Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt is a 2003 American made-for-television biographical action-comedy film based on the 1966-1968 Batman television series which features the original stars Adam West and Burt Ward as themselves, with Jack Brewer and Jason Marsden portraying the young West (Batman) and Ward (Robin) in flashbacks. It was broadcast on CBS on March 9, 2003.
Video Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt
Plot
Adam West prepares to attend a gala-style charity event targeted towards orphans, featuring a variety of classic cars, including the original Batmobile from the Batman. Adam's butler, Jerry (whom Adam refers to as "Alfred"), arranges the event and reunites Adam with his former co-star, Burt Ward.
While at the gala, Adam reveals to Burt that he had kept the key to the original Batmobile from during the show's original run. As he showcases the key, the lights mysteriously go out, and when they turn back on, both Adam's key and the Batmobile itself are gone. After asking a valet, Adam discovers the thief had been asking for directions toward Arizona. Though Burt is reluctant to follow the perpetrators, Adam manages to coerce him into going on a road-trip in pursuit of the Batmobile.
As the duo travel down the Arizona roads, Adam and Burt reminisce on their life before the show. Burt recalls a time in which he was homeless, living under the Miami pier and collecting bottles for a living, before he managed to catch his big break after a successful audition as Robin. Adam, on the other hand, remembers how he had to compete against Lyle Waggoner for the role of Batman, only narrowly acquiring the part after the studio executives agreed he had a better jawline.
Arriving in Arizona, Adam and Burt stop into a nearby bar to ask about the mysterious Batmobile thief. As Burt steps away to urinate, Adam finds himself momentarily seduced by a mysterious woman, only for her to vanish moments later and a bar-fight to erupt. Defeating their attackers, Adam recalls the sexual tension between him and Julie Newmar, before noticing a frame of the original Batcave frozen onto the bar's television set. Leaving the bar, the duo find their car towed, but instead of a traffic ticket, a mysterious invitation to a movie screening to Batman is present.
Adam and Burt notice during the movie screening that all footage of Batman and Robin have been cut, instead featuring only the villains. During the screening, Burt recalls an incident in which television censors began to criticize the tightness of his Robin briefs, forcing him to take temporary shrinkage pills (implied to be hormone therapy) to decrease his penis size during shooting. At the same time, Adam deals with the painful memories of his divorce and ostracisation from his children.
After the screening, the duo follow an oil slick to a nearby diner, but find no leads. After Burt and Adam recall a temporary on-set rivalry between them, a crazed fan who nearly killed Burt after a one-night stand, and a ridiculous outburst from method actor Vincent Price during his time as Egghead, a Batman fan that Adam had signed the breasts of years earlier (with a permanent marker that, fittingly, never washed off) arrives to tell them the location of the Batmobile.
Upon arrival to the Batmobile, the duo enter, but find it booby-trapped. Sedated and piloted remotely to the original Batcave set, Jerry reveals himself to be the thief and, in an odd turn of events, pulls off his mask to reveal himself to be Frank Gorshin, the actor who played the Riddler. Frank restrains Adam and Burt and reveals that, years earlier, he had stolen the set blueprints of the Batman series in his plan for revenge against the hero actors getting more recognition than those who played the villains. Adam realizes the woman from earlier was none other than Julie Newmar, who then reveals herself to be working as Frank's accomplice.
Strapped to an armed bomb, Adam tricks Frank into ejecting himself from the batmobile and onto a ledge, before cutting he and Burt's restraints off with a prop batarang he stole years earlier. Now free, the duo escape the cave just before it detonates (although Burt does suffer some burns), before calling the police to arrest Frank Gorshin and Julie Newmar.
Days later, Burt and Adam attend the re-opening of the classic car event for orphans. The lights vanish once more and the Batmobile is gone. Adam rushes off to find the perpetrators whilst accompanied by the classic Batman theme, with a more enthusiastic Burt running by his side.
Maps Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt
Casting
Apart from West and Ward, a number of actors from the original series also appeared in the film. This includes Frank Gorshin, who played the Riddler, Julie Newmar, who played Catwoman for the first two seasons of the show and Lee Meriwether, who played Catwoman in the Batman theatrical film. Gorshin and Newmar appear as themselves, while Meriwether appears as a waitress. The most noticeable surviving cast member not to appear in the movie is Yvonne Craig, who played Batgirl in the third season of the show. When asked by a fan at a convention why she did not appear in it she replied that she did not like the script and politely turned it down.
Due to licensing problems involving the original TV series, the makers of this film were only allowed to use footage from the 1966 Batman feature film. As a result, Lee Meriwether's rendition of Catwoman is the only one seen in archive footage in this film (even during a musical sequence intended to pay tribute to Newmar). Zambia-born actress Julia Rose plays the young Julie Newmar and gets to briefly don the Catwoman costume.
Jason Marsden, who plays the young Burt Ward/Robin, has done a few voice roles in DC/Warner Bros Cartoons such as Batman Beyond, Justice League Unlimited, and Young Justice.
Lyle Waggoner, who originally auditioned for the part of Batman, and Betty White both have cameos in the movie. Some of Waggoner's actual audition tape footage can be seen in the movie. Waggoner ended up landing a role into another DC Comics' TV series: he played Steve Trevor on Wonder Woman in the 1970s alongside Lynda Carter as the title character. Adam West's daughter, Nina West, also has a cameo as a psychotic actress who tries to kill Burt Ward after a one-night stand. This incident is mentioned in Ward's autobiography, My Life in Tights. During the original series, of the four main supervillains (Joker, Riddler, Penguin, and Catwoman), only Riddler never entered the Batcave set; in the movie the Riddler finally does enter the Batcave.
Cast
- Adam West as Himself
- Burt Ward as Himself
- Jack Brewer as Adam West / Batman
- Jason Marsden as Burt Ward / Robin
- Lyle Waggoner as Himself / Narrator
- Frank Gorshin as Himself
- Julie Newmar as Herself / Arizona Bar Owner
- Lee Meriwether as Waitress in Diner
- Betty White as Woman in Window during Batclimb Sequence
- Amy Acker as Bonnie Lindsey
- Brett Rickaby as Frank Gorshin / The Riddler
- Curtis Armstrong as Jerry the Butler
- Jim Jansen as William Dozier
- Stacy Kamano as Nghara Frisbie-West
- Ray Buktenica as Robert Butler
- Steve Vinovich as Bartender (was a bad guy)
- Andy Umberger as Sam Strangis (Assistant Director)
- Joel Swetow as Casting Director
- Nina West as Burt's One Night Stand
- Darla Haun as Charity Event Host
- Julia Rose as Julie Newmar / Catwoman
- Erin Carufel as Yvonne Craig/ Batgirl
- Nikki Ziering as Lucy
- Quinn K. Redeker as Vincent Price / Egghead
- Tony Tanner as Burgess Meredith / Penguin
- Bud Weston as Cesar Romero / Joker
- Christopher Darga as Adam West's Agent Lou
- Ivar Brogger as Doctor
- Silas Cooper as Wardrobe Man
- Todd Merrill as Network Executive
- John E. Goetz as Valet parker
- Elisa Marchhand as Fem fatale
- Rory Thost as Hunter
- Talt Ruppert as Publicist
- Ben Perkins as Fan boy
- Kelli King as Joneli
- Heidi Androl as Sexy fan
- Traci L. Crouch as Secretary
- Frank Addela as Robin stuntman
- Steve Bialock as Batman stuntman
- Bobby Porter as Henchman - Big Joe
- Scott L. Schwartz as Henchman - Curly
- Carl Ciarfalio as Henchman - Slim
- Anthony G. Schmidt as Henchman - Pretty Boy
- Brian Shakti as Delivery boy
- Zack Milan as Mysterious Stranger (uncredited)
- Chris Dawson as Reporter (uncredited)
- Bryan Hanna as Director / Cameraman (uncredited)
- Paul A. Kaufman as Network Executive #2 (uncredited)
- Cesar Romero as The Joker (uncredited / archive footage from the 1966 film)
- Burgess Meredith as Penguin (uncredited / archive footage from the 1966 film)
DVD release
Return to the Batcave was released on DVD on May 17, 2005, by Anchor Bay (which would later be owned by Lionsgate, successor to original coproducer Artisan under license from Fox/Artisan, owners of the special) (Cat. No. DV13084). It is now out of print.
External links
- Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt on IMDb
- Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt at TV.com
- Some more information and trivia
- Return To The Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt @ BYTB: Batman Yesterday, Today and Beyond
Source of the article : Wikipedia