Oh, and there's also the annoying weirdo Doctor Psycho (Tony Hale), who's recently been canceled - by the Legion of Doom of all people - over his use of misogynistic slurs. So, she puts together a crew with her best friend Poison Ivy (voiced by Lake Bell), the operatically-voiced Clayface (Alan Tudyk) and the lovable King Shark (Ron Funches). Harley, on her own, wants to be taken seriously by the boys club of Gotham's most heinous. Yes, I think it's better than The Batman.Īt the core of Harley Quinn, though, you have a clever sitcom about group dynamics that just so happen to take place within the up and coming crew of villains who want to be big time. Harley Quinn succeeds more than any recent DC release. Harley Quinn is a workplace sitcom in disguise This isn't Tom Hardy's Bane, but that of James Adomian, and it's a very sad and depressed version of the ultra-jacked Batman villain. This show pokes at every problem in the DC world with a knife, and hopes to draw laughs from us while villains, heroes and even civilians bleed on screen.Įventually, you'll meet even-more hilarious Gotham goons, such as Bane. All the while, the rogue's gallery of Batman villains locked up at the moment verbally prods at Harley's relationship with The Joker (more on that below). Next up, a trip to Arkham Asylum reminds us that even the prison guards of Gotham City are broken on the inside and out. Harley insinuates a dirty rumor about Batman's love life that I'd never heard, and then Law & Order veteran Christopher Meloni delivers a completely unhinged take on Commissioner James Gordon. Then, before you know it, you're knee-deep in a very twisted version of Gotham City.
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