Heart of Ice

Plot summary: The enigmatic Mr. Freeze unleashes his icy revenge on GothCorp, besting Batman time and again in the process.

(Originally published on The Reel World August 23rd, 2020)

Notes

Original Air Date: September 7th, 1992

Directed: Bruce Timm (1)

Written: Paul Dini (2)

Animated: Spectrum Animation Studio (4)

Music: Todd Hayen (1) & Shirley Walker (11)

To cap off the litany of glowing reviews for this episode, it won a Daytime Emmy Award. The show would be nominated for many of these, but only won 3, with the other two being for sound and music. More on this in about 20 episodes’ time…

Anthony Hopkins declined the role of Mr. Freeze. A slightly less optimistic offer than Al Pacino for Two-Face, but come on, guys.

Spectrum Animation Studio went bankrupt working on this episode due to the painstaking detail they put into the snow and ice effects, including extensive airbrushing of Freeze’s helmet.

Bruce Timm ended up directing this episode himself because of how behind schedule they were.

Timm & Dini regretted not making Freeze’s tears turn to ice/snowflakes, an idea that would find its way into Batman & Robin.

Mark Hamill was originally only contracted to voice Ferris Boyle and it was only after Tim Curry dropped out of playing Joker that he booked the second biggest role of his career. Luke Skywalker is pretty tough to top.

Recap

Mr. Freeze looks into a snow globe with a ballerina in it, lamenting about his lost love, vowing revenge.

Summer Gleason (remember her?) reports on a series of crimes perpetrated against GothCorp by an unknown individual armed with a “freeze gun”. CEO Ferris Boyle is quite sure he doesn’t know what anyone could have against their company…

Batman analyses the various items stolen from GothCorp, deducing that when configured in just the right way they could assemble an enormous ‘freeze cannon’.

Knowing which plant manufactures the last component required, he goes full throttle in the Batmobile to intercept. Mr. Freeze uses his signature weapon to send the Batmobile skidding out and then smashes his way into the factory.

Freeze cuts off security while his men start loading the truck. Batman strikes but Freeze is able to stop one of his batarangs in mid-flight. He calls this a personal vendetta and asks Batman to step aside.

The villain fires his gun with no regard for his own men, freezing one of them from the waist down. Even Batman can’t escape being encased in ice.

Freeze orders his men to roll out, leaving the frozen minion crawling across the floor begging them to come back. Freeze says he should have been more careful. Ya know, when he was minding his own business and got shot by his boss.

Freeze goes so far as to threaten to do the same to the others, so they wisely board the truck and drive away. Batman breaks free but it’s too late.

Later in the Batcave, Bruce runs tests on the unlucky henchman, floating in a huge vat of chemicals. The crook ends is de-thawed, but Batman… has a cold!

Bad timing too, because Bruce has a meeting booked with Ferris Boyle, which he uses to gently try and figure out why Freeze has a vendetta. Boyle drops his “we’re a people company” shtick now that the press aren’t around, and Bruce is disgusted.

Following up on a throwaway comment, Bruce looks through media coverage on an explosion at a GothCorp facility the previous year. When he endeavours to break in and uncover the truth, Alfred insists he take a thermos of chicken soup to treat his cold.

Sure enough, Bruce is able to find some Top Secret files on a Dr. Victor Fries. He fires up a suspiciously well-shot recording of Fries explaining a cryogenic chamber intended to buy more time for terminally ill patients like his wife, Nora.

Ferris Boyle barges in and shuts the project down, feeling it’s a waste of money. Fries freaks the eff out because Nora will die if they pull the plug, and after a struggle Boyle pushes him into a bunch of chemicals. Batman is stunned, so much so that he doesn’t hear Freeze come in behind him, weapon ready.

Awakening upside down in Freeze’s lair, Batman expresses his sorrow for what happened to Nora. He accurately surmises that the suit Freeze wears is keeping him alive, with Victor confirming that he can no longer survive at room temperature.

Freeze monologues about his plan to use the giant cannon to get rid of warm summer days, presumably so that he can walk around without his suit, or maybe just to be a dick. He and his men depart, not realising Batman will instantly escape any predicament when left alone for even a second.

Rolling up to Ferris Boyle’s award party, Freeze unleashes his fully assembled cannon on the building. Batman puts a stop to it and chases Freeze inside. Victor confronts Boyle, who doesn’t recognise him but begs for mercy as he’s gradually frozen. Batman disarms him mid-monologue but proceeds to get his ass kicked thanks to the enhanced strength Freeze’s suit affords.

Remembering Alfred’s parting gift, Bats pours the chicken soup onto Freeze’s helmet, causing it to crack from the sudden temperature change. Freeze collapses. Batman hands Summer Gleason (remember her?) the evidence of Boyle’s actions and then wishes Ferris a sarcastic good night, leaving him part-frozen.

In a special cold cell in Arkham, Freeze looks longingly at his snow globe again, begging Nora for forgiveness, feeling he failed her.

Best Performance

Michael Ansara’s voice lives forever in the memory of anyone that’s seen this episode, and for good reason. While the actor had a frustrating time performing the role, with Bruce Timm constantly asking him to be less emotional, I think it worked out for the best.

Timm had conceived the idea of a near-death experience leaving him devoid of feeling, so kept pushing Ansara to be more flat and robotic. I can’t imagine it any other way, and almost every actor who has taken on the character since this episode has followed suit. Except Arnie, of course.

If Tim Curry had never dropped out, Ferris Boyle might have been Mark Hamill’s only contribution to the show, which is unthinkable 30 years later. During the heights of Boyle’s mania he does start to vaguely drift into Joker territory, but the rest of the time it’s barely recognisable as Hamill, which is a compliment. If not for how iconic Ansara is, I might be tempted to make a very controversial decision.

Ranking

I’ve watched this episode more than any other, and despite thinking it’s a smidge overhyped, it’s undeniably excellent, following the blueprint established in the Two-Face two-parter. Both gave a classic Batman villain a fresh coat of paint that has stuck across all media to this day. Harvey’s emotional journey is made richer by his previous appearances in the show, and Richard Moll’s voice work spanks Michael Ansara’s, but this episode is such an overwhelming force of creative will.

Paul Dini had a clear vision and Bruce Timm’s crew executed it elegantly. It has that hint of mystery I personally crave, but I think its greatest strength is that it unlocks every single aspect of Batman:

  • First his state of the art tech and keen scientific mind allow him to uncover Freeze’s plan and accurately predict his next target.
  • Then he drives like a bat out of hell to catch them in one of the best Batmobile scenes anywhere.
  • Driven off the road, he switches to stealth takedown mode on the henchmen, but he is ultimately overwhelmed by Freeze’s brutality, which raises the stakes for their next encounter.
  • After he recovers, it’s back to science to try and save Freeze’s abandoned henchman, showing empathy for his victims that is sometimes lacking in Batman stories.
  • Exploiting the corporate connections of Bruce Wayne to get close to Ferris Boyle, he slickly plies the CEO for information without tipping him off to his true identity.
  • Detective hat still on, he pours over old newspaper clippings off the back of a hunch. Hunches are important.
  • A little breaking and entering later and that hunch plays out but he’s taken by surprise and captured, making him 0-2 against the villain.
  • Not to worry though, he’s an expert escapologist!
  • With the plan immenent, Batman cuts loose and shuts down the cannon, then takes down goons with ruthless efficiency.
  • Finally, the third showdown looks to go the same way as the first two, but Bruce’s improvisation as well as rudimentary science win the day, with Alfred’s soup turning out to be the pivotal difference maker, not just a throwaway joke.
  • Batman turns over his evidence to the media, refuses to help the scumbag industrialist, and observes the villain’s lament from afar, showing more empathy.

Honestly, while the legacy of this episode is what a showcase it is for Mr. Freeze, I doubt we’ll see a better demonstration for the title character’s multifaceted abilities and personality while also finding the time to develop the villain. Some people hate chicken soup winning the day. I get it, but it’s still easily number one so far.

  1. Heart of Ice (NEW ENTRY)
  2. Two-Face Part I
  3. On Leather Wings
  4. Two-Face Part II
  5. Pretty Poison
  6. It’s Never Too Late
  7. P.O.V.
  8. Christmas with the Joker
  9. Be a Clown
  10. Nothing to Fear
  11. The Last Laugh
  12. The Under-Dwellers
  13. The Forgotten
  14. I’ve Got Batman in My Basement

Villain Watch

Mr. Freeze (Michael Ansara) (first appearance)

This rendition of the character was so good that most people don’t realise Mr. Freeze was a nothing villain before this episode. In fact, he’d been killed off in the comics by this point. There was no Nora. No tragic backstory. No sympathy. No unfeeling robotic attitude. Just a whacky guy who did cold-related crimes.

This episode was so immensely popular that Freeze was resurrected and has enjoyed top-tier Rogues Gallery status ever since, with his backstory re-written to match ‘Heart of Ice’. There is zero chance Arnold Schwarzenegger plays him in a $160million movie without this episode, and his arc in the film is basically the same, but with far more camp and a plethora of puns.

Freeze has more success against Batman than anyone we’ve seen to date, and I don’t think anyone will hand it to him this badly again. Besting the legendary vigilante over and over again leaves the viewer with long-lasting memories of Freeze as a physical beast, as well as being super smart.

This kind of indelible impact on the franchise can’t go unrewarded, and while I do believe Joker will reclaim the top spot by the end of the show, this is the kind of villain superhero properties have been chasing for decades.

  1. Mr. Freeze (NEW ENTRY)
  2. Joker
  3. Two-Face
  4. Poison Ivy
  5. Scarecrow
  6. Rupert Thorne
  7. Arnold Stromwell
  8. Man-Bat
  9. Penguin
  10. Sewer King
  11. Boss Biggis

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