Zeta

Plot summary: Batman finds himself caught between the NSA and their runaway killbot, Zeta.

(Originally published on The Reel World December 12th, 2021)

  1. Notes & Trivia
  2. Recap
  3. Best Performance
  4. Episode Ranking
  5. Rogues Roundup

Notes & Trivia

Original Air Date: April 8th, 2000

Directed: Dan Riba (8)

Written: Robert Goodman (5)

Animation: Koko Enterprise Co., LTD (28) & Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD. (28)

Music: Michael McCuistion (7)

This acted as a back-door pilot for the spin-off show, The Zeta Project, the only spin-off in the entire DCAU. There was one crossover with Batman Beyond, one with Static Shock, and a trio of Justice League: Unlimited episodes.

Robert Goodman was nominated for an Annie Award for the writing in this episode.

Due to how much world building was required for Zeta, this is one of five episodes not to feature Bruce Wayne.

Recap

After their biology teacher answers their question in an overly robotic manner (quoting a lengthy passage from a textbook verbatim), Terry and Max agree something is off with her.

Sure enough, a group of strange men approach ‘Miss Martel’ after the class and draw weapons on her, but she easily evades and flees, commandeering a truck.

One chase later, and ‘Martel’ produces a pair of guns and engages the group in a shootout, which Batman intervenes in to prevent civilian casualties.

Their leader identifies himself as NSA Agent Bennet, stating “the synthoid” is theirs and Terry should either help or stand down. Martel’s façade drops, returning to a robotic appearance and it escapes.

Barbara Gordon and the GCPD raid Martel’s apartment and find her tied up. Babs confronts Bennet, who reveals the droid is called Infiltration Unit Zeta, designed for deep espionage, and that six days ago it went rogue.

Having listened in while cloaked, Batman is asked him to keep tabs on Bennet as Barbara doesn’t trust him. She also suspects Zeta was at the school for a reason and will return.

And she is immediately proven right! Max hacks some NSA files about Zeta but is interrupted by Dana offering her a ride to a study group. Max mis-genders a classmate, but Dana thinks nothing of it.

Which is unfortunate, because ‘Max’ sneaks into Gotham Mint and reveals herself to be Zeta in disguise, with the real Max tied up. Zeta demands more thorough information about her life to avoid future slip-ups.

The next day, Terry asks ‘Max’ for some help with his ‘nightlife’ but she is completely oblivious to his wordplay, raising his suspicions enough to follow ‘her’ back to the hideout.

Unfortunately his timing sucks, as he immediately engages Zeta in a fight right after Max talked it into disarmament. The two brawl for a bit before Zeta saves Terry from death via heavy machinery.

Agent Bennet and his men arrive for more shooting, and while Terry and Zeta have a minor disagreement, they ultimately all escape together without casualty.

Zeta tells them that it discovered his last NSA target was innocent, and that the experience of infiltrating the man’s family had a profound impact on it, so it spared him and went on the run.

Max installs a device to block the NSA’s ability to track Zeta and gives it the idea to blend the appearances of past targets into an original person to avoid suspicion. She bids Z farewell, but Terry is distrustful and follows.

Everything comes to a head at a train station, where Zeta immediately blows its cover and tries to evade the NSA, with Batman helping take down the agents one by one.

Terry finds Zeta standing over Bennet with a gun, but the killbot states it chooses its own identity and walks away… leaving it wide open to Bennet shooting it repeatedly in the back!

Zeta stumbles outside and the NSA absolutely riddle it with lasers, sending it hurtling over the edge of a building. Terry gets to it before the NSA can and it reveals it faked its injuries, assumes a new appearance and with Batman’s help, escapes for good.

Best Performance

Gary Cole would be replaced by Diedrich Bader in The Zeta Project. I haven’t heard Bader’s work to compare, but the effects-aided Cole was pretty decent. I would assume he was too expensive for a multi-season endeavour, or maybe he just wasn’t interested.

But the real star here was Cree Summer, who is honestly a threat to win this award virtually every time out. It can’t be overstated how much pizazz she gives Max, but it’s the emotional appeals she makes to Zeta and Terry that steal the show here. Max literally talks a killbot into throwing six guns in the trash, and Summer makes that moment believable.

Joe Spano would also be replaced as Agent Bennet, which makes sense because he didn’t make much of an impression. He will get to perform the role one more time in a future episode of Beyond, though, so we’ll see if he improves.

Episode Ranking

As a sucker for spy games, cool robots and three-way struggles, I felt extremely catered to by this episode. Zeta’s design is different enough to be memorable (it would be altered for his spin-off show), and its range of skills/abilities are pretty dope too, chiefly its holographic disguises. It kicks a lot of ass, and looks like a biology teacher while doing some of it, which is top tier stuff.

This is another episode I’d like to have been afforded more time to let its ideas breath, either with a two-parter or as a TV-movie to truly make the launch of the spin-off an event. Not only would this allow them to put Bruce Wayne back into it (to espouse some anti-robot sentiments), but we could fully engage with Zeta’s journey of self-discovery. Robots seeking a soul may be a little trite, but they took a good angle here. I would have loved to have seen flashbacks of the mission that caused it to abandon its ways as an NSA Killbot after infiltrating a nice family (I believe an episode of The Zeta Project does depict this), and to have revisited the ideas espoused in the opening about determinism and individuality. Speaking of which… maybe put a pin in that little debate for MUCH later.

Zeta’s assessment that it took great precautions to not harm Max and that everything it did was for the greater goal of emancipation is interesting. It sure is creepy when it asks her for more information about her personal life while stroking her face threateningly, not to mention the reckless abandon of the opening chase and shootout. I had half a mind to write Zeta into the villain section, but given it adopts pacifism by the episode’s end, and immediately went on to be the hero of its own cartoon, that wouldn’t be right… even if it is a reformed government Killbot.

It’s a really nice touch that Max clearly shares some degree of information under Zeta’s interrogation, but crucially does not spill the beans about Terry’s secret. She’s also the one to talk Zeta into a change of tactics, going as far as to toss away all its dope guns (boooo!)

The only thing keeping it from ranking higher is the rushed feeling, particularly the ending, where Zeta gets gunned down but feigns greater injury than it actually suffered… even though it definitely did get VERY shot.

  1. Eyewitness
  2. Meltdown
  3. Babel
  4. Shriek
  5. Disappearing Inque
  6. Rebirth: Part 1
  7. A Touch of Curaré
  8. Spellbound
  9. Lost Soul
  10. Zeta (NEW ENTRY)
  11. Bloodsport
  12. Black Out
  13. Earth Mover
  14. Rebirth: Part 2
  15. Dead Man’s Hand
  16. Once Burned
  17. Splicers
  18. Hidden Agendas
  19. Golem
  20. Ascension
  21. Heroes
  22. Revenant
  23. Terry’s Friend Dates a Robot
  24. Mind Games
  25. Hooked Up
  26. Joyride
  27. The Winning Edge
  28. Rats

Rogues Roundup

Agent Bennet (Joe Spano) (first appearance)

Being a big giant narc makes this a very easy character to dislike. Even if you have neutral/positive feelings about government agents for some reason, this one is clearly crooked as hell. Barbara Gordon doesn’t trust him, Terry doesn’t seem to think much of him, and he shoots Zeta in the back!

The NSA using a top secret killbot to assassinate people who are sometimes innocent, and then losing said killbot and engaging in wildly dangerous gunfights at a school is about the most realistic depiction of villainy in the show.

From the perspective of being detestable, he’d rank quite near the top, but unfortunately coolness and character depth are a factor here, so while I’d encourage you to boo this man, I can’t in good conscience rank him very highly. Let’s slot him just above the other ‘normal’ villains (plus a killer femmebot).

  1. Inque
  2. Shriek
  3. Mr. Freeze
  4. Curaré
  5. Derek Powers/Blight
  6. Spellbinder
  7. The Jokerz
  8. Earthmover
  9. The Royal Flush Gang
  10. Dr. Cuvier (and pals!)
  11. Stalker
  12. Mad Stan
  13. Willie Watt
  14. Robert Vance
  15. The Terrific Trio
  16. Agent Bennet (NEW ENTRY)
  17. The Brain Trust
  18. Cynthia
  19. Dr. Stephanie Lake
  20. Howard Hodges & General Norman
  21. Paxton Powers
  22. Jackson Chappell
  23. Mr. Fixx
  24. Ratboy

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