PBS and NPR for Southwest Florida
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Holy Smokes 'Batman,' The '60s Series Is Out On DVD

Unlike later incarnations of Batman, the '60s version was tongue-in-cheek.
Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment
Unlike later incarnations of Batman, the '60s version was tongue-in-cheek.

If you're an impressionable young kid hitting your teens right now, chances are pretty good you've been watching and enjoying some Batman —either Christian Bale in Christopher Nolan's just-completed Dark Knight trilogy, or the prequel series, Gotham,now showing on Fox. If you came of age a generation ago, your Batman of choice was likely to have been the big-screen caped crusader played by Michael Keaton or George Clooney. Or maybe even Val Kilmer.

Cesar Romero played the Joker on the '60s show.
/ Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment
/
Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment
Cesar Romero played the Joker on the '60s show.

But between 1966 and 1968, long before any of those versions of the DC Comics hero, Batman came to the screen in a much lighter, and brighter, ABC series, starring Adam West. The Dark Knightit wasn't. This Batmanwas played for laughs, with its star's no-nonsense delivery making it all the more tongue-in-cheek.

With its pop-art sensibility, vibrant colors and rogue's gallery of playful guest stars, Batmanwas a brief but major hit. Frank Gorshin as the Riddler, Cesar Romero as the Joker, Burgess Meredith as the Penguin and Julie Newmar as Catwoman — these were some of the original villains who made this Batmana TV phenomenon right from the start. That first season, ABC presented two episodes per week in a serialized cliffhanger format — and both installments made that year's Top 10.

With its pop-art sensibility, vibrant colors and rogue's gallery of playful guest stars, Batman was a brief but major hit.

Yet, until now, this particular incarnation of Batmanhas never been released on home video — not on DVD, not even on VHS. But Warner Bros. Home Video has just released the entire Adam West Batmanseries on DVD and Blu-ray, including a limited-edition collectible box set that comes with a set of Batmantrading cards and even a Hot Wheels Batmobile. Some collectors, I guess, will geek out over all that extra stuff — but personally, I love the extras that come on the bonus disc, like the original screen test of Burt Ward, who won the role of Robin, and the original pilot for a planned Batgirlspinoff, and a new documentary, which has various Batman experts placing the TV series squarely in the pop-art movement of the mid '60s.

Burt Ward was Robin and Adam West was Batman in the TV show that was played for laughs.
/ Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment
/
Courtesy of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment
Burt Ward was Robin and Adam West was Batman in the TV show that was played for laughs.

Most of all, of course, I love these old Batmanepisodes themselves. Certainly, that goes for the classics, like the ones with the original Catwoman, and those pop-art fight scenes.

But, to be honest, I also enjoy watching the really obscure, justifiably forgotten, admittedly bad ones. Who remembers Zsa Zsa Gabor as Minerva, or Ida Lupino as Dr. Cassandra? Ididn't. But I doremember Joan Collins, in a pre- Dynastyrole at her most alluring, playing the seductive villainess known as the Siren. Her high-pitched, miniskirted spell worked well, and not just on Commissioner Gordon.

I remember the Siren, and especially Catwoman, very fondly indeed. Various rights issues have kept Batmanfrom home-video release until now, so younger viewers — those seeing this goofy, playful comic-book TV version for the first time — may be very pleasantly surprised by the fun to be had here. And for fans of a certain age, who are old enough to remember the '60s, I'm fairly certain this long-delayed box set will be worth the wait. Holy sensory overload, Batman!

David Bianculli is founder and editor of the website TV Worth Watching.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

David Bianculli is a guest host and TV critic on NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross. A contributor to the show since its inception, he has been a TV critic since 1975.