Plot summary: Big Time returns as part of a criminal enterprise but isn’t thrilled about his standing and makes an unlikely plea to Terry.

(Originally published on The Reel World February 12th, 2022)
Notes and Trivia
Original Air Date: December 9th, 2000
Directed: Kyung-Won Lim (5)
Written: Stan Berkowitz (14) (story & teleplay) & Robert Goodman (8) (story)
Animation: Koko Enterprise Co., LTD (43) & Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD. (43)
Music: Lolita Ritmanis (13)
This is of course a follow up to the episode ‘Big Time’.
Big Time’s ostensible demise bears resemblance to the end of ‘Mudslide’ wherein Batman and Clayface went over a cliff, but only the hero came back up.
Major is drawn to look like his voice actor, Jon Polito.
Final appearance of Barbara Gordon in the series!
Recap

After Charlie ‘Big Time’ Bigelow ambushes an armoured truck, Bruce suggests Terry let the GCPD handle it as Charlie is his friend. Naturally our hero ignores that advice, which is good as the police get absolutely stomped.
Terry manages to restrain Big Time, but to his surprise a GCPD car knocks him down, frees the escaped criminal and provides an escape.

The driver definitely isn’t a cop though, but rather ambitious mobster ‘The Major’, who is clearly manipulating Big Time but doing a decent enough job of confusing the giant that he can only be muscle and should leave the planning to him.
Terry struggles with the whole situation as Bruce seemingly accuses him of allowing his friend to escape, while confiding in Max about his guilt over Charlie’s mutation.

Suddenly a pair of large men pull over and kidnap Terry, knocking off his backpack containing the Batsuit in the process. Max calls Bruce to fill him in and he warns her not to even think of suiting up. Boooo!
Turns out Big Time arranged the kidnapping, wishing to bring Terry into the operation as he doesn’t trust The Major’s allies. When Terry accuses him of being selfish, he starts to break things.

Major is not amused by his enforcer’s antics and scolds Big Time for bringing in an outsider who now knows the location of his hideout. During their argument, Terry escapes, but while Major’s men can’t gun him down, Big Time does catch him.
Surprisingly, Charlie can’t bring himself to hand over his former friend, so Terry pleads with him to turn himself in and Bruce will reverse his condition.

The cops arrest Major and his men after a tip-off from Terry, who is disappointed when Big Time refuses to go quietly. The brute reveals he just wanted Major out of the way so he could take over his operation and has no desire to be cured.
Bruce crashes his car into Big Time and covertly returns the Batsuit to Terry while the villain is distracted. After a brief scuffle, hero and villain end up dangling over a suspension bridge, but Big Time is unable to hold on. Bruce and Terry make amends.

Best Performance
Clancy Brown replaces Stephen Baldwin as Big Time, and while the character is less interesting, I do enjoy Brown’s work conveying his immense size. He also suits the double-cross moment, even if the material sucks.
Jon Polito is fine… I guess? Cree Summer and Angie Harmon barely get a chance to contribute. Suddenly we’re only left with Bruce and Terry as options.
I don’t care enough about this episode to debate it much, so let’s pretend I flipped a coin and it landed on Will Friedle.

Episode Ranking
When I think about how few episodes there are left in this show, I’m left scratching my head over the decision to give Big Time a second feature episode. Stan Berkowitz and Robert Goodman must have been enamoured with the idea of spinning a parallel to some of Bruce’s old capers, bringing back a mob element, trying to play on the Two-Face dynamic, and even writing a Harvey/Clayface style ending. However, they clearly lack the writing chops of the BTAS crew and this just ends up feeling really out of place in a series that excels when it’s tackling cyberpunk and the dangers of new technologies and societal extremes.
More on how lacklustre their central players are in the section below, but even if you swap them out for the likes of say… Killer Croc and Rupert Thorne, the story itself barely holds up. The opening trap sequence is a little wishy-washy. Terry gets grabbed a little too easily, even if he is taken by surprise, and him being separated from his Batsuit ends up feeling rather inconsequential, because even if he had it, he couldn’t change in front of the villains. And why tease us with Max suiting up to save Terry, which would have been a FAR more compelling story, only to yank it away and do something so boring?
Having the whole thing culminate in a lacklustre double-cross and a hurried ‘Oh no, he couldn’t hold on to his leg so he fell to his death!’ moment was pretty blah too. But the real icing on the cake was Bruce twice asking Terry to let the police handle the ten foot rampaging mutant, which could not feel more out of character. If anything, I’d have gone the other way with it, with Terry overtly hesitating to attack his former friend while Bruce implores him to do his job. You can still do your inferior parallel to Two-Face at the end if you want, but there’s no way Bruce would tell his protégé to hang back while danger is afoot.
- Eyewitness
- Meltdown
- Babel
- Shriek
- Disappearing Inque
- Rebirth: Part 1
- King’s Ransom
- 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
- Untouchable
- Splicers
- Where’s Terry?
- Hidden Agendas
- Golem
- Ascension
- The Eggbaby
- Big Time
- Heroes
- Revenant
- Terry’s Friend Dates a Robot
- Sentries to the Last Comos
- Mind Games
- Hooked Up
- Joyride
- Ace in the Hole
- April Moon
- The Winning Edge
- The Last Resort
- Payback
- Plague
- Rats
- Betrayal (NEW ENTRY)
Rogues Roundup

Big Time (Clancy Brown) (second appearance)
It is hilarious to me that they tried so hard to make Big Time happen given how many dope one-and-done villains there are in the show. Heck, I’d take a return of the other villain from his debut, Kerros, with more enthusiasm!
I didn’t hate the design in the darker lighting of his debut appearance, but after getting a good look here, I think it sucks. It’s the colour choices for his hair and clothes; they undercut his hulking appearance. I do like that he’s so weirdly proportioned, which reinforces his mutation, but you look at this guy with his thinning white hair and pale blue trousers and you cannot possibly take him seriously.
Obviously the story is attempting to compare Big Time with Two-Face, but my word is that overgenerous. Sure, both are former friends of a Batman who feels guilty for not saving them from their transformation, but Harvey Dent was nuanced, layered character whose pre-existing personality mapped deliciously to his supervillain makeover. Charlie Bigelow just used people and then became a giant monster man who feels insecure about being pigeonholed as just the muscle, so ‘masterminds’ a takeover. That personality wrinkle could be interesting, but it isn’t here.
Down he goes.

Major (Jon Polito) (first appearance)
Ehhh. Generic gangsters have to work a lot harder to be interesting in a setting like Beyond than they did in BTAS, and this guy simply falls short. He manipulates a brute and uses him to get rich… and then gets captured incredibly easily by the police.
- Inque
- Curaré
- Mr. Freeze
- Shriek
- Derek Powers/Blight
- Spellbinder
- The Royal Flush Gang
- The Jokerz
- Earthmover
- Ian Peek
- Dr. Cuvier (and pals!)
- Mad Stan
- Willie Watt
- Robert Vance
- Repeller
- Armory
- Stalker
- The Mayhem Family
- The Terrific Trio
- Agent Bennet
- Bullwhip’s Gang
- The Brain Trust
- Cynthia
- Simon Harper (and the Sentries!)
- Karros
- Paxton Powers
- Charlie ‘Big Time’ Bigelow (↓)
- Kobra
- Dr. Stephanie Lake
- Howard Hodges & General Norman
- Jackson Chappell
- Payback
- Falseface
- Mr. Fixx
- The T’s
- Ratboy
- Ronny Boxer
- Dr. Wheeler
- Major (NEW ENTRY)
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