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Batman Beyond - Season Two (DC Comics Classic Collection)
Batman Beyond - Season Two (DC Comics Classic Collection)

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Director: Bruce W. Timm
Actors: Will Friedle, Kevin Conroy
Studio: Warner Home Video
Category: DVD

List Price: $44.98
Buy New: $15.54
You Save: $29.44 (65%)



New (50) Used (18) Collectible (1) from $14.24

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 25 reviews
Sales Rank: 3998

Format: Animated, Box Set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 4
Running Time: 544
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 17.8 x 13.1 x 0.7

MPN: WARD81110D
UPC: 012569811102
EAN: 0012569811102
ASIN: B000GYI336

Theatrical Release Date: January 10, 1999
Release Date: October 24, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Batman Beyond - Season Three (DC Comics Classic Collection)
  • Batman Beyond - Season One (DC Comics Classic Collection)
  • Batman Beyond - Return of the Joker (The Original Uncut Version)
  • Justice League Unlimited - Season One (DC Comics Classic Collection)
  • Justice League Unlimited - Season Two (DC Comics Classic Collection)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 10/24/2006 Run time: 544 minutes


Customer Reviews:   Read 20 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars It gets better every time!   July 27, 2006
 44 out of 47 found this review helpful


I remember watching BATMAN BEYOND when I was a little child. I still enjoy it, and I can tell you that it is a great series. If you like BATMAN: THE ANIMATED SERIES, SUPERMAN: THE ANIMATED SERIES, JUSTICE LEAGUE, JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED, STATIC SHOCK, and THE ZETA PROJECT...then you'll love this! While I have not seen all of the episodes, I have seen some. But, being the Season Two box-set, I already know what episodes are going to be in this - all of Season Two's episodes!

Here is a list of the episodes featured in "Batman Beyond: Season Two."

1. Splicers
2. Earth Mover
3. Joyride
4. Lost Soul
5. Hidden Agenda
6. Bloodsport
7. Once Burned
8. Hooked Up
9. Rats
10. Mind Games
11. Revenant
12. Babel
13. Terry's Friend Dates a Robot
14. Eyewitness
15. Final Cut
16. The Last Resort
17. Armory
18. Sneak Peek
19. The Eggbaby
20. Zeta
21. Plague
22. April Moon
23. Sentries of the Last Cosmos
24. Payback
25. Where's Terry?
26. Ace in the Hole

I hope you make a wise choice and purchase this item. Trust me, this is a true collector's item for any DC Animated Universe fan.



3 out of 5 stars The best is yet to come   August 16, 2006
 9 out of 17 found this review helpful

During the second season of Batman Beyond, the show crew develope the characters they created along Season One. The result is a full-action packed series, a great entertainment and one or two memorable episodes (for instance April Moon, maybe one of the best stories I've seen in a TV animation series).

If you liked season one, buy this second season. However, if you are thinking about it, have in mind that the thriteen episodes of thethird season are really really good (in fact, of compulsory view if you are a Bat-fan) and maybe you will regret not having the whole series...



3 out of 5 stars Some Good, Some Lax   January 30, 2007
 9 out of 10 found this review helpful

I've got to agree with other reviewers that, after Season One, Season Two is a letdown. You can get a sense of this from the Added Features that frame the 4-DVD set.

The first episode, "Splicers," gets good commentary from the actors and other interested parties, including Will Friedle's description of how he distinguished vocally between Terry and Batman. There are also appreciations of fellow voice actors in the series, including the late Paul Winfield. But "Splicers" itself is terribly derivative, an unimaginative imitation of Season One's "The Winning Edge."

Disk 4 gives us an interview with four of the series producers, who confirm that they were charged with (1) introducing a new character (Max), (2) making the stories more "high school" and Terry-centered, less "crime comics"/Batman-centered, and (3) reducing the reliance on corporate baddies. All these they did, with the result that the stories are, more often than not, vehicles for long-term character and relationship development.

That's not bad, if the characters are interesting, which often they are. But I don't hear much excitement from the producers, except when it comes to "Earth Mover," a "return from the grave" story reminiscent of EC Comics. There's also some talk about the younger cartoonists not knowing Jack Kirby's work. But does that really explain why the artwork is, in general, pretty slack in the second season?

In addition to Max, new characters in Season Two include Stalker (Terry's nemesis in "Blood Sport," his ally in "Plague"), the incapable-of-introspection schlump Howard Groot, and one real gem, Stanley "Mad Stan" Labowski, voiced to perfection by Henry Rollins. Catch him in "Rats" and "Eyewitness," two episodes that seem to have caught the imagination of artists, writers, and actors alike.

The season's emphasis on high school brings us some good comedy--best being "The Eggbaby"--and effectively shifts antagonism away from the corporate and toward the family. "Hooked Up," an addiction drama like "The Winning Edge," gives us affecting portrayals of troubled or neglected kids' compensatory fantasies. "Armory" shows what happens to the rich family of Season One's "Spellbound" when all-sufficient Dad loses his job. In "The Last Resort" family and corporation collaborate as betrayers and oppressors. In the better-drawn, better-imagined episodes, I get a fuller sense of who Terry and Max are: working-class kids living in the projects: architectural design can be traced to London's Barbican, and sometimes you can see the bubbles in the cast concrete, a reminder of Le Corbusier.

A final word. I like the dark, creepy side of "Batman Beyond," so my personal recommendations are "Mind Games" and "April Moon." The first is a take on the classic anime "Akira." The second is film noir, predictable, but with an ending almost as good as that of Season One's "Disappearing Inque." Looking forward to Season Three.



5 out of 5 stars McGinnis rules!   August 12, 2006
 8 out of 17 found this review helpful

Gothum's new Dark Knight is back. The guys at Warner home video are presenting us DC AU junkies with the entire second season of this action packed series. I've not seen too many episodes of Batman Beyond because we didn't get the Wb when I was a kid, but I really enjoyed the first season and am looking forward to the second. Here are some things to look forward to, well, us fans who are new to the series.
From the brief synopses I've read from episode guides, looks like Terry has to deal with the Jokers again in an episode called Joyride. They steal a top secret military vehicle and its up to McGinnis to stop them. Shriek is back, and Batman has to go up against teens who've combined their DNA with that of various animals in Splicers. Remember Curare from Season 1? That ninja assassin who tried to take out Comissioner Barbara Gordon's husband? Well, she's back in action as well. We also get another episode featuring the Royal Flush gang. And we're introduced to a terrorist organization known as Cobra along the way also. No multipart eps though, sadly. Now if only they'd reveal when the final season's coming out! Yeah yeah, I know the second season hasn't even been released yet. I'm a pretty sad case, huh?
Anywho, can't wait until October 24th!



2 out of 5 stars Without Derek Powers, and with the intro of Max Gibson (among other things), the show seemed to lose its sense of direction.   November 7, 2006
 7 out of 12 found this review helpful

Rating: 2.5/5
I must admit I'm occasionally hasty to judge television shows, which was the case when I gave up on Bruce Timm's Justice League after the first seven episodes. Quite obviously a mistake on my part, seeing as the rest of the first season was (mostly) excellent and the show only improved from there, resulting in one of the best animated shows on television.

I was hoping for a similar experience with Batman Beyond, which actually won me over in its first season (rating: 3.5/5) despite my initial skepticism towards the premise. But I eventually gave up on season two back when it first aired somewhere close to the halfway mark. Hoping for a better viewing the second time around much like I had with the first season of Justice League, I gave the DVD a shot but found myself just as disappointed as I was back then.

There were several things that made the first season work, the most important elements being a fair sense of freshness and a first-rate lead villain in the form of Derek Powers. For all its faults season one had a sense of focus and direction, we could see how Terry McGinnis was inching closer to uncovering Powers' connection to Blight and getting justice for his father's murder. So you could understand my reaction when I thought the show jumped the gun (and the shark, I suppose) when Powers criminal enterprise was exposed in the season finale.

Despite this questionable move, it wasn't unreasonable to think the second season could take the show in a different, bolder direction, right? No such luck. The new villains this time around are weaker than ever, with only The Stalker making an impression as a game hunter who sees Batman as his newest prey (his back story is also satisfyingly grim and gruesome, especially by Saturday morning standards). Unfortunately, we usually end up getting lame villains like Mad Stan and Ma Mayhem instead.

Probably the worst decision was the introduction of Max Gibson, a computer genius who discovers Batman's true identity and becomes his sidekick. Not only is the concept just groan-inducing, Max herself is an annoying character, constantly ignoring Terry's advice and getting into trouble for seemingly no other reason than to get a good thrill in the guise of crimefighting. Even worse, her presence means there's less time spent between Terry and Bruce, which was easily the most interesting relationship this show had going for it.

The writing is also surprisingly lacking this season. While there's still some memorable dialogue and good voice acting, the stories are less interesting and, given the lack of a central villain, have an aimless feel to them. There are certainly some exceptions, with enjoyable episodes like Hidden Agenda (until the whole Max/Terry sidekick angle comes up at the end), Mind Games, Babel, and even a guilty pleasure in the humorously silly The Eggbaby. But there's also a lot of blown opportunities as well, like the intriguing Eyewitness, which started off with a lot of promise but came up limp in the payoff.

I've only seen a few episodes from season three, but I recall enjoying them more than most of the stuff in season two. Still, this season pretty much solidified my opinion of Batman Beyond as the one show in the DCAU that never lived up to its potential (Static Shock and Zeta Project didn't have much potential to begin with).


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