguin's plan is [[spoiler:seemingly]] foiled halfway into the movie. The rest of the run time is about [[spoiler:Evil Batman...until it turns out ''he'' was just a distraction for the first three to go knock over a bunch of museums.]]
39* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:As with her debut episode and "Scat! Darn Catwoman", Catwoman falls to her apparent death from the Penguin's blimp in the end when Batman refuses to join her and she is not willing to go back to face jail-time. Still, knowing Catwoman's later appearances in the show, she may return. She does indeed return in ''Batman vs. Two-Face''.]]
40* DutchAngle: Used heavily, as it was one of the most prominent elements of the original '66 show [[spoiler:and is one of the first clues to Batman's slow descent into evil.]] Later given an absolutely hilarious lampshade, as one of the cameras at the Gotham Palace has a specific "Fight Scene" setting that does exactly this.
41* EnemyMine: Robin teams up with Catwoman to [[spoiler:return Evil Batman to normal.]] Catwoman helps the heroes to get revenge on her former partners in crime after they betray her and at one point [[spoiler:directly saves Robin's life.]]
42* ExactlyWhatIAimedAt: While fighting the villains in zero gravity, Batman flings a Batarang at them. The villains laugh as it whizzes past them harmlessly, but the Batarang ricochets off a column and hits the switch to turn the gravity back on.
43* {{Expy}}: Miranda Monroe is a very obvious stand-in for Creator/MarilynMonroe.
44** Belgravia for the Soviet Union. The two Belgravian cosmonauts ([[Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus bosmonauts?]]) even have "BBBP" on their helmets (for CCCP, Cyrillic for "USSR").
45** "''Gotham Palace''" is likely one for the real-world variety show ''Hollywood Palace''. Why ''Hollywood Palace''? [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yNzPjPOOfU The October 8. 1966 episode was guest-hosted by Adam West in character as Batman.]] Including a song-and-dance routine performed by the Caped Crusader himself!
46* {{Fanservice}}: Catwoman prominently shaking her [[IncrediblyLamePun tail]] during the credits.
47* FauxActionGirl: Parodied with Catwoman, who spends the fight scenes stood to the side, posing seductively while the men fight. [[spoiler:Defied during the fight with the cloned Batmen, wherein she manages to do well]].
48* GoshDangItToHeck: Robin indignantly declares that Batman will succumb to Catwoman's [[WeCanRuleTogether blandishments]] "When Heck freezes over, [[TheVamp you shameless Bathsheba]]!"
49* HandbagOfHurt: [[spoiler:Black Widow does this to one of the evil Batman clones. It doesn't really work, and she gets KO-sprayed for her troubles.]]
50* HumiliationConga: Joker gets one right at the end, courtesy of a circus.
51* InkSuitActor: Every major character greatly resembles their respective 1966 live action counterpart. However, due to most of the original cast being deceased when the movie was developed, only Batman, Robin, and Catwoman are voiced by their original actors. The Joker, who is modeled after Creator/CesarRomero, is missing his moustache covered by makeup.
52* InstrumentOfMurder: When attacking the Gotham Palace, the Joker uses an electric guitar that fires entangling streamers that tie up the audience.
53* {{Interquel}}: While the original show never had much in the way of continuity, seeing as how the live action film was set between seasons 1 & 2, this could be set either sometime in season 2, or, more likely, between seasons 2 & 3 of the show given the absence of Batgirl.
54* JerkassHasAPoint: [[spoiler:Evil Batman]] has a point when he upbraids the Commissioner and Chief O'Hara for being pretty much useless, especially after we see they can't even catch shoplifters without help. In reality, both would likely be out of a job.
55* LastSecondChance: Batman keeps trying to convince Catwoman to give up crime and turn herself in to no avail.
56* LawyerFriendlyCameo: To a variety of degrees with the escapees from Gotham State Penitentiary. It's fairly obvious whose likenesses they were able to get permission/licensing for (Victor Buono[[note]]King Tut[[/note]], Otto Preminger[[note]]Mr. Freeze[[/note]], Vincent Price[[note]]Egghead[[/note]]) and whose they either couldn't or didn't care enough to get right. (Milton Berle[[note]]Louie the Lilac[[/note]], Van Johnson[[note]]The Minstrel[[/note]], Art Carney[[note]]The Archer[[/note]].) The main four villains vary as well -- Catwoman is the most faithful as she's being played by her original actress, Joker and Penguin are reasonable likenesses of Cesar Romero[[note]]although without his distinctive moustache -- Romero, a proud Puerto Rican, refused to shave his 'stache for the part and the producers [[SureLetsGoWithThat went along and put the pancake makeup over it]][[/note]] and Burgess Meredith, while Riddler looks only barely like Frank Gorshin. At one point, Batman has a hallucination in which he sees the two other versions of Catwoman from the series and the 1966 movie; while the Eartha Kitt version is a dead ringer for the original, the Lee Meriwether version from the movie is less so.
57* LighterAndSofter: When compared to the dark tone of the past decade's DC animated movies starring Batman, especially ''The Killing Joke'', which came out the same year. It's similar in tone to the earliest episodes of the original series, which included some occasional DarkerAndEdgier things like the murders of the Waynes being mentioned and the Riddler's moll dying in the Batcave.
58* LyingFingerCross: Catwoman does this when allying with Robin. Subverted; she sticks to their deal with no attempt at betrayal.
59* MesACrowd: The function of Professor Nichols' duplication ray (which the villains promptly steal). After getting his hands on it, [[spoiler:Evil Batman uses it to turn himself into an army that overruns Gotham.]]
60* MistakenForGay: Aunt Harriet gets nosier than usual about Bruce and Dick's "relationship" here. No one ever voices the implications out loud, but given that one of these scenes concludes with Alfred going off to polish doorknobs, it's safe to say the creators knew exactly what they were doing.
61* MuggedForDisguise: The villains stuck Hector and the Hoe-Daddies into a backstage broom closet and went onstage disguised as the band, playing a few [[DreadfulMusician cacophonic notes]] before revealing themselves.
62* MurderByCremation: The villains strap the Dynamic Duo to a giant TV dinner tray and use a ConveyorBeltODoom to send them into a giant flaming oven.
63* MythologyGag:
64** [[spoiler:Evil Batman]] quotes ''ComicBook/BatmanTheDarkKnightReturns'' at one point. And before that, he quotes the "You wanna get nuts?!" rant from Creator/MichaelKeaton's first ''Film/{{Batman|1989}}'' movie.
65-->"Riddler, this is an operating table -- and I'm the surgeon."
66** At one point, when Batman hallucinates three Catwomen, the three versions of Catwoman from the series (played by Lee Meriweather, Eartha Kitt and Julie Newmar) appear.
67** In addition to the usual giant T-rex in the Batcave, earlier versions of the Batsuit from UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks appear in trophy cases.
68** The host of ''Gotham Palace'' is a woman named Miranda Monroe, a reference to "Miranda", the Batman novelty song Adam West sang in the 60s.
69** The comic covers in the opening are actual comic covers.
70** Both Catwoman and [[spoiler:Evil Batman]] suggest killing Robin, referencing a scene in ''Film/BatmanTheMovie''.
71** Also like in ''Batman: The Movie'', Joker, Riddler, Penguin, and Catwoman team up for a larger plan. And Batman with a large bomb in the credits.
72** Catwoman suggests that she and Batman could move to Europe, sit in a cafe, and drink tea together, describing the end of ''Film/TheDarkKnightRises''.
73** [[spoiler:Batman's sudden StealthHiBye through an open window. Lampshaded by Gordon and O'Hara remarking on how unlike (this version of) Batman it is.]]
74** One of the biggest ones yet when Batman and Robin are put into a death trap at around the 22-minute mark - the classic series was ''a half-hour show'' with a CliffHanger ending every odd episode, usually involving a death trap.
75** One of the circus clowns who captures the Joker during his final HumiliationConga resembles Gaggy, a Silver Age Joker sidekick.
76** The first Riddler clue that Batman and Robin decipher was lifted word-for-word from the riddle that Ed used to introduce himself to the Penguin in ''Series/{{Gotham}}''.
77* NeutralFemale: Catwoman plays this straight in the early Bat-fights, but begins subverting it in the later ones.
78* NeverGoingBackToPrison: In the film's climax [[spoiler:Catwoman is faced with the possibility of being sent back to prison. Instead she opts to leap off a blimp and into a factory smokestack.]]
79* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: At one point, the Gotham Palace TV show makes a reference to a band from Manchester called [[Music/TheBeatles The Bedbugs]].
80* NoGravityForYou: An obligatory part of the big Bat-fight aboard the space station.
81* NoHonorAmongThieves: Much to Catwoman's dismay.
82* NoSmoking: In the original '60s series, Burgess Meredith's Penguin was never seen onscreen without his trademark cigarette and long cigarette holder. In fact that was the origin of Meredith's iconic Penguin laugh (the "waaugh waaugh waaugh" laugh), as it was invented by him on the spot to cover up a coughing fit from the cigarettes. In the animated film, that cigarette is nowhere to be seen.
83* NotInTheFace: What the Riddler begs when Batman begins his NoHoldsBarredBeatdown.
84* NotMeThisTime: Having become familiar with Riddler's habit of giving away riddling clues to the Dynamic Duo, Penguin and Joker initially accuse him of being the cause of the Crusaders finding them aboard the space station. Riddler denies responsibility, saying he had resisted the urge.[[note]]In truth, Batman and Robin had deduced the villains were in space because they were nowhere on Earth[[/note]]
85* OOCIsSeriousBusiness:
86** [[spoiler:As Batman becomes evil, Robin looks on his partner's deteriorating behavior with more and more alarm, especially during the NoHoldsBarredBeatdown of Penguin, Riddler, and Joker.]]
87** [[spoiler:This becomes a plot point to resolve the Evil Batman story arc, as Batman and Alfred have an agreement -- given their long history together, the only logical reason that Batman would ever fire Alfred is if he weren't acting of his own free will. Therefore, Alfred would have standing orders to gather ingredients for a mind-control antidote.]]
88* PaintingTheMedium: As [[spoiler:Catwoman's poison starts taking effect]], Batman's HitFlash onomatopoeia becomes more and more brutal. The [[IdiosyncraticWipes Bat-scene transition]] starts changing too, becoming an upside down bat when [[spoiler:Evil Batman]] is on screen and a cat and an "R" for scenes where [[EnemyMine Robin teams up with Catwoman]].
89* PoliceAreUseless: To the point of not even being able to catch a shoplifter without Batman there to tell them what to do.
90* {{Retraux}}: And how. Complete with a '60s-style poster.
91* SelfDeprecation: Quite a bit of the film's humour is this, mainly aimed at how the franchise has changed since the '60s.
92* ShipTease: A lot between Batman and Catwoman of course. There is also a bit between Catwoman and Robin, or at least she likes flirting with him to see his reactions.
93* ShoutOut:
94** The first two sound effects of the NoHoldsBarredBeatdown are [[Creator/RipTorn "RIP!" and "TORN!"]].
95** Upon seeing the Catmobile, Robin says "[[MadLibsCatchphrase Holy]] Film/FasterPussycatKillKill!".
96* SingleMaltVision: A non-drunk variation. After receiving a blow to the head, Batman looks over at Catwoman and sees three of them; the hallucinatory ones being the Lee Meriwether and Eartha Kitt versions.
97* SlowlySlippingIntoEvil: [[spoiler:Catwoman's poison does work]], it just takes a while.
98* SmokestackDrop: In the film's climax, [[NeverGoingBackToPrison Catwoman is faced with the possibility of being sent back to prison]]. Instead she opts to leap off a blimp and into a factory smokestack.
99* StealthHiBye: Unlike Batman in almost every other incarnation, [[AvertedTrope he doesn't really do this]]. This is due to Batman actually being pretty happy in this continuity. [[spoiler:He does this on Gordon, Robin, and O'Hara [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness when the evil serum starts to take effect]].]]
100* StylisticSuck: The movie heavily references the LimitedAnimation of 1960s cartoons. Characters have very few facial expressions and tend to stare into space a lot, and sequences take several milliseconds longer than modern scenes.
101* TakeThat:
102** To ''Film/TheDarkKnightRises'' when Catwoman offers to turn herself in if Batman will run away with her to Europe where they can sip tea in a cafe and live happily ever after, only for Robin to retort "Holy unsatisfying ending!".
103** The entire film is one to the current state of the Batman franchise in general, especially to the overly violent and incredibly dark takes seen in some of the [[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheKillingJoke more recent]] [[Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice adaptations]] of the character, arguing that wonder and excitement are being lost in favor of out-of-place moodiness and extreme violence. This is illustrated vividly when [[spoiler:Evil Batman delivers a vicious beatdown to Penguin, Riddler and Joker after considering killing them. And pulled a StealthHiBye on Gordon...which is rather ''disturbing'' to see the Adam West version do this.]]
104* TemporarilyAVillain: [[spoiler:Batman is turned evil by Catwoman's slow acting poison, but he gets better by the climax.]]
105* ThrownOutTheAirlock:
106** The Joker, Penguin and Riddler attempt to dispose of Catwoman by jettisoning her through the airlock on the space station.
107** [[spoiler: Evil Batman]] threatens to do the same to the rest of them.
108* VerbalTic: Robin's "Holy [''insert word'']!" are back.
109* UnplannedCrossdressing: After the Riddler is thrown from the top of the Penguin's blimp, he falls into a frilly pink dress hanging on a clothesline.
110* VillainExitStageLeft: [[spoiler:When Batman rejects her advances for the last time and even her loot abandons her, Catwoman jumps off Penguin's getaway blimp and into a smokestack.]]
111* VillainHasAPoint: Considering just how ineffective Gotham's police department is shown to be [[spoiler:Evil Batman's]] decision for taking charge of it actually makes some sense. [[MoralEventHorizon On the other hand his following decision to take over the world might not.]]
112* VocalEvolution: Given it was decades since he originally played the role and was 88 years old and fighting leukemia at the time he recorded his lines, Adam West's Batman sounds much more low and worn sounding than in the original show. Curiously, this is ''averted'' with Burt Ward, who was in his early 70s while recording his lines, but his voice was almost identical to how he sounded in the original show, when he was in his mid-20s! The same, however, cannot be said of Julie Newmar, who was in her 80s like West and sounded her age. It's very distracting seeing as Catwoman is supposed to be somewhere in her 20s or 30s as she was in the show.
113* WeCanRuleTogether: Just as Batman tries to convince Catwoman to give up her life of crime, she is just as persistent at trying to convince Batman to give up crimefighting and become her partner.
114* WrittenSoundEffect: As in the original live-action series, any punch or kick during a fight is punctuated by an onomatopoeia.

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