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The first design of the Jokermobile from Batman #37 (October 1946), art by Jerry Robinson.. The Jokermobile made its comic book debut in Batman #37 (October 1946), [1] in which Joker was fed up with Batman's superior gadgetry that played a role in foiling his criminal plots and so decided to build a series of Joker-themed gadgets, like the Jokermobile, for example, his own themed vehicle ...
Batman falls out of the Owlship and into a rioting mob. Lois confronts Lex who denies being behind the "Supermen Theory". He does claims that a metahuman and former member of the Justice League created metahumans for the government. With the Comedian hot on their trail, Mime and Marionette locate Joker who has a beaten Batman delivered to him.
The 1966–1968 television series Batman was so popular that its campy humor and its version of Batmobile were imported into Batman's comics. The iconic television Batmobile was a superficially modified concept car, the decade-old Lincoln Futura, owned by auto customizer George Barris, whose shop did the work. [11]
DC Comics had the first fictional universe of superheroes, with the Justice Society of America forming in the Golden Age of Comic Books in the 1940s. This shared continuity became increasingly complex with multiple worlds, including a similar team of all-star superheroes formed in the 1960s named the Justice League of America, debuting in The Brave and the Bold Volume 1 #28.
Angel Rojas (voiced initially by Edward James Olmos and subsequently by Jesse Corti) is a police officer who believes Batman to be a criminal and wants to capture him. Ellen Yin (voiced by Ming-Na Wen) is a police officer who initially antagonizes Batman before becoming his ally. In a potential future depicted in the episode "Artifacts", Yin ...
While the posters for Batman Returns teased a grudge match between the Bat, the Cat and the Penguin, the movie itself is much more sympathetic in its portrayal of all three DC Comics mainstays ...
Batman — car designer, The Batmobile, 120 episodes (1966–1968) Mannix — car customizer, Mannix Roadster (1967) The Banana Splits Adventure Hour — car designer, 5 episodes (1968) The Beverly Hillbillies — car designer, 3 episodes (1962–1963); production assistant, 1 episode (1968) The Bugaloos — car designer, 14 episodes (1970–1971)
The series shows Bruce Banner's origin of becoming the Hulk and struggling to keep his dual identity a secret from everyone, as well as trying to maintain his romance with Betty Ross, friendship with Rick Jones—the only one knowing that Banner and the Hulk are the same—and battling super-villains such as the Leader, Metal Master, Ringmaster ...