List of Batfink episodes: Difference between revisions
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==References== |
==References== |
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* [http://www.davemackey.com/animation/seeger/batfink/bfeptable.html Batfink Episode Guide] |
* [https://web.archive.org/20120420111141/http://www.davemackey.com:80/animation/seeger/batfink/bfeptable.html Batfink Episode Guide] at DaveMackey.com |
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[[Category:Lists of American animated television series episodes|Batfink]] |
[[Category:Lists of American animated television series episodes|Batfink]] |
Revision as of 06:33, 24 February 2016
The following is a list of all 100 five-minute episodes of the Batfink cartoon series.
Overall credits
Production Supervisor: | Len Bird |
---|---|
Voices: | Len Maxwell, Frank Buxton |
Produced and Directed by: | Hal Seeger |
Episodes
No. | Title | Story | Animation | Scenics | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Pink Pearl of Persia" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | April 21, 1966 | |
Batfink says that he knows who has stolen a huge pearl from the museum, but he refuses to tell who did it; this leads everyone, including the thieves, to believe that he's turned crooked. The three crooks in this episode appear again in "Crime College." | ||||||
2 | "The Short Circuit Case" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | April 21, 1966 | |
Hugo A-Go-Go (in his first appearance) is using his short-circuit device to make trains and traffic signals go wild. | ||||||
3 | "Ebenezer the Freezer" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Hugo and Ebenezer the Freezer plan to freeze the entire city, using a missile loaded with freezing gas. | ||||||
4 | "The Sonic Boomer" | (No credit) | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Boomer, the owner of Boomer Glass Works, is using a jet plane to create window-shattering sonic booms in order to increase business. | ||||||
5 | "Big Ears Ernie" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Big Ears Ernie is a burglar whose super-sensitive hearing allows him to break into safes and avoid capture. The main battle takes place at a construction site. | ||||||
6 | "Batfink on the Rocks" | Dennis Marks | John Gentilella | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Hugo has stolen all the water from Niagara Falls, and is selling it for five cents a glass. | ||||||
7 | "Manhole Manny" | Heywood Kling | James Tyer | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
8 | "The Mad Movie Maker" | Dennis Marks | I. Klein | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
9 | "Nuts of the Round Table" | (No credit) | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Hugo is sending out robotic knights to commit robberies for him. | ||||||
10 | "Skinny Minnie" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Skinny Minnie and her gang of rail-thin thugs use their ability to squeeze through tight spaces to commit robberies and hide from the police. | ||||||
11 | "Fatman Strikes Again" | Dennis Marks | Graham Place | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Someone is stealing valuables from fat men's clubs, so Batfink dons an inflatable "fat suit" to find him. | ||||||
12 | "The Kitchy Koo Kaper" | Heywood Kling | James Tyer | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Hugo uses his latest invention, a tickle stick, to render people helpless with laughter. | ||||||
13 | "The Dirty Sinker" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen, John Zago | January 20, 1967 | |
Hugo is using a special submarine to cut through the hulls of ships, so he can rob them and then sink them. | ||||||
14 | "Gluey Louie" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | March 3, 1967 | |
Gluey Louie, who immobilizes people with puddles of glue, steals Benjamin Franklin's kite just as it is being donated to a university. | ||||||
15 | "Brother Goose" | Dennis Marks | Tom Golden, Arnie Levy | Bob Owen, Dave Ubinas | January 20, 1967 | |
Brother Goose (whose name is a takeoff of "Mother Goose") is a crook whose crimes and traps are patterned after nursery rhymes. This criminal appears again in "Crimes in Rhymes." | ||||||
16 | "The Chocolate-Covered Diamond" | Dennis Marks | Graham Place | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Two crooks have lost a stolen diamond in a candy factory, so now they're trying to find it by stealing chocolate bars all over town. | ||||||
17 | "Crime College" | Heywood Kling | John Gentilella | Bob Owen | March 1, 1967 | |
Hugo is teaching his students (the three crooks from "Pink Pearl of Persia") how to commit crimes and avoid capture, with the help of a heavily armed school bus. | ||||||
18 | "Myron the Magician" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Myron the Magician, who uses magic tricks to commit crimes, steals a valuable painting from a museum and hides out in his specially-gimmicked house. | ||||||
19 | "Brain Washday" | Heywood Kling | I. Klein | Bob Owen | February 6, 1967 | |
Hugo steals a factory's payroll with the help of an instant brainwashing solution that turns people into his willing slaves. | ||||||
20 | "MPFTBRM" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras | Bob Owen | January 31, 1967 | |
Hugo, using his newly invented Millisecond Photo Flash Temporary Blinding Ray Monocle, has stolen a set of secret plans from a diplomatic courier. | ||||||
21 | "Gloves on the Go-Go" | Dennis Marks | Maury Reden | Bob Owen | March 3, 1967 | |
Hugo has invented a pair of flying gloves that steal for him; because they look like Batfink's gloves, Batfink is now wanted by the police! | ||||||
22 | "Sporty Morty" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman, I. Klein | Bob Owen | March 13, 1967 | |
23 | "Go Fly a Bat" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | January 31, 1967 | |
24 | "Ringading Brothers" | Dennis Marks | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | March 1, 1967 | |
The Ringading Brothers use acrobatic skills to steal valuable rings from people's homes. Their name is a takeoff of "Ringling Brothers," and of the Frank Sinatra song Ring-A-Ding-Ding. | ||||||
25 | "Out Out Darn Spot" | Dennis Marks | Morey Reden, I. Klein | Bob Owen | March 3, 1967 | |
26 | "Goo-Goo A-Go-Go" | Heywood Kling | James Tyer | Bob Owen | March 1, 1967 | |
Hugo has built a grenade-throwing robotic baby to help him commit crimes. | ||||||
27 | "Crimes in Rhymes" | Dennis Marks | John Gentilella | Bob Owen | April 7, 1967 | |
Brother Goose is back, and committing more crimes based on nursery rhymes. | ||||||
28 | "Stupidman" | Heywood Kling | Graham Place, John Gentilella | Bob Owen | March 30, 1967 | |
Stupidman, who commits crimes that no sensible person would try, has stolen a two-million-dollar scimitar; the police are unable to act, because he's the Chief's brother-in-law! The crook's name is a takeoff of "Superman." | ||||||
29 | "A Living Doll" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | January 31, 1967 | |
Hugo has built a mechanical Batfink lookalike, and Karate must determine who's who in order to save Batfink's life. | ||||||
30 | "Bat Patrol" | Heywood Kling | Martin Taras, Morey Reden | Bob Owen | March 13, 1967 | |
Hugo's mechanical soldiers have declared war on law and order. The title is a takeoff of The Rat Patrol. | ||||||
31 | "Dig That Crazy Mountain" | Dennis Marks | Graham Place | Bob Owen | January 20, 1967 | |
Professor Vibrato has broken out of jail using his ultrasonic cello, and Batfink pursues him to his mountaintop hideout. | ||||||
32 | "Spin the Batfink" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | February 6, 1967 | |
A junk dealer is using a machine to create artificial tornadoes, which steal money and junk for him. This episode contains the first half of a hidden political message; the second half is in "Bride and Doom." | ||||||
33 | "Greasy Gus" | Heywood Kling | James Tyer | Bob Owen | March 23, 1967 | |
Greasy Gus, who uses puddles of grease to trip people up, has stolen the police payroll; the police won't work without pay, so it is up to Batfink to bring Gus in. | ||||||
34 | "The Mark of Zero" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | March 13, 1967 | |
Plus A. Minus, alias Zero (a parody of Zorro), has stolen an original manuscript for The Three Musketeers. | ||||||
35 | "Swami Salami" | Heywood Kling | Graham Place | Bob Owen | April 18, 1967 | |
Snake charmer Swami Salami uses the Indian rope trick to rob penthouses. | ||||||
36 | "The Human Pretzel" | Dennis Marks | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen, Bill Focht | April 24, 1967 | |
A contortionist called The Human Pretzel has stolen a box of diamonds, and is hiding out at a carnival. | ||||||
37 | "Jumping Jewelry" | Heywood Kling | John Gentilella | Bob Owen | March 30, 1967 | |
Professor Hopper, owner of a flea circus, uses his trained fleas to steal jewelry. | ||||||
38 | "Roz the Schnozz" | Heywood Kling | James Tyer | Bob Owen | April 24, 1967 | |
Roz the Schnozz uses her bloodhound-like nose to sniff out valuables and to avoid the police. | ||||||
39 | "Karate's Case" | Dennis Marks | Bill Ackerman, I. Klein | Bob Owen, Bill Focht | April 7, 1967 | |
Someone impersonating Karate has stolen the Gold Hand of Kara-Tay from a museum; Karate, determined to clear his name, insists on taking charge of this case. | ||||||
40 | "The Wishbone Boner" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman, Frank Endres | Bob Owens | May 1, 1967 | |
41 | "Hugo for Mayor" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, Morey Reden | Bob Owen | April 18, 1967 | |
Marked money from a bank robbery is planted on the Chief and the Mayor, as part of Hugo's plan to get himself elected mayor. | ||||||
42 | "The Indian Taker" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen, John Zago | March 23, 1967 | |
Hugo is using an Indian (i.e., Native American) motif for his latest crime spree, "because I don't look good as a cowboy!" The title is a takeoff of the term "Indian giver." | ||||||
43 | "The Devilish Device" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, Morey Reden | Bob Owen | May 29, 1967 | |
Hugo's latest invention makes people behave like animals, and he's using it to turn Batfink into a chicken. | ||||||
44 | "Goldstinger" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | March 30, 1967 | |
Hugo is using a "goldstinger" — a wand that instantly encases people and things in gold plate — to turn the heroes into immobile statues. The title of this cartoon is a takeoff of Goldfinger. | ||||||
45 | "The Shady Shadow" | Heywood Kling | Martin Taras, Frank Endres | Bob Owen | April 18, 1967 | |
Hugo's machine has brought his shadow to life, so that it can commit crimes and fight Batfink for him. | ||||||
46 | "Party Marty" | Heywood Kling | Morey Reden | Bill Focht | March 1, 1967 | |
Party Marty, who uses party favors to commit crimes, steals Cleopatra's love letters from a library. A reader in the library keeps shushing people throughout this cartoon. | ||||||
47 | "The Beep Bopper" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | April 7, 1967 | |
Hugo's newest machine has brainwashed Batfink's BEEP into leading the heroes into one trap after another. | ||||||
48 | "The Super Trap" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, John Gentilella | Bob Owen | May 12, 1967 | |
Hugo's electronic jamming device is turning all the machines in the Split-Level Cave against the heroes, including a trap of Batfink's devising that even Batfink can't escape from. | ||||||
49 | "Bride and Doom" | Heywood Kling | James Tyer | Bob Owen | May 1, 1967 | |
Hugo has invented a mechanical bride to help him commit crimes; the climax of the action takes place at Niagara Falls. This episode contains the second half of a hidden political message; the first half is in "Spin the Batfink." | ||||||
50 | "Topsy Turvy" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | April 24, 1967 | |
Professor Flippo's invention turns people and things upside-down; he uses it as part of a death trap in which Batfink is trapped. | ||||||
51 | "The Rotten Rainmaker" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, Peter Dakis | Bob Owen | June 8, 1967 | |
52 | "Gypsy James" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman, Frank Endres | Bill Focht | May 29, 1967 | |
Gypsy James is a crooked fortune teller who steals parking meters; he uses a voodoo doll to battle Batfink. His name is a takeoff of "Jesse James." | ||||||
53 | "The Kooky Chameleon" | Dennis Marks | Graham Place | Bob Owen | May 19, 1967 | |
The Chameleon (no relation) is an art thief from France who uses portable camouflage screens to hide from his pursuers. | ||||||
54 | "Beanstalk Jack" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | May 12, 1967 | |
Beanstalk Jack (a parody of Jack and the Beanstalk) is a farmer who uses instant giant beanstalks to commit crimes; he traps the heroes in a Rube Goldberg-style death trap involving a beanstalk. | ||||||
55 | "The Time Stopper" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, Jim Logan | Bob Owen | May 19, 1967 | |
Hugo's latest device can stop time itself for everyone but him, and he uses it to rob a bank. | ||||||
56 | "The Kangarobot" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen, Bill Focht | May 1, 1967 | |
Hugo has built a robotic kangaroo that can leap tall buildings, provide Hugo with a quick getaway, and fight. | ||||||
57 | "Presto-Chango-Hugo" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, John Gentilella | Bob Owen | June 8, 1967 | |
Hugo is spraying the entire city with Presto-Chango, a chemical that causes people to swap personalities; as a result, Batfink and Karate become each other. | ||||||
58 | "Curly the Cannonball" | Dennis Marks | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | June 30, 1967 | |
Curly the Human Cannonball is using his routine to break into jewelry stores so he can rob them. | ||||||
59 | "Robber Hood" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | May 12, 1967 | |
Robber Hood (a parody of Robin Hood) uses his archery skills to rob money from banks, so he can give it to himself. | ||||||
60 | "Slow Down! Speed Up!" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, James Tyer | Bob Owen | June 1, 1967 | |
Hugo's latest device can change the speed of whomever it is aimed at; he's using it to slow down his enemies and speed himself up. | ||||||
61 | "Sandman Sam" | Heywood Kling | Martin Taras, Frank Endres | Bob Owen | June 21, 1967 | |
Sandman Sam is committing crimes with the help of his "slumber sand," which can put anyone to sleep; it even turns Batfink's BEEP into ZZZZ. | ||||||
62 | "Yo-Yo A-Go-Go" | Heywood Kling | Martin Taras, John Gentilella | Bob Owen | June 14, 1967 | |
63 | "Hugo's Hoke" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, Jim Logan | Bill Focht | June 1, 1967 | |
Hugo has blanketed the city with "Hoke" — hate-inducing smoke — causing everyone to be distracted from Hugo's crimes by their own constant bickering; even Batfink and Karate are at each other's throats. | ||||||
64 | "Backwards Box" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | June 1, 1967 | |
Hugo's latest device makes people and things go backwards; after Batfink escapes from one of Hugo's traps, Hugo uses the box to make him go back into it. | ||||||
65 | "The Great Escapo" | Dennis Marks | Graham Place | Bob Owen | June 14, 1967 | |
The Great Escapo escapes from prison, and seals Batfink inside four famous traps at the same time, challenging him to get out. | ||||||
66 | "Watch My Smoke" | Heywood Kling | Martin Taras, James Tyer | Bob Owen | June 30, 1967 | |
Hugo has an Aladdin-style lamp, which produces a thick black smoke that obeys Hugo's commands. | ||||||
67 | "Daniel Boom" | Heywood Kling | Dave Tendlar, Morey Reden | Bill Focht | June 21, 1967 | |
Daniel Boom (a parody of Daniel Boone) uses explosives to commit crimes and to trap the heroes. | ||||||
68 | "Queenie Bee" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bill Focht | May 29, 1967 | |
Queenie Bee's trained bees scare away a museum guard so that she can steal a valuable painting. | ||||||
69 | "The Thief from Baghdad" | Dennis Marks | Dave Tendlar, Robert Taylor | Bob Owen | June 26, 1967 | |
Sabubu, the Thief from Baghdad, steals a priceless gem from a museum and makes his getaway on a flying carpet; his hideout is a carpet store. | ||||||
70 | "The Mean Green Midget" | Dennis Marks | Tom Golden, Arnie Levy | Bill Focht | July 12, 1967 | |
The Mean Green Midget (a parody of the Jolly Green Giant) creates special plants and vegetables to help him commit crimes, such as a flower that sneaks money out of a bank. | ||||||
71 | "Double Double Crossers" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bill Focht | June 8, 1967 | |
Hugo claims that an impersonator of him is going to rob the bank, and that he himself is innocent; it is really a robot double that Hugo himself built, so he can have an alibi for his own crimes. | ||||||
72 | "The Baffling Bluffs of Hugo A-Go-Go" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras | Bob Owen | August 15, 1967 | |
Hugo fools people into thinking that everyday objects are actually powerful weapons, so he can rob them easily. | ||||||
73 | "Napoleon Blownapart" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bill Focht | June 14, 1967 | |
In this pun-loaded episode, a lunatic called Napoleon Blownapart (a parody of Napoleon Bonaparte) is using hand grenades to blow up statues in the park. | ||||||
74 | "The Atom Boom" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, Jim Logan | Bob Owen | July 12, 1967 | |
Hugo pretends to surrender in order to lure Batfink into a seemingly inescapable trap he calls the Atom Boom (a takeoff of the atom bomb). | ||||||
75 | "Magneto the Magnificent" | Dennis Marks | Dave Tendlar, Morey Reden | Bill Focht | July 26, 1967 | |
Magneto (no relation) is a crook whose magnetic gauntlets help him to steal things. His voice is modeled after Cary Grant's. | ||||||
76 | "Hugo the Crimefighter" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | June 21, 1967 | |
Hugo gains a reputation as a costumed crimefighter, in order to put Batfink out of business. | ||||||
77 | "The Trojan Horse Thief" | Heywood Kling | Tom Golden, Arnie Levy | Bill Focht | July 12, 1967 | |
Hugo's new vehicle is an armored, heavily armed "Trojan Horse" that can tear into vaults. | ||||||
78 | "The Zap Sap" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, James Logan | Bill Focht | September 12, 1967 | |
Hugo builds a "flying saucer" and fools everyone into thinking he's an alien. | ||||||
79 | "Unhappy Birthday" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | June 26, 1967 | |
80 | "Buster the Ruster" | Heywood Kling | Dave Tendlar, Frank Endres | Bob Owen | July 26, 1967 | |
Buster the Ruster uses a spray gun loaded with "rust dust" to disintegrate safes and policemen's guns. | ||||||
81 | "Karate's Day Off" | Dennis Marks | Dave Tendlar, Bob Taylor | Bob Owen | September 14, 1967 | |
On his day off, Karate is fooled by two crooks into believing that Batfink is their hostage, and is forced to help them steal. | ||||||
82 | "Mike the Mimic" | Nick Meglin | Dave Tendlar, Frank Endres | Bob Owen | September 28, 1967 | |
Mike the Mimic uses his impersonation skills to trap Batfink and take his place. | ||||||
83 | "Cinderobber" | Heywood Kling | Dave Tendlar, Morey Reden | Bob Owen | August 3, 1967 | |
The Chief's new cleaning lady has stolen the police payroll, and accidentally left one of her shoes behind; it can only be Cinderobber (a parody of Cinderella)! | ||||||
84 | "Bouncey Bouncey Batfink" | Dennis Marks | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | June 26, 1967 | |
85 | "The Bomber Bird" | Heywood Kling | Dave Tendlar, James Tyer | Bob Owen | August 3, 1967 | |
Hugo has built a giant mechanical pigeon that drops explosive eggs. | ||||||
86 | "The Copycat Bat" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bill Focht | June 30, 1967 | |
Using mechanical steel wings, Hugo impersonates Batfink while stealing the city payroll. | ||||||
87 | "Old King Cruel" | Heywood Kling | Tom Golden, Arnie Levy | Bob Owen | September 12, 1967 | |
Old King Cruel (a parody of Old King Cole) steals money from a charity and candy from a baby. | ||||||
88 | "Victor the Predictor" | Dennis Marks | Dave Tendlar, Morey Reden | Bill Focht | September 14, 1967 | |
Victor the Predictor publicly predicts that a valuable gem will disappear and Batfink will be destroyed; Victor has secretly arranged for his predictions to come true. | ||||||
89 | "Goldyunlocks and the Three Baers" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | July 26, 1967 | |
Goldyunlocks (a parody of Goldilocks) robs the bank with the aid of her henchmen, the three Baer brothers. | ||||||
90 | "Jerkules" | Heywood Kling | Martin Taras, James Tyer | Bob Owen | September 14, 1967 | |
Hugo's machine has given him superhuman strength, which he uses to commit crimes under the name "Jerkules" (because he doesn't want Hercules to sue him). | ||||||
91 | "Hugo Here, Hugo There" | Dennis Marks | Martin Taras, John Gentilella | Bob Owen | August 15, 1967 | |
Hugo's new "here-and-there belt" lets him teleport into and out of bank vaults, and send Batfink to random places around the world. | ||||||
92 | "Bowl Brummel" | Nick Meglin | Dave Tendlar, Milton Stein | Bob Owen | October 4, 1967 | |
Ex-champion bowler Bowl Brummel (whose name is a play on "Beau Brummel") uses an exploding bowling ball to rob several jewelry stores at once. | ||||||
93 | "Fleiderfink" | Dennis Marks | Tom Golden, Arnie Levy | Bob Owen | August 15, 1967 | |
Operatic understudy Harold Hamboné uses a special powder to make the star lose his voice, so that he can go on instead. The title is a takeoff of Die Fleidermaus, an opera whose title translates as "The Bat." | ||||||
94 | "Blankenstein" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | August 3, 1967 | |
Green-skinned Blankenstein (whose name is a takeoff of "Frankenstein") has a gun that shoots "blanks" that blank out people's memories. | ||||||
95 | "Whip Van Winkle" | Heywood Kling | Tom Golden, Arnie Levy | Bob Owen | September 28, 1967 | |
When he isn't napping, Whip Van Winkle (whose name is a play on "Rip Van Winkle") uses whips to rob people. | ||||||
96 | "Tough Macduff" | Heywood Kling | Martin Taras, Frank Endres | Bob Owen | October 4, 1967 | |
Tough Macduff, Batfink's oldest enemy, has gathered together all of Batfink's foes (from all the previous episodes) and is giving the hero an ultimatum: get out of town, or be destroyed! | ||||||
97 | "Judy Jitsu" | Heywood Kling | Bill Ackerman | Bob Owen | September 28, 1967 | |
Martial artist Judy Jitsu (whose name is derived from "Jujutsu") steals a valuable set of jewelry; the heroes track her down, even though Karate is falling for her. | ||||||
98 | "Ego A-Go-Go" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | September 12, 1967 | |
Hugo has sprayed Batfink with a chemical called Ego A-Go-Go that has turned him into a narcissist, thus making him easier to fight. | ||||||
99 | "Father Time Bomb" | Heywood Kling | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | October 4, 1967 | |
Father Time Bomb (who resembles Father Time) informs the Chief that he's planted a time bomb somewhere in the city; the heroes look for it, not knowing that it is at police headquarters. | ||||||
100 | "Batfink – This Is Your Life" | Dennis Marks | Myron Waldman | Bob Owen | October 4, 1967 | |
Trapped in a seemingly inescapable death trap by Hugo, Batfink sees his life flash before his eyes, and we see how he first became a steel-winged crimefighter. The title is taken from This Is Your Life. |
References
- Batfink Episode Guide at DaveMackey.com