Two-Face: Part II
- Episode aired Sep 28, 1992
- Unrated
- 22m
IMDb RATING
9.0/10
3.7K
YOUR RATING
Two-Face, the former Harvey Dent, begins an aggressive campaign against his hated rival, Rupert Thorne.Two-Face, the former Harvey Dent, begins an aggressive campaign against his hated rival, Rupert Thorne.Two-Face, the former Harvey Dent, begins an aggressive campaign against his hated rival, Rupert Thorne.
Kevin Conroy
- Batman
- (voice)
Efrem Zimbalist Jr.
- Alfred
- (voice)
Murphy Cross
- Grace
- (voice)
Robert DoQui
- Doobie
- (voice)
- (as Bob DoQui)
Micky Dolenz
- Min, Max
- (voice)
Matt Landers
- Frankie
- (voice)
Diane Michelle
- Candace
- (voice)
Richard Moll
- Two-Face
- (voice)
John Vernon
- Rupert Thorne
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBruce Timm said of this episode, "This is such an adult show that I bet kids don't like it. There's not a whole lot of action and Batman's hardly in it. It's a lot of talking heads. But it works on such a powerful emotional level that I'm sure that anyone over the age of six is going to get sucked right into it. It's absolutely compelling. They always talk about the BATMAN films as being oh, so psychological. Bull. This episode is a compelling psychological drama."
- GoofsTwo-Face falsely interprets "the law of averages", stating that it is the one true equalizer. In reality, "the law of averages" is the commonly held belief that over certain period of time a particular outcome of an event in a series of events will occur at a frequency that is similar to its probability. For example, if a person tosses a coin five times and all of the tosses lend on tails, one might wrongfully expect the next couple of tosses should lend on heads with more than 50% of probability.
- Quotes
Rupert Thorne: [to Two-Face] At last we meet face to face to face.
- ConnectionsEdited into Bat-May: Two-Face Part II (2020)
Featured review
Lasting repercussions
'Part II' goes in an interesting direction. It's not completely about Two-Face's reign after taking over Harvey Dent, but also Batman's inner turmoil over the whole thing. He acts as a man complicit in Dent's ruination, even wracked with guilt over it.
And in the end, after foiling Two-Face (mildly, at that)he's hopeful that a recovery is possible. This is as much about Bruce Wayne as it is about the former District Attorney, and Bruce's undying concern is what I've always liked about Two-Face episodes. This is a worthy second half.
7/10
And in the end, after foiling Two-Face (mildly, at that)he's hopeful that a recovery is possible. This is as much about Bruce Wayne as it is about the former District Attorney, and Bruce's undying concern is what I've always liked about Two-Face episodes. This is a worthy second half.
7/10
helpful•11
- Mr-Fusion
- Dec 26, 2016
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