Time fo some slammin.
The tragedy of this show is its attempt at really really pointless themes such as the portrayal of outsider and graffiti art as the antithesis of criminality and lack of creative talent when it’s already an established art form across continents, galleries, exhibitions, art books in gift shops. In this episode two of Gotham's criminal elements are caught by Batman while attempting wanton acts of aesthetic vandalism and Batman being the sole defender of Gotham marks the line between chaos and a world established form that was more of A CONCERN IN THE EIGHTIES as opposed to the 21st Century

Anarky makes an appearance in this Episode with Nathan Fillion's voice (though not by Nathan Fillion), a B-List Batman villain that I admit compelled me to enjoy because even with his V for Vendetta rip-off of disestablishmentariamism I liked his often spoken out themes questioning the random actions by government based systems ..and even though I hadn’t read as many Anarky based comics he never seemed entirely pro-death toll Anarchy. Here Anarky seems to be here for the sake of Anarky, looking for a game player that could help rival him in his complex anarchic madness a Batman to his Joker if you will, in fact Batman to the exact dialogue to his The Dark Knight Joker IF U WILL!
And the final most intriguing of the the themes in this peculiar pro-government Batman if you will.. CAPITALISM! Unhealthily close shots of his Bat-eared shaped helmet, with close almost slow motion shots of his Bat vehicles, even closer more unnecessarily close shots of it transforming..
This show has an agenda, a bad agenda, and when I was reading other peoples reviews before I realized Episode 1 - Anti-Eco-Terrorists, Episode 2 - Anti-Government-Based Healthcare, Episode 3 - Anti-Outsider Art. Batman now works for the political system, I could have sworn he was for Justice.
Peace Out!