The Dark Knight must contend with a mysterious female vigilante who emulates him, but to a more ruthless degree.The Dark Knight must contend with a mysterious female vigilante who emulates him, but to a more ruthless degree.The Dark Knight must contend with a mysterious female vigilante who emulates him, but to a more ruthless degree.
Kevin Conroy
- Batman
- (voice)
Kelly Ripa
- Rocky
- (voice)
Elisa Gabrielli
- Sonia
- (voice)
Kyra Sedgwick
- Batwoman
- (voice)
David Ogden Stiers
- Penguin
- (voice)
John Vernon
- Rupert Thorne
- (voice)
Hector Elizondo
- Bane
- (voice)
Efrem Zimbalist Jr.
- Alfred
- (voice)
Eli Marienthal
- Robin
- (voice)
Tara Strong
- Barbara Gordon
- (voice)
Tim Dang
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Philip Maurice Hayes
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
- (as Phil Hayes)
Sal Lopez
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaHector Elizondo takes on the role of Bane, who was played regularly throughout the DC Animated Universe series by Henry Silva. This was due to Silva retiring from acting before production on the film began.
- Crazy creditsThe first half of the end credits features a clip of each character with the credit of their respective voice actor attached.
- Alternate versionsOn HBO Max, the Chase Me short is shown following the film.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Best Animated Batman Movies (2021)
- SoundtracksBatman: The Animated Series Theme
by Shirley Walker
Featured review
"Batman: The Mystery of the Batwoman" is about as entertaining as animated Batman movies get.
While still true to the feeling of the comic books, the animation is done with a lighter spirit than in the animated series. Bruce Wayne looks much like he has before, but now he appears somewhat less imposing. The Dick Grayson Robin has been replaced by the less edgy, more youthful Tim Drake Robin.
Kevin Conroy, as usual, invokes the voice of Batman better than most live action actors.
Kelly Ripa did a much more decent voice-acting job than I was expecting.
As in the live action Batman films, the movie lives or dies based on the quality of the villains. My all-time favorite, the Penguin, is here. His design is sleeker than it has appeared before, hearkening more to the Burgess Meredith portrayal of the '60's than the Danny DeVito portrayal of "Batman Returns." David Ogden Stiers is the perfect choice for the Penguin's voice. The Penguin is finally portrayed as a cunning sophisticate, just as he most commonly appears in the comics. Hector Elizondo's voice creates a Bane who's much more memorable than the forgettable version in "Batman & Robin." And finally, Batman has a descent mystery to solve, putting the "Detective" back in "Detective Comics" (that is what "DC" stands for, after all.) The revolution to the mystery is a delightfully sneaky twist.
The score adds to the mysterious ambiance of the movie. It sounds like a mix between the score from "Poirot" and the score from "Mission: Impossible." All in all, it's more entertaining than your average cartoon.
While still true to the feeling of the comic books, the animation is done with a lighter spirit than in the animated series. Bruce Wayne looks much like he has before, but now he appears somewhat less imposing. The Dick Grayson Robin has been replaced by the less edgy, more youthful Tim Drake Robin.
Kevin Conroy, as usual, invokes the voice of Batman better than most live action actors.
Kelly Ripa did a much more decent voice-acting job than I was expecting.
As in the live action Batman films, the movie lives or dies based on the quality of the villains. My all-time favorite, the Penguin, is here. His design is sleeker than it has appeared before, hearkening more to the Burgess Meredith portrayal of the '60's than the Danny DeVito portrayal of "Batman Returns." David Ogden Stiers is the perfect choice for the Penguin's voice. The Penguin is finally portrayed as a cunning sophisticate, just as he most commonly appears in the comics. Hector Elizondo's voice creates a Bane who's much more memorable than the forgettable version in "Batman & Robin." And finally, Batman has a descent mystery to solve, putting the "Detective" back in "Detective Comics" (that is what "DC" stands for, after all.) The revolution to the mystery is a delightfully sneaky twist.
The score adds to the mysterious ambiance of the movie. It sounds like a mix between the score from "Poirot" and the score from "Mission: Impossible." All in all, it's more entertaining than your average cartoon.
- SylvesterFox007
- Jul 12, 2005
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Batman: El misterio de Batwoman
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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