> From: Steve Sloan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
 
> It's a very weird show, but it's a weird show that makes sense.
> If you pay attention, there is an actual storyline there, and it
> came together nicely in last night's final episode. I'm still
> pondering the old guy with the chalk, and how he might have tied
> into history. Now that I think about it, wasn't he in the opening
> sequence, laughing with a mushroom cloud in the background? I
> shouldn't say any more without spoiler warnings, though.

Slight Spoiler:

S
P
A
C
E

The Equations at least the first two times were refereneces to the
people who were boinked.  
 
>  > But have you been watching Justice League Unlimited, Zatch
>  > Bell, and One Piece?
> 
> Is Justice League Unlimited dead? Or maybe the team that's been

No.

> making these shows since Batman: The Animated Series? I say that,
> because the last episode sure looked like a goodbye.

Looks can be decieving.
 
> The title, "Epilogue", sounds like it, but that's not all. It
> wrapped up the Batman Beyond storyline. The way it told stories
> about Batman reminded me of a funeral. It also ended with a
> scene that mirrored the first scene of Batman: Animated: heavy
> clouds over Gotham, two cops patrolling in a floating police
> vehicle, and a mysterious bat figure flying by. I think the
> cops' dialog was even the same. The two scenes showed two
> different eras of Gotham, and the vehicles were different
> (a police blimp vs. some kind of futuristic antigrav car), and
> the bat figures were different (Man-Bat vs. McGinnis as Batman),
> but there was an obvious homage there.
> 
> Maybe it's just a way of passing the torch to The Batman. The
> Batman isn't a bad show, but it's not even remotely as good
> as Batman: Animated. The villains are much more shallow, for
> one thing.

teh batman is teh S uck
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