Nora Clavicle and the Ladies' Crime Club
- Episode aired Jan 18, 1968
- TV-G
- 24m
Nora Clavicle, a women's rights activist, uses her influence to have Commissioner Gordon, Chief O'Hara, and the whole police force fired and replaced with women. She cuts ties with Batman an... Read allNora Clavicle, a women's rights activist, uses her influence to have Commissioner Gordon, Chief O'Hara, and the whole police force fired and replaced with women. She cuts ties with Batman and Robin, then launches her plan to blow up Gotham City with explosive-packed mice and coll... Read allNora Clavicle, a women's rights activist, uses her influence to have Commissioner Gordon, Chief O'Hara, and the whole police force fired and replaced with women. She cuts ties with Batman and Robin, then launches her plan to blow up Gotham City with explosive-packed mice and collect on the insurance. The Terrific Trio look for a way to neutralize her mechanical hordes... Read all
- Angelina
- (as Inga Neilson)
- 1st Policewoman
- (as Ginny Gan)
- 2nd Policewoman
- (uncredited)
- 3rd Policewoman
- (uncredited)
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- The Penguin
- (uncredited)
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Moreover, the series now tapped explicitly into countercultural tropes (Louie the Lilac's flower power, Joker shooting the surf-movie curl) in an attempt to stay contemporary, which is where "Nora Clavicle and the Ladies' Crime Club" comes in. Writer Stanford Sherman might not have planned to write a political manifesto, but he wound up penning one for the ages.
Make no bones about it: Nora Clavicle (Barbara Rush) is probably the dullest "Batman" villain of the series, and just on narrative strength and production values alone, this episode is nigh-impossible to beat for sheer lameness. Nevertheless, what exactly were men in general, and Sherman in particular, afraid of?
The true value of TV shows and movies from decades past is their reflection of attitudes and assumptions at the time of production. In the 1960s, civil rights and protest against the Vietnam conflict were significant social and political movements, but even such progressive causes still manifested patronizing, sexist attitudes toward women, thus spurring the rise of feminism--and provoking a backlash by ostensibly enlightened men.
In "Nora Clavicle," the backlash involves constant caricature, both blatant and subtle, of women starting with Nora herself. Presented as a feminist activist, Nora manipulates Millie Linseed (Jean Byron) into pressuring her mayoral husband (Byron Keith) to sack Gotham City's entire police department, replacing it with women. Then Nora double-crosses Millie by planning to destroy the city for a huge insurance payout using swarms of mechanical mice that are not only programmed to explode en masse, they incapacitate the female cops through a "Looney Tunes"-inspired terror of mice.
Nora is the stereotypical femme fatale--devious, calculating, ruthless. In film noir, "mouse" refers to a compliant, ordinary woman, the kind you marry while lusting after the femme fatale. Indeed, Rush plays it cool and bland until it's time to put Batman, Robin, and Batgirl into the kinky Twister-gone-lethal deathtrap called the "Siamese human knot"--then Rush suddenly cackles in psycho-sexual ecstasy we now call "beeyotch be crazy."
Had series writer Stanley Ralph Ross, who went on to co-develop "Wonder Woman" for TV in the 1970s, written this episode, it might have avoided Sherman's snide parade of tired tropes about female fatuousness that masks Sixties male insecurity. Instead, we get his mouse droppings preserved for posterity.
Firstly, I should say I totally understand some viewers being a little bothered by this episode. So please don't bombard me with "not useful" votes. This adventure does seem a tiny bit out of character in the Batman series. Many women would view this as the most sexist 25 minutes of television ever. However, one thing needs to be remembered here: this is Batman.
This series does not make statements about the human condition. This is not Star Trek or The Outer Limits. It is Batman. A series that is adventure for the kids and a show that is meant to be humour/adventure for the adults. However, maybe I am wrong, if someone has proof that I am wrong (maybe Adam West has spoken up about this episode) please let me know about it and I will correct this review.
Perhaps this episode could be described as a 1968 version of South Park or The Simpsons?
This entire episode I spent open jawed at the blatant sexism on display along with the worst jeopardy of any episode (and this being Batman that says a lot)a human knot? REALLY? Upon the request of Nora Clavicle, the new Commissioner of Gotham, all the police officers are replaced with women. Batman and Robin having nothing to do decide to investigate the reason women are now in charge. After a "human knot" involving the dynamic trio and a bank robbery with the most sexist of overtones (undertones far to subtle for this show) we run into the greatest plan ever... because all women... and only women... are scared of mice.
I feel dirty after watching this. Like a car crash. I shouldn't crane my neck and slow down to see, but somehow I do.
I'm glad this sexism doesn't exist today but my god I laughed... I just hope I did it ironically. As I hope will you, if you dare watch.
The Pied Piper bit is the only thing worth watching. The rest of the episode makes both men and women look bad.
I watched the entire series in it's initial run, not fervent fan, but would always watch as kid. So here I am tonight and see it on the guide with "Nora Clavicle" in the description as villain, and for the life of me I didn't recall this villain! So, I figured I would give it a watch.....
But THIS one is just THE WORST of any episode! Fine, some episodes BAD, but they have at least some good moment or line or something. But THIS one has NONE!
No fights (OK understood not having Batman and Robin fight females, but how about BatGirl stepping in and subdue them?
But no.
Worst "peril" ever, Human knot! Knot even a good moment there (pun intended)! How about if BatGirl had come up with the solution out of some Yoga training or something!?
But no.
Worst ending. Alfred brings them in for what? Speeding?
Worst villain. Not campy fun, like a professor conking head and become Tut. When you watch Tut it's by NO means the idea that ALL Professors have this proclivity..... Yet with this episode you're left with the idea that ANY/ALL women's libber would be essentially Nora!!
I know "it's the 60s" and to some degree those type ideas existed, but this one just goes WAY over any boundaries, even taking that into account.
But even the episode compared to all other Batman's just doesn't have any good moments.
The reviewers here have it right, most 1s and 2s. But so how the overall average is at 5.8 is also WAY beyond any understanding. Free Speech, fine..... Here's mine: if you rated this higher than 3, you're not being honest or responsible.
Did you know
- TriviaThis is one of a very few episodes where there is no batfight.
- GoofsBatgirl has held her own against multiple trained fighters, but yet she's utterly helpless when Nora Clavicle, with no training whatsoever, grabs her.
- ConnectionsReferenced in C.O.P.S.: The Case of Big Boss's Bye Bye (1988)
Details
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 24m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 4:3