Tyger, Tyger

Plot summary: Catwoman’s name becomes far more literal after she is kidnapped by a mad scientist.

(Originally published on The Reel World November 29th, 2020)

Notes

Original Air Date: October 30th, 1992

Directed: Frank Paur (8)

Written: Michael Reeves (6) (story) & Randy Rogel (5) (story) and Cherie Wilkerson (1) (teleplay)

Animation: Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD. (14)

Music: Todd Hayen (4)

Among the episode’s influences are The Island of Dr. Moreau, The Most Dangerous Game, Bride of Frankenstein and William Blake’s poem, The Tyger

Kirk Langstrom’s line about preferring cats to people is identical to the one he uttered in the pilot, save for swapping the word bats for cats.

The episode’s final shot/title card was referenced in a movie poster in Batman Arkham Knight

Recap

A Gotham Zoo security guard at Gotham Zoo fails to notice Selina Kyle sneaking around at night to talk to a tiger. Selina in turn fails to notice a talking gorilla in people clothes take aim and shoot her with a tranquilliser dart!

Bruce investigates the zoo (after Selina cancelled a dinner date with a flimsy excuse about meeting someone there), noticing the dart, which the police missed.

Selina awakens strapped to a table in what is essentially Dr. Frankenstein’s lab. A huge bipedal feline creature approaches her, snarling, but Emile Dorian interrupts and tells “Tygrus” to go and do his “exercises”.

Dorian info-dumps about his work with cross-species genetics, stating he created Tygrus, as well as “Garth, the ape man.” We see his two test subjects battle, with Tygrus mopping the floor with Garth.

The dart shows similarities to the formula of Dr. Kirk Langstrom (remember him?) The rehabilitated Kirk confirms and reveals a weird little cat-monkey hybrid that Dorian worked on previously.

Following Langstrom’s directions to Dorian’s island of cross-bred animals, Batman glides in, immediately met by a cat/bird cross. Shaking it off, he heads for the central tower and tries to observe Dorian silently through the skylight, but Garth grabs him and the two fall through to the lab below.

Batman tosses Garth aside but is horrified to learn Selina has been transformed into a far more literal Catwoman! Furries will be thrilled.

Bruce has no time for Dorian’s explanations of her enhanced attributes, smashing the glass of her enclosure and trying to communicate with her. Tygrus intervenes, protective of his ‘mate’.

Garth joins in, not that Tygrus needs the help, easily overpowering Batman. Observing Selina has maintained a degree of control over her new bestial form, Dorian has her taken away.

Dorian proposes a challenge, setting Batman loose on the island with a headstart and then releasing Tygrus. If Batman can survive and make it back to the lab he can have the antidote. Simple.

Batman takes the early advantage with a smoke bomb but Tygrus’ physical gifts turn the tide. The pair tumble off a rickety rope bridge, with Tygrus apparently falling to his doom, while Batman is able to climb back up.

Selina, having escaped Dorian, shows concern for Bruce. Tygrus of course returns, but she is able to reason with him, pointing out she is not a prize to be won.

Dorian beats Tygrus, scolding him for disobeying his orders. Batman arrives and gives Garth his third beatdown of the episode. When Dorian tries to shoot Selina with more drugs, Tygrus turns on his “father”.

Going a step further, Tygrus begins to destroy the lab, apparently killing himself and Dorian while Bat & Cat drag Garth to safety…

Naturally Tygrus emerges from the flames carrying Dorian, handing him over to Batman. Tygrus shoots his shot one last time, but takes rejection like a champ, handing Selina the antidote and declining to leave the island with them.

Batman quotes The Tyger to end the episode.

Best Performance

Kevin Conroy is a legend in his own right, but very few can match Jim Cummings for voice acting credits and for good reason. Despite having this incredibly low rumble that keeps him constantly employed as generic tough dudes, he’s actually most famous for his work as Winnie-the-Pooh, Tigger and Taz. THAT is range.

He’s mostly leaning on the gravelly pipes for Tygrus, who starts out as little more than a snarling beast, but ultimately reveals emotional intelligence and possibly even a tortured soul! Cummings makes all of that work because he’s a g-darn professional. He also voiced Garth and the security guard and made both sound different.

Conroy and Barbeau are on form as ever, and I guess Joseph Maher does a good job of making Dorian creepy, but this is a no-contest for me.

Episode Ranking

I feel that some people have a selective memory of this show, pretending it skews vaguely realistic (albeit less-so than Nolan’s trilogy), overlooking the plethora of episodes like this one. For the record, I have no objection to Batman tangling with big sci-fi monster men, so long as the writing is good. If the more supernatural stuff breaks the show for you… fair enough, I guess?

But is the writing good? Ehhh. It’s an incredibly simple plot with a Dr. Moreau rip-off kidnapping Catwoman to turn her into a… well, Cat-Woman to serve as a mate for his giant Cat-Man (not to be confused with Cat Man). Batman duels the monster, who has more humanity than his creator, and Selina is saved. They end up handling the humanity of the monster stuff pretty well, but everything else is middling at best.

Actually scratch that, it’s not that what is here is bad, it’s just there isn’t much here to begin with. We learn Dorian is a mad scientist who thinks cats are better than people thanks to Kirk Langstrom in a cute bit of continuity. We don’t really go any deeper than that. Garth is an afterthought. If you felt generous you could say the caper enriches Bruce and Selina’s relationship.

The action is certainly solid, with the always interesting dynamic of Batman vs a physically superior opponent given a fun twist due to Tygrus’ mobility, able to leap tall bounds and easily outrun Bruce. The exhibition of what he can do against Garth is more effective to look at than any exposition Dorian could deliver. It’s the kind of thing that would make for a fun one-shot comic, letting a good artist run wild with the jungle hunt (as in the poster at the end), but it’s relatively forgettable television.

  1. The Laughing Fish
  2. Heart of Ice
  3. Robin’s Reckoning Part I
  4. Perchance to Dream
  5. Two-Face Part I
  6. Joker’s Favor
  7. Feat of Clay Part II
  8. Robin’s Reckoning Part II
  9. Beware the Gray Ghost
  10. Mad as a Hatter
  11. Heart of Steel Part II
  12. Vendetta
  13. Appointment In Crime Alley
  14. Two-Face Part II
  15. Heart of Steel Part I
  16. On Leather Wings
  17. Pretty Poison
  18. Feat of Clay Part I
  19. It’s Never Too Late
  20. See No Evil
  21. The Clock King
  22. Joker’s Wild
  23. The Strange Secret of Bruce Wayne
  24. Eternal Youth
  25. The Cape and Cowl Conspiracy
  26. The Cat and the Claw Part I
  27. P.O.V.
  28. Christmas with the Joker
  29. Fear of Victory
  30. Be a Clown
  31. Night of the Ninja
  32. The Cat and the Claw Part II
  33. Nothing to Fear
  34. Prophecy of Doom
  35. Tyger, Tyger (NEW ENTRY)
  36. If You’re So Smart, Why Aren’t You Rich?
  37. Dreams In Darkness
  38. The Last Laugh
  39. Cat Scratch Fever
  40. The Under-Dwellers
  41. The Forgotten
  42. I’ve Got Batman in My Basement

Rogues Roundup

Tygrus (Jim Cummings) (first appearance)

What seems like just a decent monster design (a huge humanoid cat creature) turned out to be the best part of the episode. He’s an interesting blend of strong, fast and smart and all of his fight scenes were fun to watch. He’s even got that “why won’t you die?” element down pat.

His fast lesson in morality and realising his creator is a bad person, but caring for him anyway was shockingly good stuff. We even leave the door open for a return, with him deciding to live alone on Dorian’s island of horrors. Unfortunately he will not be back to make good on the promise established here (though he did return in a tie-in comic.)

Dr. Emile Dorian (Joseph Maher) (first appearance)

There’s literally nothing to Dorian beyond having a thing for cats and trying to cross-breed them with other things. It’s a mad scientist, and one that’s blatantly plagiarising a more famous one. Being fractionally more interesting than Professor Milo is not a compliment.

I’ll package Garth in with him to justify thinking anything about him at all. Garth is a talking gorilla servant who gets his ass kicked. That’s fun.

Catwoman (Adrienne Barbeau) (fourth appearance)

Yet another episode where Selina is definitely not a villain. This doesn’t really do a great deal for her development, beyond the hint that she may have been trying to pull a jailbreak for the tiger in the zoo. Oh, and her love for Batman shines through despite Dorian being convinced she’d lose all her memories when she transformed, so that’s something?

  1. The Joker
  2. Mr. Freeze
  3. Two-Face
  4. Clayface
  5. Mad Hatter
  6. Poison Ivy
  7. Catwoman (-)
  8. The Riddler
  9. Clock King
  10. HARDAC (and Ronda Duane)
  11. Killer Croc
  12. Rupert Thorne
  13. Lloyd Ventrix
  14. Josiah Wormwood
  15. Scarecrow
  16. Roland Daggett (and Germs & Bell!)
  17. Tony Zucco
  18. Harley Quinn
  19. Hugo Strange
  20. Red Claw
  21. Arnold Stromwell
  22. Mad Bomber
  23. Tygrus (NEW ENTRY)
  24. Man-Bat
  25. Nostromos (and Lucas!)
  26. Cameron Kaiser
  27. Kyodai Ken
  28. Penguin
  29. Dr. Emile Dorian (and Garth) (NEW ENTRY)
  30. Professor Milo
  31. Sewer King
  32. Boss Biggis

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