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[Batman] Spotlight on The Devil's Fingers/Dead Ringers

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Ubiquitous

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May 4, 2020, 12:38:41 PM5/4/20
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Okay, call me a wacky package. From the "Likewise" credit to "Wings Like an
Angel," this episode is a genuine hoot, the nutsy culmination of everything
BATMAN's parody-happy producers wanted to do with the series. Is this oddest
of all Bat-tales better directed and photographed than other Season Two
shows? Not really. But there's a curious vibe at work here, a unique
flavor, some intangible sense of ribald fun that seems to transcend logic
itself. Reflecting this, "The Devil's Fingers"/"Dead Ringers" was the
highest-rated episode of BATMAN - ever - at a time when the show's numbers
were beginning their steep decline. It's almost as if the public somehow
sensed that this had to be the ultimate BATMAN campfest and simply couldn't
resist tuning in. As twin brother Harry might say, go figure.

Long before Dozier's perverse take on the Caped Crusader appeared on
television, a certain piano-playing entertainer known as "Mr. Showmanship"
embodied the very essence of mainstream kitsch. Liberace is, well, Liberace;
this individual can't be described, he must be experienced, hopefully at a
safe distance. Turning Libby into a (double) Bat-villain was a stroke of
Hollywood genius. He can't act and never could, but that's part of the gag
and everyone involved seems to know it. You want "so bad it's good?" It
doesn't get much badder than this. Check out that amazingly obvious split-
screen containing both Liberaces, or Mrs. Cooper's awful singing while trying
to entrap Harry. "Devil's Fingers" not only pushes the endurance envelope,
it gleefully tears it to shreds with a loopy smile on its deranged face.

We know this isn't business as usual when the show's rigid structure is
shattered within the first few minutes. Batman's on vacation, forcing Gordon
and O'Hara to face the unthinkable: they have to do their jobs themselves.
Writer Semple Jr. milks this dilemma for all its worth. While the great
pianist Chandell (secretly "Fingers") and his cigar-chomping brother Harry
are this week's culprits de jour, actual criminal assaults are committed by
Harry's will-of-the-wisp henchbabes, a trio of exotic dancers who descend
upon victims with mind-shattering bagpipes. The attack on that lone cop
early on is hilarious and weirdly suspenseful at the same time, climaxed by a
devastating, picturesque explosion. Meanwhile, our eventual introductions of
Bruce and Dick are more than worth the wait. Bruce happens to be off camping
(listening to Chandell's revealing concert at Gotham Town Hall, of course),
while swooning Dick's at the malt shop on a classic, gee-and-gosh teenage
date. Probably invigorated by the change of formula and some genuinely funny
set-ups, West and Ward are at their best throughout both installments. When
they spot the seductive Threesome flapping their arms outside Wayne Manor's
window and then slipping away into the night, awestruck, almost mesmerized
Bruce responds with a letter-perfect "Gone. like wraiths!"

Adding to the insanity of Liberace's fruity persona is that, during his `50s
heyday, he was viewed as a seductive heartthrob to little old ladies, who
seemed hopelessly dazzled by his sophisticated, soothingly fey charm. Alas,
art imitates life in "Devil's Fingers," with Aunt Harriet scoring as a
perfect representation of Libby's female admirers. His look of disgust when
she turns her back probably mirrors the guy's true feelings about doting
fans. And Mrs. Cooper pulling a gun on Chandell after a hand kiss reveals
he's twin brother Harry ("A girl can tell!") is an episode highlight.

Inspiration in full-gear, Semple Jr. whips up two notable, fairly ambitious
set-pieces: the player piano cliffhanger is audacious and clever, with a game
B & R singing their fool heads off in order to survive. Equally impressive
is the instant recall sequence from "Dead Ringers," with a performing
Chandell supered over our heroes' heads as they melodramatically conjure the
memory of a recent recital.

But Semple Jr. and director Larry Peerce save the best for last. In one of
the funniest epilogues ever filmed for anything, all of this episode's bad
guys and gals find themselves in striped pajamas at Gotham City Jail. Ever
the elegant sophisticate, Chandell sings and plays serenely at a striped
piano, even as incarcerated Harry, vowing to escape, spews tough guy clichT
a few yards away. We fade out delicately on the maestro's final note,
BATMAN's pounding theme in the end credits prompting a visceral WTF? from
stunned viewers.

Billy Wilder couldn't have crafted it better.


--
Every American should want President Trump and his administration to handle
the coronavirus epidemic effectively and successfully. Those who seem eager
to see the president fail and to call every administration misstep a fiasco
risk letting their partisanship blind them to the demands not only of civic
responsibility but of basic decency.

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