Nothing to Fear
- Episode aired Sep 15, 1992
- Unrated
- 22m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
A horrifying villain named Scarecrow spreads fear gas and wreaks havoc at Gotham State University.A horrifying villain named Scarecrow spreads fear gas and wreaks havoc at Gotham State University.A horrifying villain named Scarecrow spreads fear gas and wreaks havoc at Gotham State University.
Kevin Conroy
- Batman
- (voice)
Clive Revill
- Alfred
- (voice)
Mari Devon
- Summer Gleeson
- (voice)
Kevin McCarthy
- Dr. Long
- (voice)
- (as Kevin Mc Carthy)
Richard Moll
- Computer
- (voice)
Henry Polic II
- Scarecrow
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaProduction-wise, this is the last episode to feature Clive Revill's voice as Alfred Pennyworth before he left due to a previous commitment. After Revill left, Efrem Zimbalist Jr. took over Alfred's role for the rest of the series and the DCAU.
- GoofsSpiders have eight legs yet are shown as only having four
- Crazy creditsIn the original series Henry Polic 2 plays the voice of Professor Jonathan Crane/The Scarecrow. In the cast credits his name is spelled differently sometimes. It goes from Henry Polic II(Nothing to Fear) to Henry Polick(Fear of Victory)
- ConnectionsEdited into Bat-May: Nothing to Fear (2020)
Featured review
'The Scarecrow' Makes People Face Their Worst Fears
Here's another cool villain, "The Scarecrow," who is an ex-professor of psychology. (No wonder he's nuts.) Anyway, things didn't go well for him at the local university, so he's paying them back with terrorist attacks. His gimmick is a smoke-bomb in which people who inhale it suddenly face their worst fears. So, if it's rats or spiders or parental rejection - whatever your greatest fear - it will consume you, while 'The Scarecrow" does whatever he wants to do.
With Batman, his fear is more psychological: fear of his father's rejection.
This was another entertaining show with nice Deco art and a cool-looking villain. Alfred the butler also had some humorous remarks. It kind of freaks me out knowing Efrem Zimbalist Jr. is voicing that character, as I still associate that actor from his glory days as a television star way back in the 1950s and 1960s.
With Batman, his fear is more psychological: fear of his father's rejection.
This was another entertaining show with nice Deco art and a cool-looking villain. Alfred the butler also had some humorous remarks. It kind of freaks me out knowing Efrem Zimbalist Jr. is voicing that character, as I still associate that actor from his glory days as a television star way back in the 1950s and 1960s.
helpful•150
- ccthemovieman-1
- Jun 29, 2007
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