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In between this, the team began a series of Batman film spinoffs, beginning with the theatrically released Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993). This was followed by Batman and Mr Freeze: SubZero (1998), this, Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker (2000), Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman (2003), Batman: Gotham Knight (2008), Superman/Batman: Public Enemies (2009), Batman: Under the Red Hood (2010), Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (2010) and Batman: Year One (2011) all of which were released straight to video. There were four spinoff films from the Superman animated series with Superman: The Last Son of Krypton (1996), Superman: Brainiac Attacks (2006), Superman: Doomsday (2007) and All-Star Superman (2011). The Batman Superman Movie was a crossover between the two animated series. It originally aired as a three-part episode, World's Finest, of the Superman series and was compiled as a film for video release. (It should also be noted that around this time director Wolfgang Petersen was in discussion for making a live-action film Batman vs Superman). Batman and Superman teamed up again in the animated Superman/Batman: Public Enemies and Superman/Batman: Apocalypse, also from the Bruce Timm production team. Both the Batman and Superman animated series should be noted for their uncommon intelligence in the general intellectual wasteland of tv animation. The same rigour is applied to the team-up here. Rather than approaching the meeting as a mutual friends club as the comic-book is wont to do, the script (which interestingly is co-written by Howard the Duck creator Steve Gerber) sets up rivalries on all levels. Instead of a team-up, there is friction between Batman and Superman with Superman disdaining Batmans vigilante approach in fact, their first meeting starts out as a fight. Similarly, the film brings in both characters two principal nemeses The Joker and Lex Luthor and pits them together in a reluctant team-up where Luthor is patently gritting his teeth at the off-the-wall Jokers insanity. Even the two villains female sidekicks are seen fighting it out at one point. The films most interesting spin is to throw in a romance between Bruce Wayne and Lois Lane, something that clearly has Superman trying to keep his cool from the sideline. There is also crossplay between the various secret identities, including a nifty scene where Superman and Batman both manage to unmask the others identity. This is wound into an interesting playoff between all four identities at one point Batman and Superman lament: Its ironic that she [Lois Lane] likes Bruce Wayne and Superman. Its the other two guys shes not hot about. I wish there was some way we could swap around. It is these playoffs that make the film. The Batman Superman Movie: World's Finest is less successful on a directorial level. The Batman series always managed to throw in some wonderfully exciting action sequences, while the Superman series scaled Supermans superheroics up enthrallingly. For the most part, the action here is routine although toward the end there are some exciting sequences with Batman and Superman facing killer robots and taking on The Joker who has gone crazy in a giant Flying Wing. Director Toshiko Masuda also fails to grasp the mood of either series. Batman created a wonderfully stylised vision of the dark moodiness of the Tim Burton films, while Superman adopted a unique Art Deco look. However, Toshiko Masuda abandons either look and opts for a blank lack of any real background detail.
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