The Mechanic
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| Batman: The Animated Series episode | |
|---|---|
| | |
| "The Mechanic" | |
| Airdate: | January 24, 1993 |
| Production Number: | 55 |
| Airdate Order: | 48 |
| Animation Services by: | Dong Yang Animation Co., LTD. |
| Teleplay by: | Randy Rogel |
| Story by: | Laren Bright, Steve Perry |
| Directed by: | Kevin Altieri |
| Episode images (14) | |
"The Mechanic" is the forty-eighth episode of Batman: The Animated Series. It originally aired on January 24, 1993.
Contents |
Plot
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Added by MrWhitmanBatman and Robin are pursuing the Penguin's thugs Eagleton, Falcone and Sheldrake in their getaway vehicle. After Falcone sees that bullets bounce harmlessly off the Batmobile's armor, Eagleton takes drastic action to escape, jumping the car off the end of a dividing bridge, to crash into the bed of a garbage scow passing underneath. Batman brakes to a stop, but not soon enough to prevent the front end of the Batmobile going under the bridge and being crushed as it comes back down.
The Batmobile limps to a secret garage operated by Earl Cooper, the Batmobile's designer and mechanic. He says he will need a few days to repair it, and in the meantime gives Batman and Robin two Batcycles to ride.
In his hideout, Penguin is livid that his men have botched the robbery they were assigned to carry out; instead of stealing the rare-edition stamps he wanted, they have stolen much less valuable ones by mistake—which aren't even worth enough to cover the repairs to the getaway car. But then Falcone introduces an acquaintance of his, Arnold Rundle, who works for an auto parts company. Rundle says that, based on Falcone's description of the damage suffered by the Batmobile, Rundle has created a list of the kind of exotic parts that would be needed to fix it, and has traced a sale of such parts to Earl's garage—and has been compiling his list for some time. Penguin is delighted, and rewards Rundle with a large check—before bundling him onto a "rubber ducky" boat that vanishes down a raging whirlpool.
Penguin and his thugs invade Earl's garage and take Earl and his daughter, Marva, hostage. At first, Earl refuses to help Penguin, who is intrigued to know why he is so loyal to Batman. Earl explains that Batman saved his life, twice.

Added by MrWhitmanEarl was an engineer for Global Motors, who quit in protest when the company leaders refused to listen to his warnings about serious safety defects in one of their cars. His former bosses sent thugs after Earl, but Batman saved him. Several months later, Earl had been unable to find another job, when Batman appeared again in his run-down Batmobile and asked for Earl to design and build him a new one. After it was completed, Batman kept Earl on to maintain and upgrade it.
Penguin turns his attention to Marva, forcing Earl to cooperate.
Batman and Robin are called in to pick up the repaired Batmobile. With Falcone watching from the shadows, Earl tries to slip a warning to Batman, saying repeatedly that Marva is down "in the basement", and emphasizing that he has fixed the car's air conditioning.
As soon as they drive away, Penguin follows in his own car, taking Marva along as a hostage and leaving Falcone to guard Earl.
Earl has been forced to rig the Batmobile with a remote control held by Penguin. Penguin, laughing like a maniac, has a fine old time sending the car on a crazy ride, with the Dynamic Duo trapped inside and unable to control it. Batman presses the eject button, but it has been disabled. Finally, Penguin decides to end the game. He drives the Batmobile to the roof of a parking structure and prepares to send them off the edge. Batman realizes that "down in the basement" is a slang term in race car driving for crashing. Remembering what else Earl said, Batman presses the air conditioning switch, and the ejector seats fire, launching Robin and he to safety.
Added by MrWhitmanBack at the garage, Falcone answers the telephone and receives the news of the Dynamic Duo's death with jubilation. Unable to contain himself, Earl knocks Falcone out and ties him up, then cries, believing that his friend is gone and his daughter is doomed.
Batman and Robin parachute down, and attack Penguin and his thugs. Penguin tries to get away, dragging Marva along and opening fire on Batman until Marva stomps on his feet. Penguin angrily throws Marva to the ground and prepares to kill her, but Robin swerves down and subdues him. Penguin reaches for his umbrella, but Batman stops him and he is subsequently captured.
Earl packs up his toolkit, sad that he will have to leave the garage, now that its location has been compromised. Batman assures him that he is setting up an even better one for him. He also adds that, from now on, future parts will be ordered through dummy corporations so no one else can trace him as Penguin did. Earl, feeling no regrets after the incident, launches on an enthusiastic description of the newer, better Batmobile he's going to build.
At Stonegate Penitentiary, Penguin has been put to work in the license plate factory, scrubbing the finished plates clean. He comes across one that reads "1BAT4U", and tears it in half in a rage.
Continuity
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- In the flashback, one of the sketches on Earl's office wall resembles the appearance of the re-vamped Batmobile in The New Batman Adventures and Justice League.
- In "The Demon's Quest", Ra's al Ghul reveals that he was able to trace Batman's secret identity through the ordering of specialized equipment, in the same manner as Arnold Rundle does.
Background information
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Home video releases
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- The Adventures of Batman & Robin: The Penguin (VHS)
- Batman: The Animated Series, Volume Two (DVD)
- Batman: The Complete Animated Series (DVD)
- Adventures of Batman & Robin: Poison Ivy/The Penguin (DVD)
Production inconsistencies
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- Penguin is animated off-model in almost every scene.
Trivia
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- The idea of Penguin taking control of the Batmobile was derived from the movie Batman Returns.
- This marks the only time on screen both Batman and Robin have an independent episode with Penguin.
- The license plate Penguin rips in half refers to "Gotham—the Dark Deco State". "Dark Deco" was the term used by production crew to describe the show's art deco style.
- For Earl, Batman conceals his true identity by maintaining that his personal resources come from a group of unseen "backers," rather than from Wayne Enterprises. Earl apparently has no idea of who Batman really is.
Cast
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Quotes
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Earl Cooper: What happened? You've been letting the kid drive again? |
Arnold Rundle: Excuse me?! Where will this take me? |
Penguin: And how, praytell, did that costumed clown give you such a bad case of loyalty? |
Batman: (in flashback) I need a new car. |
Earl Cooper: He paid for everything, cash. Found this site for a garage, too, and outfitted it out to my specifications, and paid me real well... but he got his money's worth. |
(after the Batmobile crashes, presumably killing Batman and Robin) |
External links
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| Previously produced episode: "Zatanna" | Episodes of Batman: The Animated Series | Next produced episode: "Harley and Ivy" |
| Previously aired episode: "Harley and Ivy" | Next aired episode: "The Man Who Killed Batman" |