Plot summary: An old friend from Terry’s criminal past gets out of prison and immediately weaves a tangled web of corporate espionage and horrific mutation.

(Originally published on The Reel World January 23rd, 2022)
Notes and Trivia
Episode Title: ‘Big Time’
Original Air Date: October 7th, 2000
Directed: James Tucker (2)
Written: Robert Goodman (7) & Tom Reugger (1) (story)
Animation: Koko Enterprise Co., LTD (38) & Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD. (38)
Music: Michael McCuistion (11)
This is where things get particularly screwy in terms of the production order vs airdate order. Most places list this as a season 3 episode, airing in October. However, it was produced before a number of season 3 episodes, and even two of the season 2 ones. Soooo. Call it whatever season you want, but we’re reviewing it here because it impacts the ongoing narrative.
For proof this is the right decision, see this being Terry’s introduction to the chemical Cerestone, hence knowing what it is already in the upcoming episode ‘Ace in the Hole’, versus following airdate order and him being clueless in this episode.
Terry’s criminal past has been hinted at in several episodes (‘A Touch of Curaré’, ‘Revenant’, ‘Rats’, ‘Eyewitness’) but we finally get the full story at last.
Recap

A group of thieves rob an armoured truck full of unknown chemicals, which brings Batman into the fray. During the fracas one of the containers springs a leak, causing the gang to retreat in fear.
Bruce explains that the liquid is called Cerestone, an experimental hormone intended for plant growth that a rival company, Agrichem, have been trying to steal from him.

Terry has to cut the conversation short when Dana is harassed by… his old friend, Charlie ‘Big Time’ Bigelow. The two catch up, but Terry is turned off by Charlie’s continuing commitment to crime.
Sympathising with Charlie’s struggles to get a job, Terry successfully begs Bruce for one on his behalf… only it turns out it was a set-up, and Charlie shared a cell with Agrichem higher-up Richard Armacost, and was asked to infilitrate Wayne-Powers.

He wastes no time, using a fancy gadget to swipe a security guard’s fingerprints on his first day, which is turned into a glove that will fool security scanners.
Terry confronts Charlie about his link to Agrichem after Bruce did some digging, planting a tracker on him during a heated argument.

Charlie unlocks the Cerestone lab for Karros and his men, but before they can steal any, Batman attacks. Yet another drum of the chemical is damaged in the battle, and Charlie gets the volatile chemical all over him.
The criminals get away again, and Karros blames Charlie for messing up the job for him, demanding he come up with the money they’ve lost out on. Worse still, Charlie is suffering weird side effects from the Cerestone.

Charlie asks Terry to help him, but is rebuffed and runs away, fearing for his life. Terry later confides in Max that when he was 14 he accompanied the older Charlie on a heist to impress a gang. Terry got 3 months in juvenile detention, while Charlie went to prison.
Terry obtains a recording of Karros and Armacost implicating themselves in the Cerestone robberies. Before he can call the police, a mutated Charlie bursts in to attack everybody.

Thus we get a three-way battle between Batman, Karros and ‘Big Time’, as the brute attempts to throw Armacost to his death. Karros ends up being the one to take a big fall, which doesn’t phase Terry at all for some reason.
Bats reluctantly fights his friend who has trouble breathing and ends up being easy to take down. A news report informs us Charlie is to be held without bail, and Karros is in hospital. Terry remains a sad panda despite Dana and Max trying to comfort him.

Best Performance
Three big guest stars this time around! Robert Patrick is fine as the generic corporate criminal, Richard Armacost. The character doesn’t end up mattering much to the story despite being the key link between the various elements. Stephen Baldwin was very Stephen Baldwin as Charlie, theoretically sounding vaguely threatening at all times, and trying to imbue some turmoil into what ends up being a disappointingly one-dimensional character.
It’s William H. Macy who really shows out though, returning for his second stint on the show after he leant his talents to the guy who fell in love with Inque. That kind of sad sap is his bread and butter, so I was pleasantly surprised by how much menace he was able to channel as Karros. The character design for the villain was middle of the road, so Macy has to do a lot of heavy lifting, and he’s more than up to the task.
Will Friedle was great here as well, but is clearly not as good of an actor as Macy, which is no great insult. Other regulars Kevin Conroy, Cree Summer and Lauren Tom were all perfectly decent, but it was a story about Terry and his old friend, so their roles were limited.

Episode Ranking
There’s generally something compelling about Bruce being incredibly cynical and untrusting to the point he alienates those around him… only to be proven right. He’s not a pleasant person, but nobody can do what he does and Gotham canonically needs him to be that way. I’ve brought this up in a number of BTAS reviews. HOWEVER, there are certain stories where that idea is warped into something a little gross. This is one of those stories.
Terry’s old friend has a criminal past, so Bruce distrusts him instantly. Terry asks him to drop it but he goes behind his back and ultimately it turns out Charlie is in fact ‘bad news’. It just seems counter to Batman’s ethos that everybody can be rehabilitated. That Bruce would accept Terry but write this character off because he was a couple of years older and be proven right doesn’t send the best message. All of this is made worse by the fact we don’t hear from Bruce again in the final stretch, so it just ends as ‘Bruce is smart, Terry is dumb, The End’, which I can’t stand. At the very least Bruce could have offered some kind of rhetoric about the differences in Terry and Charlie’s characters despite their similar circumstances.
Terry’s angle on the whole thing is more interesting, genuinely pitying his friend and feeling misplaced survivor’s guilt that he got a lighter sentence for being younger than Charlie. Yet another reason Terry is a Good Boy Golden Retriever. His reluctance to fight ‘Big Time’ at the end is done really well, but you almost wish Charlie learned Terry’s secret to make the moment land even harder. What we got was still emotionally charged, with Batman easily dodging the fading ‘Big Time’s blows before finally bringing himself to put him down.
I’m mildly shocked they got away with Terry as a fourteen year old thief given how touchy censors can be, and it finally paid off the various teases we’ve had about his troubled past and why Dana’s father doesn’t like him. Speaking of which, Dana’s response to Charlie and attempt to comfort Terry at the end is depressingly one of her more prominent episodes, but even then it’s Max who gets the heart to heart.
The action is pretty decent, and I’ll never be mad about them for trying to expand on the protagonist’s past, but it’s nothing too special.
- Eyewitness
- Meltdown
- Babel
- Shriek
- Disappearing Inque
- Rebirth: Part 1
- A Touch of Curaré
- Spellbound
- Lost Soul
- Sneak Peek
- Zeta
- Bloodsport
- Black Out
- Earth Mover
- Rebirth: Part 2
- Dead Man’s Hand
- Armory
- Final Cut
- Once Burned
- Splicers
- Hidden Agendas
- Golem
- Ascension
- The Eggbaby
- Big Time (NEW ENTRY)
- Heroes
- Revenant
- Terry’s Friend Dates a Robot
- Sentries to the Last Comos
- Mind Games
- Hooked Up
- Joyride
- April Moon
- The Winning Edge
- The Last Resort
- Payback
- Plague
- Rats
Rogues Roundup

Karros (William H. Macy) (first appearance)
While a little generic, he does gave a fun arsenal of gadets and sort of gets the better of Batman twice. William H. Macy adds a little extra something to make him more intimidating when not fighting, but there’s only so far you can go with a character without a distinct gimmick or backstory.

Charlie ‘Big Time’ Bigelow (Stephen Baldwin) (first appearance)
I lament even having to rank him as a villain, but the show sure wants him to be one so here we are. Teenager acts out after his parents’ divorce, does time, sees crime as his only viable option in life, falls victim to a chemical accident, turns into a monster. Yay.
The creature design is perfectly fine, and I do like that the hand he was wearing a glove on when he got covered in Cerestone is unaffected. Plus his temporary hulk style rampage seems to give way to health issues that make him easy for Terry to take out… or maybe I’m reading too much into that.
- Inque
- Shriek
- Curaré
- Mr. Freeze
- Derek Powers/Blight
- Spellbinder
- The Jokerz
- Earthmover
- The Royal Flush Gang
- Ian Peek
- Dr. Cuvier (and pals!)
- Mad Stan
- Willie Watt
- Robert Vance
- Armory
- Stalker
- The Mayhem Family
- The Terrific Trio
- Agent Bennet
- Bullwhip’s Gang
- The Brain Trust
- Cynthia
- Simon Harper (and the Sentries!)
- Karros (NEW ENTRY)
- Charlie ‘Big Time’ Bigelow (NEW ENTRY)
- Kobra
- Dr. Stephanie Lake
- Howard Hodges & General Norman
- Paxton Powers
- Jackson Chappell
- Payback
- Falseface
- Mr. Fixx
- Ratboy
- Dr. Wheeler
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