PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *adventure*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTIONS: *psychological, sociological*
It’s Stanley Ralph
Ross up to “bat” once more, and he presents Bat-viewers with yet
another sophomoric villain, the western-themed owlhoot “Shame.”
Any viewers who didn’t guess that the villain’s name spoofed that
of the hero of the 1954 western “Shane” would be clued in by the
way Ross tediously spoofs the film’s signature line “Come back,
Shane” throughout the episode.
Neither Shame nor
any of his henchpeople have any particular reason for affecting a
western theme, though early in the episode Batman credits the villain
with a “bravado” like that of old-time outlaws. (However, the
same could be said about most Bat-villains.) Like Riddler and
Penguin, Shame has a case of Batmobile-envy, since in a previous
outing Batman outraced Shame with the Batmobile’s superior engines.
Thus one of Shane’s main aims in the episode is to build a better
Batmobile—though this project doesn’t really have much effect on
his big score: that of ripping off a herd of priceless breed cattle.
In order to put
across a western vraisemblance, Shame makes his hideout in a defunct
film studio, with a standing western set. While Shame and his men
attempt to make their super-car, they meet an eight-year-old boy,
Andy, who dresses as a cowboy but gets a disconcerting taste of
real-life outlaws. After Shame swipes the boy’s radio, Andy spends
a lot of time wandering around crying, “Come back, Shame”-- and
though this routine gets old fast, Ross does make it pay off a little
at the end, when Andy forswears cowboy-fantasies in favor of
Batman-style superheroes.
Though the episode
is slackly plotted, it does have a number of pluses, beginning with
Cliff Robertson’s ornery perf as the guest villain. In the first
fight-scene, when the heroes square off against Shame, his two
henchmen and his henchwoman Okie Annie, Shame describes them as
“three-and-a-half against two.” However, it’s the “half,”
Okie Annie, who knocks out the crimefighters by dropping a chandelier
on them: a rare feat of direct violence for a female character on
this show. Both this fight and the concluding one get
better-than-average choreography, possibly because western films were
so famous for elaborate fisticuffs. The latter fight features an
exchange in which the audience laughs with Batman rather than at him.
Laughing Leo, a cheery car-saleman who’s been working with Shame,
tries to avoid being hit with the old standby, “You wouldn’t hit
a man with glasses, would you?” Batman astutely points out that
Leo’s not wearing glasses, slugs him, and adds the insult, “Laugh
that one off, Leo!”
“Come Back” is
at best a mixed bag, but Shame did indeed come back for one more duel
with the Caped Crusaders, though not until the third season.
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