This does NOT incude the idiotic movies (though I personally think Nicholson and DeVito did a good job) . . . . I am thinking comic books, old TV series, and animated series including “Beyond”. If you give your votes I will post a winner on this MB in a few days.
My vote ?
Easy, Edward Nigma, aka
“The Riddler”.
I love that green suit with the green derby and the black tie with the green “?”. Great suit. Plus he has the best traps.
“Solos Dios basta” . . . but a little pizza won’t hurt.
Julie Newmar as Catwoman. My idea of feminine beauty was strongly formed by her. I expected that I would look like that when I, too, grew to womanhood.
toss-up between Joker and Catwoman (starring Eve as Catwoman!).
Catwoman because of the mutual attraction between her and Batman. The whole, in another world we might have…" (which they do in some Elseworlds, Earth 2, etc.).
Joker because he is the most consistently deadly and dangerous. he MIGHT just be out for larks one day, the next he might kill someone. He’s already killed a Robin and crippled Batgirl.
Oh, Two-Face is pretty cool, too.
The only true Batwoman is Eartha Kitt, Julie Newmar, or that other one on the show–horrible paraphrase of Adam West on Simpsons.
Lee Meriwether was the other Catwoman but I have to give the nod to Ertha Kitt. For a while my brother had the same agent as E.K. and thought it was the coolest thing in the world.
I will have to find one of the episodes where Eli Wallach played Mr. Freeze. That’s beyond bizarre.
George Sanders as the original TV Mr. Freeze, was so classy, so debonair, he made villainy so… cool. (No other way to describe it!)
Best Batman Villain Based Upon a Real Person: Grant Walker in the “Deep Freeze” episode of Batman: The Animated Series.
“WHO?!?!?” you may be asking. Lemme tell ya:
He was a multi-millionaire who made his money building theme parks, according to Robin. He was obsessed about the future and he built a future city offshore from Gotham City. He was getting old and it occurred to him that he may not live long enough to complete his plans. How to gain immortality…?
Break Mr. Freeze out of prison! With robots! And use his vast knowledge of cryogenics to make Grant Walker as immortal as Freeze! And use the freeze ray to freeze the entire world except for a hand-picked few living inside the domed future city.
Grant Walker is obviously based on Walt Disney, who also built theme parks (including Epcot, originally intended to be a working, futuristic city) with attractions that make extensive use of robotics; worried that he’d die before completing his life’s work; and, according to urban legend, had his body frozen so that he’d be revived at some future date. (The only deviation from this model is that Grant Walker apparently never made animated cartoons nor did he start his own movie studio.)
When I saw that episode, I laughed my fool head off! It’s still one of my favorite Animated shows.
The proper name of Batman’s immortal villain is Ra’s Al Ghul.
I have to agree with Sylence. The thing that makes The Batman so interesting is his remarkable villains, and The Joker is the best of the best. Unpredictable, mischevious, murderous, and perhaps best of all, there is really nothing known about his life before the accident that made him who he is.
We don’t know his real name. (Forget all that “Jack Napier” jazz, that has never been supported in the comics, which is the true cannon.) We don’t know what he did for a living. We don’t know squat about his childhood. He history is probably the best kept secret in all of comic-dom.
Definitely the Joker, but a close favorite for second place would be Grendel (Hunter Rose) who appeared in a two-part mini series written by Matt Wagner.
“I know a place where dreams get crushed, hopes are smashed, but that ain’t much.”
Make it three Jokers in a row… That laugh just made him. And nothing beats using razor-sharp playing cards as a weapon. He’s also funny as hell.
“The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents.”
-H.P. Lovecraft, “The Call of Cthulhu”