Batman: "True or False Face"/'Holy Rat Race": I really like the idea of this one -- a villain who's a master of disguise and deception, where nothing is what it seems and everything is a trick within a trick. But the weird, immobile mask False Face wears kind of undermines it. It works against letting Malachi Throne give a memorable performance, which may be why he was never brought back. Which is a shame, since False Face was a terrific villain in concept. Myrna Fahey's Blaze was a pretty impressive moll, too -- not surprising, since she had to carry so much of the episode with FF sticking to the shadows. She was less impressive after her "face turn," though.
I'm getting a little tired of the Fox backlot streets. It was pretty obvious here that the facade Blaze dove out of, supposedly at police HQ, was on that triangular building that the "Trick Truck" drove behind to elude the cops in the teaser. It didn't look anything like the police HQ exterior in any other episode.
But it's funny how the "oncoming subway train" in the cliffhanger is just a stage light. You can even see its "barn doors" (the metal leaves on the sides) folded in.
And how did Blaze have time to go to the radio station and leave that clue? The end of part 1 implied the train was moments away. Also, Blaze was in FF's custody at that point, so how did she get away to leave the clue?
Note the Gary Owens cameo as the TV newsman in part 2.
Hard to believe we're halfway through season 1 at this point and we still haven't met Catwoman. Fortunately, she shows up next week.
Wonder Woman begins its hilariously titled 2-parter "The Feminum Mystique," introducing Debra Winger as Drusilla, the TV version of Wonder Girl. And it features John Saxon and Paul Shenar as Nazi spies, a pretty good casting job. Meanwhile, Queen Hippolyta is now Morticia Addams rather than Frau Blucher. (Neighhhh!) I have to admit, I wasn't crazy about Cloris Leachman's performance as Hippolyta in the pilot. It was kind of weird and self-mocking, without a lot of queenly dignity. Carolyn Jones is a better fit.
Overall, though, this was kind of a boring one. It's weird enough to try to vary the format so early in the series, but Drusilla just wasn't all that interesting, and the story was kind of slow-paced and unfocused.
It's odd that the Nazis seem unaware of Wonder Woman here, given that they had her in their custody just weeks ago, and given that the US would probably be playing her up in propaganda films and broadcasts. And given that folks on Paradise Island are aware that she's become a legend. How is it that a secret island in the Bermuda Triangle gets better news updates than the government of Germany?
By the way, it's an anachronism to label it as the Bermuda Triangle, since that legend didn't get started until about 1950 and didn't really get codified until the '60s. But the hype about it was really active when this series came out. (Also, did people use "neat" in that sense in 1942? I think it would've been "swell" or "keen" at the time.)
I never realized it before, but at least in this episode, when Diana transforms to Wonder Woman, the flash of light is red as it grows, white when it fills the screen, and blue as it fades. That's really embracing the patriotic theme. And we get our first (implied) reverse spin when she changes in front of Drusilla.