When I keep reading that they're focusing on lesser knowns, I keep feeling that this show is just an excuse to release a new set of action figures.
Whereas I feel this show is an excuse for its comics-fan producers to play with the characters they loved reading about as kids but never got to do anything with in animation before. James Tucker has made his love for Silver Age comics and the Dick Sprang era of
Batman quite clear in the past. He storyboarded the Dick Sprang-styled sequence of the B:TAS episode "Legends of the Dark Knight," and in the DVD commentary for that episode, it's clear that he was thrilled by the opportunity to pay tribute to his favorite comics. Now he gets to do a whole series like that.
Tonight's episode was pretty good. Although it featured the comical Plastic Man as Batman's partner, and embraced freaky-bizarre elements of the DC universe like Gentleman Ghost, Gorilla Grodd, and Dinosaur Island, it was a surprisingly serious episode, with Batman taking Plastic Man under his wing because of his guilt at being responsible for the accident that turned him into the "freak" he is now. (The origin as depicted was basically the Joker's origin, although that does have some broad similarities to PM's origin story.) This was a different side of Batman than we saw last week. Rather than a wise and supportive mentor figure, he was a Batman more familiar to fans of TAS -- serious, hard-edged, tough to get along with, even somewhat angsty. And Diedrich Bader is still doing a very good job in the role. Tom Kenny was also pretty good as PM.