Stupidity: Batwoman not only drives through town the same bike as Kate, in full Batwoman garb including the cape, but at the beginning of the episode is driving to Wayne enterprises, right inside the employees entrance (clearly marked as such). Even funnier considering the fact that the series keeps referencing things such as security cameras and people taking Batwoman pictures with their phones, elements that were not a concern decades ago and that would if anything require more caution, not less. The old Adam West show with all its camp and obvious absurdities had him at least drive his car to the outskirts of town and come in and out through a secret entrance, not his home garage. (00:03:00)
Batwoman (2019)
1 stupidity in The Rabbit Hole
Starring: Ruby Rose, Rachel Skarsten, Camrus Johnson, Elizabeth Anweis
How Queer Everything Is Today! - S1-E10
Factual error: Kate fires a grappling hook into the back of the runaway train - it punctures the thin back door easily. She then fires another one backwards which hooks against one of the sleepers on the tracks. The slack gets taken up...and the train jolts to a dead stop as the hooks bite, (with everyone just wobbling on their feet somehow). No way on earth that's possible - the back door would have been torn off/open like a tin can and/or the sleeper would have been yanked out out of the ground, and the train would have ploughed into the station at full speed. Not to mention the fact that only after the train stops does the sleeper apparently give up the ghost and break. The magical supermetal of the train door is somehow still intact.
Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part Two - S1-E9
Trivia: The version of Batman played by famous Bat-voice Kevin Conroy is a darker version of that from the graphic novel The Dark Knight Returns. The line "the world only makes sense when you force it to" is a version of a line from that comic (also used in Batman V Superman), also "Clark always said yes to anything with a badge or a flag." There are also elements from Batman Beyond, which first aired in 1999 (hence Earth-99), in which Conroy voiced an older Bruce Wayne mentoring a new Batman. The whole scene is full of nods to other versions - describing Kryptonite as "a little souvenir from the old hometown" is a Lex Luthor line from the original Superman movie, and him describing Superman as "strange visitor from another planet, with powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men" comes from Superman serials from the 40s and 50s.
Question: In flashbacks, Dougray Scott looks noticeably younger than present-day scenes. Is he digitally de-aged, or is it just makeup and soft focus? Or indeed is he just made a bit older and more "grizzled" in the present day scenes?
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