Armory

Plot summary: After getting laid off, a desperate weapons designer uses his military past to keep his family in finery by any means necessary.

(Originally published on The Reel World January 1st, 2022)

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

Notes & Trivia

Original Air Date: March 11th, 2000

Directed: Kyung-Won Lim (2)

Written: John P. McCann (2)

Animation: Koko Enterprise Co., LTD (31) & Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD. (31)

Music: Kristopher Carter (9)

The Tate wedding was a key moment of the episode ‘Spellbound’.

Another Bruce-less episode. Three of them have occurred very close together, which is weird, as I would assume they were all produced long before dialogue was recorded, so it’s not like temporary unavailability for Kevin Conroy would force them to change any plans.

The music from Jared’s party is re-used in Return of the Joker.

Recap

Terry and his friends gather for Jared Tate’s extravagant birthday party, bankrolled by his rich stepfather, Jim… who is made redundant shortly afterwards thanks to Paxton Powers’ streamlining.

Jim is furious, but remains optimistic his skills designing weapons will let him land on his feet. Unfortunately, nobody is hiring, but one of his shadier contacts does offer to pay good money for a prototype weapon owned by Wayne-Powers.

Luckily for Jim, he background in Special Forces lets him easily break in and steal the design specs, fully armed and masked up, of course. The GCPD give chase, but he deploys some of his advanced weapons to give them the slip.

Batman joins the fray and does manage to disable Jim’s armoured truck, but when they battle on foot, Jim deploys a high-powered taser, flashbang grenade and adhesive gun and escapes.

Nicknamed ‘The Human Armory’ (and later just Armory) by the media, Jim isn’t too thrilled by what he’s doing, lashing out at his family.

Jared in turn begins acting moody around Terry, who immediately pieces together what’s really going on, and follows Jim to the robbery of some of the components needed for the weapon.

Armory dispatches the police and overwhelms Batman with similar ease to the last time, upping the ante on his arsenal. He starts a fire, forcing Terry to save the wounded policemen, allowing Armony to flee.

Jared snoops around his stepfather’s secret workshop just as he brings the buyer to inspect his prototype, so Jared hides… but is quickly discovered.

Luckily, Terry arrives before the buyer can insist anything be done about Jim’s family learning everything. Unluckily, the prototype works perfectly and is unleashed on Batman.

Even more luckily, Jim comes to his senses and uses his glue gun to stop the buyer, and Terry finishes the job. Jared later confirms the courts went easy on Jim, and Terry and Max offer their support.

Best Performance

Nobody really blew me away this episode, so I think I will give the nod to Dorian Harewood, who does a good job of conveying the internal conflict Jim Tate suffers from his criminal undertakings. He demonstrates range too, angry when he’s fired, snippy when he gets stressed, depressed when his buyer is a little too happy about everything, and ultimately broken and remorseful when he helps save the day.

Corey Burton was solid as the sleazy buyer, Istivan Hegedesh, which is a wiiiiild name. But it’s very one note. Omar Gooding is good as Jared, but has very little to say.

Episode Ranking

This is a pretty action-heavy episode, but does a good job of telling a complicated villain story. That does mean I’m risking repeating myself, but I’ll take a shot.

Jim Tate’s abrupt firing and struggles to secure new work in order to keep providing for his family make for evergreen social commentary, and we see that reflected in Jared’s behaviour. His mopey demeanour after Jim snaps at them, and sensitivity when Max suggests he has no worries because he’s rich are more interesting beats to play than we usually get for Terry’s teen friends.

There’s an argument that Terry solves Armory’s identity a little too quickly, but I actually liked it as a change of pace, as it shows how much sharper his detective skills have become, especially in the wake of Bruce’s absence. It also is relatively easy to figure out, so you don’t have to suffer through the experience of all of the characters being dumb while we know everything.

At the risk of sounding hypocritical, I kind of enjoyed seeing Batman get completely wrecked by Armory. I say hypocritical, because I made a comment in a previous review that it kind of sucks how easily Terry gets beaten up in comparison to Bruce, even if I do understand that is by design to convey that he’s both new at this, and that Bruce was truly special. The reason I’m okay with making this comment, is Terry has been on a strong run of episodes where he came across as both smarter and more skilled, so him catching a major beating here feels more impactful.

In summary, I think this episode has a lot of great subtle touches that elevate it, but its greater focus on action keeps it out of the top tier. Oh, and this is some of the best music in any episode.

  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. Armory (NEW ENTRY)
  17. Final Cut
  18. Once Burned
  19. Splicers
  20. Hidden Agendas
  21. Golem
  22. Ascension
  23. Heroes
  24. Revenant
  25. Terry’s Friend Dates a Robot
  26. Mind Games
  27. Hooked Up
  28. Joyride
  29. The Winning Edge
  30. The Last Resort
  31. Rats

Rogues Roundup

Armory (Dorian Harewood) (first appearance)

My, my, aren’t we Lock-Up with a more nuanced personality? Rather than a prison guard who snaps and decides to dispense some street justice, Jim Tate is a desperate man who makes a bad decision to try and keep his family living the good life and gets in over his head.

This is reflected in his weaponry, starting out non-lethal and then becoming explosive as he grows more desperate. Not only is this an example of story and character development informing aesthetics, but it makes him a more fun villain, as his equipment is varied (love the glue gun) and ever-changing to keep things from getting stale.

It’s the tiniest of things, but it was a nice touch to have him getting laid off by Paxton Powers, who you’d be forgiven for forgetting the existence of. Bums me out a little, as I liked Derek Powers, and while the teen-centric second season has been better than I expected, I do miss the sleazy corporate aspect.

  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. Armory (NEW ENTRY)
  16. The Terrific Trio
  17. Agent Bennet
  18. The Brain Trust
  19. Cynthia
  20. Dr. Stephanie Lake
  21. Howard Hodges & General Norman
  22. Paxton Powers
  23. Jackson Chappell
  24. Mr. Fixx
  25. Ratboy
  26. Dr. Wheeler

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