Final Cut

Plot summary: Curaré hunts down the remaining members of the Society of Assassins, forcing Batman to protect one of them.

(Originally published on The Reel World December 19th, 2021)

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

Notes & Trivia

Original Air Date: February 5th, 2000

Directed: Butch Lukic (9)

Written: Alan Burnett (6) (story) & Hilary J. Bader (7) (story & teleplay)

Animation: Koko Enterprise Co., LTD (30) & Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD. (30)

Music: Kristopher Carter (8)

Max claims to have always known Bruce Wayne was Batman’s silent partner, despite that seeming to very much not be the case in ‘Hooked Up’.

Another of the five episodes which Bruce doesn’t make an appearance.

Max’s defusing of the bomb perfectly mirrors Batgirl’s in ‘Sins of the Father’, right down to the dialogue.

Recap

A private plane lands to make a minor adjustment before immediately taking back off. The owner expresses his anxiety about being on the ground for even a short time, and his worries are immediately validated, as Curaré sneaks aboard.

Once they’re back in the air she attacks, easily defeating the man’s private security and then releasing a nerve agent that ‘wipes his mind’, before leaping out of the plane and jet-packing away.

In Gotham, a man takes a shot at the Batmobile. Batman lands and ‘Mutro Botha’ introduces himself as the last surviving member of the Society of Assassins.

Botha insists he only wanted to get Terry’s attention and explains that Batman’s part in preventing Curaré achieving her mission led to her exile and to her hunting them all down. He blackmails Batman into protecting him using a hidden bomb only he knows how to disarm.

Terry orders Max to try and contact Bruce (who is on a business trip to Malaysia) but she isn’t thrilled about being told what to do, so infiltrates Botha’s hotel suite to try and find a clue to the bomb.

Unfortunately Curaré arrives looking for Botha and Max only survives the encounter because the assassin realises she is nobody.

Terry races to help Max, leaving Botha unguarded when Curaré attacks. He puts up the smallest of fights but is hit with the mind wipe treatment all the same.

Terry recovers the bomb remote, but only Botha knew the deactivation code. Max researches the device and determines the most likely location for the bomb based on the maximum signal range, places Botha has been, and a discarded cash card she recovered from his room.

The pair search the Gotham Museum of Armaments, but Max is left to finish solo as Curaré attacks Terry (Botha warned she would come for him after she finished with the Society).

With seconds to spare, Max disables the bomb and Terry is able to defeat and handcuff Curaré. The two bond over the experience of saving the city in secret.

Best Performance

Will Friedle and Cree Summer are on top of their games as well, both individually and in selling their endearing friendship. I believe I’ve only declared a tie once before, but I couldn’t choose between these two. Terry refuses to shy away from the pressure of operating without Bruce’s supervision, reluctantly teams up with Botha, and goes through it with Max, who in turn rejects the role of bystander and comes through in the clutch. Hats off to both.

All he’s really doing is putting on a South African accent, but Tim Curry does it well and makes a solid impact on the episode as Mutro Botha. If his role were a little bit larger, I’d give him the nod.

Episode Ranking

Bruce has been missing from a couple of episodes now, but this feels like the first one to actually make something of that, with Terry forced to put on his Big Boy Pants. He immediately becomes a bit of a prick, ordering Max around and snapping at her for calling him Terry while wearing the Batsuit, something I’m reasonably sure she’s done several times already. He doesn’t go Full Bruce though, as they quickly patch things up and he backs down on his stance she can’t be allowed anywhere near the mission after she proves her immense value.

More than just changing his mind, he puts complete and total faith in her to disarm the bomb, turning the episode’s problem into words of subtle encouragement: “you’re on your own.” I appreciate these kinds of direct comparisons to his predecessor, with Terry simply being a Good Kid every time, and Max just keeps soaring to new heights as a supporting character. You can see why fans wanted her to either become Terry’s girlfriend or to suit up as a Neo Batgirl, especially given the explicit mirroring of a classic Babs moment, and the sweet moment at the end.

That’s before we even get into the dope game of cat and mouse with an exiled assassin seeking revenge against her former employers and Terry, which also owns. I’ll go into it more below, but Curaré rules, and the notion of Batman being forced to team up with somebody he despises to protect them from another villain is tried, tested and certifiably juicy.

  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
  11. Bloodsport
  12. Black Out
  13. Earth Mover
  14. Rebirth: Part 2
  15. Dead Man’s Hand
  16. Final Cut (NEW ENTRY)
  17. Once Burned
  18. Splicers
  19. Hidden Agendas
  20. Golem
  21. Ascension
  22. Heroes
  23. Revenant
  24. Terry’s Friend Dates a Robot
  25. Mind Games
  26. Hooked Up
  27. Joyride
  28. The Winning Edge
  29. The Last Resort
  30. Rats

Rogues Roundup

Curaré (Melissa Disney) (second appearance)

Every second of screen time for Curaré is designed to make her look like an absolute badass. The Master Assassin remained airborne for three months to protect himself from her, but she still snuck aboard his jet the minute he landed and took him out.

Speaking of which, I assume they went with the mind-wiping nerve agent due to censorship rules around killing (even though she is explicitly an assassin), but what a happy accident, as the all-white eyes were creepy as hell. A fate worse than death you might say.

It’s wild to consider how much mileage they’ve gotten out of this villain who doesn’t even speak in only two appearances, to the point I’m forced to move her up the list by one spot. (Reminder: Mr. Freeze’s ranking in Beyond is based exclusively on his appearance in Beyond.)

  1. Inque
  2. Shriek
  3. Curaré (↑)
  4. Mr. Freeze
  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
  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
  25. Dr. Wheeler

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