The Call: Part 1

Plot summary: Superman invites Terry to join the Justice League Unlimited, asking him to investigate a potential traitor in their ranks…

(Originally published on The Reel World March 6th, 2022)

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

Notes and Trivia

Original Air Date: November 11th, 2000

Directed: Butch Lukic (14)

Written: Paul Dini (4) (story) & Alan Burnett (9) (story), and Rich Fogel (11) (teleplay) & Hilary J. Bader (13) (teleplay)

Animation: Koko Enterprise Co., LTD (50) & Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD. (50)

Music: Kristopher Carter (13)

Butch Lukic won an Annie award for his direction in this episode.

Bruce Timm wanted Superman to be shown caring for an octogenarian Lois Lane, but Dini & Burnett hated the idea. The JLB comics later confirmed that Lois has passed away by this era.

Superman’s eyes usually glow blue when he uses X-Ray vision in the DCAU. Here they glow red, hinting that he’s the one causing the explosions before Bruce confirms it at the end of the episode.

Bruce mentions Superman has gone rogue before, referencing the Superman: The Animated Series finale ‘Legacy’, in which Darkseid brainwashes him into becoming his champion.

Recap

In Metropolis, the size-changing hero Micron of the Justice League Unlimited, stops a runaway monorail but is seriously injured in the process.

Back in Gotham, Batman chases down Inque after she steals a military prototype while a mysterious bystander looks on. Terry brings her down but she gets the best of him on the ground.

Inque grabs the bystander as a hostage, but it turns out he is freakin’ Superman!!! Clark spins at superhuman speed, effectively putting Inque into a blender, defeating her in seconds.

Terry brings Supes back to the Batcave for an awkward reunion with Bruce. Superman extends an invitation for Terry to join the JLU, claiming to have been watching him for some time.

Bruce leaves the decision to Terry, so he jumps at the opportunity, returning to the Watchtower with Clark. The other members are displeased they weren’t consulted before adding a member, but Supes overrules them.

They check on Micron, with Superman revealing he believes the monorail incident was an inside job, and that he recruited Terry to flush out the traitor in their ranks.

Reviewing their files and watching them on CCTV, Terry complains to Bruce about it feeling weird to spy on heroes. No time for that though, as Aquagirl gets locked into her training tank and almost boiled alive!

Terry can’t get her out so steals Big Barda’s Mega Rod to smash it open and rescue her. Barda and Warhawk scold him for acting alone instead of simply asking for help.

The League get called to help with a series of bombings across Metropolis that bring down entire buildings. They leap into action and it’s thrilling.

Terry continues to have tension with Warhawk, who labels him an amateur before flying off to to deal with an incoming missile that only he was alerted to, which seemingly claims his life. Barda is reluctant to believe Terry’s claims about the missile, but Superman again sticks up for him.

Bruce uses the Batcomputer to extensively analyse the missile explosion, eventually determining it was Superman himself that caused both it and the other explosions with his heat vision!

Terry prepares to confront Clark, with Bruce providing him with a hidden piece of Kryptonite and instructing him to do whatever it takes to stop him.

To be continued…

Best Performance

Christopher McDonald steps into the role of Superman after voicing his father, Jor-El, in Superman: The Animated Series. Tim Daly was available; it was a conscious choice to portray an older Superman. Not to be unkind to McDonald, but he also takes better to being a tad unlikeable, which makes sense given he’s revealed as the traitor. It’s not so obviously evil to give the game away, with plenty of warmth in his banter with Bruce and recruitment of Terry. Instead, he is believably world-weary after being at the superhero game for decades, stepping in to decisively settle disputes.

Jodi Benson plays Aquagirl following on from her most famous role of Ariel in The Little Mermaid, and probably gives the second best performance of the Leaguers. Farrah Forke (Barda) and Peter Onorati (Warhawk) do a good job of being abrasive towards Terry, particularly Onorati. Wayne Brady (Micron) and Lauren Tom (Kai-Ro) don’t get to talk enough to make an impression.

Kevin Conroy rules. His needlessly prickly demeanour when reunited with theoretical life-long friend Superman is delightful, made all the better by the enormous ‘I Told You So’ of proving Superman has turned, pointing out it’s happened before and breaking out his secret Kryptonite.

Will Friedle managing to not seem like an afterthought is impressive given the wealth of talent.

Episode Ranking

Once again, I rank two-parters separately, which arguably hurts their overall standing. Blah blah blah.

The pull of this episode is seeing a reimagined Justice League, incorporating new versions of classic heroes, or in Superman’s case, simply ageing him up and giving him a new costume. In that regard they absolutely nailed the brief, presenting a line-up that absolutely justified the spin-off comic they later got, and was arguably strong enough to justify a full cartoon, or at the very least heavily featuring them in a hypothetical fourth season of Batman Beyond.

We have Micron, a size-changer akin to The Atom, Mareena aka Aquagirl, the daughter of Aquaman and Mera, Kai-Ro, a Tibetan monk Green Lantern, Warhawk (later revealed as the son of Hawkgirl and John Stewart), and Big Barda, who appears instead of Wonder Woman due to weird licensing issues. Every one of these designs rules, and their diverse mix of powers and abilities make for some bombastic spectacle that makes Terry and his advanced Batsuit seem almost redundant by comparison. Normally that would be a complaint, but we’re talking about entire buildings falling over left and right, which is a legitimately exciting sequence that acts as a proof of concept for the then-upcoming Justice League cartoons.

It’s not all about powers and designs though, with the writers doing a good job of quickly establishing Terry’s dynamic with their different personalities. Barda and Warhawk are openly distrustful of him, while Kai-Ro and Mareena are a little more polite, with the latter the first to befriend our hero. The delicate art of juggling multiple superheroes and giving them a conflict every episode led to every episode of Justice League being a two-parter, which likely had its origins here. Fingers crossed that part two lets us get to know the individual members a little better as people.

The JLU aside, this was a huge shot in the arm for Batman Beyond which was in the winter of its life at this point. It does this by massively expanding the world and providing exciting new avenues for future stories… which wouldn’t really be taken, but still! Terry jumping at the chance to join the team directly contrasts with Bruce’s reluctance to collaborate, while his decision to steal Barda’s Mega Rod instead of just asking for help shows the negative influence Bruce has had on him. He’s simultaneously infantilised as a bright-eyed kid – almost starstruck by his superhero peers – and given more agency than ever by getting to choose for himself whether or not he will join the team, and entrusted with finding the traitor in their midst. It’s a nice dichotomy that utilises the full history of the show.

It’s not just the writing that makes it such a good episode though, with the art team crushing it with the above mentioned character designs and the exciting (and legitimately tense) rescue sequence. There’s also the elegant simplicity of contrasting the Metropolis and Gotham skylines.

  1. Eyewitness
  2. The Call: Part 1 (NEW ENTRY)
  3. Out of the Past
  4. Meltdown
  5. Babel
  6. Shriek
  7. Disappearing Inque
  8. Inqueling
  9. Rebirth: Part 1
  10. King’s Ransom
  11. A Touch of Curaré
  12. Spellbound
  13. Lost Soul
  14. Sneak Peek
  15. Zeta
  16. Bloodsport
  17. Black Out
  18. Unmasked
  19. Earth Mover
  20. Rebirth: Part 2
  21. Dead Man’s Hand
  22. Armory
  23. Final Cut
  24. Once Burned
  25. Untouchable
  26. Splicers
  27. Where’s Terry?
  28. Curse of the Kobra: Part 1
  29. Hidden Agendas
  30. Golem
  31. Ascension
  32. The Eggbaby
  33. Big Time
  34. Heroes
  35. Revenant
  36. Terry’s Friend Dates a Robot
  37. Sentries to the Last Comos
  38. Mind Games
  39. Hooked Up
  40. Joyride
  41. Ace in the Hole
  42. April Moon
  43. The Winning Edge
  44. The Last Resort
  45. Payback
  46. Plague
  47. Rats
  48. Speak No Evil
  49. Curse of the Kobra: Part 2
  50. Betrayal

Rogues Roundup

Inque (Shannon Kenney) (fourth appearance)

Discounting The Jokerz, Kobra and Derek Powers’ non-Blight appearances, Inque becomes the most frequently occurring villain on the show with this brief appearance. She deserves that distinction as she is far and away the show’s best original creation. There is no explanation as to how she survived the events of ‘Inqueling’, but hey, being functionally indestructible is part of her gimmick.

Anyway, I like that she snuck in one last beatdown on Terry, who goes the entire run of the show without ever defeating her one on one. Instead, Superman eviscerates her in ten seconds. Sucks. But hey, he’s Superman!

  1. Inque (-)
  2. Curaré
  3. Mr. Freeze
  4. Shriek
  5. Derek Powers/Blight
  6. Spellbinder
  7. The Royal Flush Gang
  8. Talia/Ra’s al Ghul
  9. The Jokerz
  10. Earthmover
  11. Ian Peek
  12. Dr. Cuvier (and pals!)
  13. Mad Stan
  14. Willie Watt
  15. Robert Vance
  16. Repeller
  17. Armory
  18. Stalker
  19. Deanna Clay
  20. The Mayhem Family
  21. The Terrific Trio
  22. Agent Bennet
  23. Kobra
  24. Bullwhip’s Gang
  25. The Brain Trust
  26. Cynthia
  27. Simon Harper (and the Sentries!)
  28. Karros
  29. Paxton Powers
  30. Charlie ‘Big Time’ Bigelow
  31. Dr. Stephanie Lake
  32. Howard Hodges & General Norman
  33. Jackson Chappell
  34. Payback
  35. Falseface
  36. Mr. Fixx
  37. Winchell
  38. The T’s
  39. Ratboy
  40. James Van Dyle
  41. Ronny Boxer
  42. Dr. Wheeler
  43. Major

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