REVIEW: Batman: Under the Red Hood by Judd Wunick.
TYPE: Movie
DETAILS: 75 mins
Although the character was controversial and hated, the death of Jason Todd, the second Robin, was a shocking one that remained in place for a long time in DC comics canon. Still, he returned to life in an arc almost as famous as the one that killed him. But how would the adaptation of said arc go?
Five years ago, during a mission in Bosnia, Jason Todd is murdered by the Joker, his mentor, Batman, mourning him. Now, a mysterious hoodlum has taken up the mantle of the Red Hood, an identity once used by the Joker. As the new Red Hood takes control of criminals on the streets and threatens the operations of Black Mask, Batman must unravel the identity of this killer with familiar moves and who knows his identity. But when he learns the truth, that Red Hood is Jason Todd reborn, Batman will be forced into a deadly confrontation of not only his former protégé, but his own mistakes and morals…
The story is perhaps the weakest part of it. True, it’s quite well-done, very tightly adapted with little left to waste, but this also has it feeling somewhat lacking, and Black Mask seems to turn to the Joker for help too easily. Still, it’s a fairly dark and mature work with the right emotional beats and some great dialogue.
The cast is stellar. While Bruce Greenwood is an excellent Batman, as is Neil Patrick Harris as Nightwing, it is Jensen Ackles, best known for playing Dean Winchester in Supernatural, who shines as the Red Hood. He has the right mix of cockiness, rage and sorrow for such a role. John DiMaggio is a surprisingly excellent take on the Joker too, showing a more thuggish and powerful side to the infamous villain.
The production values are pretty stellar too. The CGI effects are used well for certain sequences, not quite seamlessly, but done well, and the fight scenes have a lot of energy. The film is suitably moody, for being a dark Batman film.
Overall, while not perfect, Under the Red Hood is a damn good example of a Batman animated film. Dark, moody, but in just the right way…
****½
TYPE: Movie
DETAILS: 75 mins
Although the character was controversial and hated, the death of Jason Todd, the second Robin, was a shocking one that remained in place for a long time in DC comics canon. Still, he returned to life in an arc almost as famous as the one that killed him. But how would the adaptation of said arc go?
Five years ago, during a mission in Bosnia, Jason Todd is murdered by the Joker, his mentor, Batman, mourning him. Now, a mysterious hoodlum has taken up the mantle of the Red Hood, an identity once used by the Joker. As the new Red Hood takes control of criminals on the streets and threatens the operations of Black Mask, Batman must unravel the identity of this killer with familiar moves and who knows his identity. But when he learns the truth, that Red Hood is Jason Todd reborn, Batman will be forced into a deadly confrontation of not only his former protégé, but his own mistakes and morals…
The story is perhaps the weakest part of it. True, it’s quite well-done, very tightly adapted with little left to waste, but this also has it feeling somewhat lacking, and Black Mask seems to turn to the Joker for help too easily. Still, it’s a fairly dark and mature work with the right emotional beats and some great dialogue.
The cast is stellar. While Bruce Greenwood is an excellent Batman, as is Neil Patrick Harris as Nightwing, it is Jensen Ackles, best known for playing Dean Winchester in Supernatural, who shines as the Red Hood. He has the right mix of cockiness, rage and sorrow for such a role. John DiMaggio is a surprisingly excellent take on the Joker too, showing a more thuggish and powerful side to the infamous villain.
The production values are pretty stellar too. The CGI effects are used well for certain sequences, not quite seamlessly, but done well, and the fight scenes have a lot of energy. The film is suitably moody, for being a dark Batman film.
Overall, while not perfect, Under the Red Hood is a damn good example of a Batman animated film. Dark, moody, but in just the right way…
****½