Dr. Cassandra has a grand scheme against Gotham City with her invisibility pills merely the beginning of her tricks.Dr. Cassandra has a grand scheme against Gotham City with her invisibility pills merely the beginning of her tricks.Dr. Cassandra has a grand scheme against Gotham City with her invisibility pills merely the beginning of her tricks.
Fred Carson
- The Joker
- (uncredited)
Albert Cavens
- The Penguin
- (uncredited)
William Dozier
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Zsa Zsa Gabor
- Minerva
- (uncredited)
Eddie Hice
- The Riddler
- (uncredited)
Cosmo Sardo
- Bank Teller
- (uncredited)
Marilyn Watson
- Catwoman
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn this penultimate Bat-adventure, Dr. Cassandra releases six Arch-Criminals from Gotham State prison: The Riddler, The Penguin, The Joker, Catwoman, King Tut and Egghead. However none of them are played by the usual guest actors. For one thing it would be too expensive to feature them all at the same time. Note that their faces are never clearly seen, they have no lines (other than the Riddler's giggle and Penguin's squawk reused from earlier appearances) and Catwoman resembles the Julie Newmar version instead of season three's Eartha Kitt.
- GoofsKing Tut is among the arch-criminals released from prison by Dr. Cassandra. However, in Tut's last appearance, he was hit on the head and resumed his primary identity, Yale professor William Omaha McElroy. Further, on the single occasion that he was apprehended without returning to normal, he was held in a psychiatric hospital for treatment, not sent to prison.
- Quotes
Robin: [Batman has put Batgirl to sleep, so she won't learn the location of the Batcave] You know something, Batman?
Batman: What's that, Robin?
Robin: She looks very pretty when she's asleep.
Batman: I thought you might eventually notice that. That single statement indicates to me the first oncoming thrust of manhood, old chum.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Biography: Batman: Holy Batmania! (2003)
Featured review
Good Episode With Fantastic Elements
This episode has some very memorable scenes, mainly the footage of all the super-criminals being released from prison: The Riddler, King Tut, The Joker, etc. With the exception of the 1966 Batman motion picture, we never see the gang all bunched together like this and we can only wonder what kind of small talk they all made in prison together.
Elements of the fantastic are also present with vanishing criminals (note the Lost In Space vanishing sound effect), then turning invisible and marching into Gordon's office.
However, this is the 2nd last Batman episode EVER and the direction was far from the quality seen in season one's episodes directed by Robert Butler. All in all, this episode is good.
Elements of the fantastic are also present with vanishing criminals (note the Lost In Space vanishing sound effect), then turning invisible and marching into Gordon's office.
However, this is the 2nd last Batman episode EVER and the direction was far from the quality seen in season one's episodes directed by Robert Butler. All in all, this episode is good.
helpful•111
- StuOz
- Jul 19, 2011
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime24 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 4:3
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