That is a silly criticism and it would be wise of you not to say something like that again, if you criticize the Simpsons for being yellow you open your argument for all sorts of responses and makes you appear as if you would hate this show for immature reasons as well.
Oh, I will say something like "Why are the Simpsons yellow?" again all I like. I really don't get why they are yellow, and I'm not afraid to admit that I've never liked the Simpsons. I don't hate them, I just don't find them entertaining. We don't all have to like the same things.
How about the one where Batman must defeat Kite man in his own Whirly Bat across the airline of Gotham and still make it to Robin's birthday in time?
What issue is that? And by the way, there are sillier ones than that. Much sillier. In the 1950s Jack Schiff converted him -- you know, a Rainbow Batman, he went to other planets, all kinds of awful stuff got done to the character.
Granted this is a ridiculous example, but it just goes to show that it is unrealistic to expect all translations to equal a mature and dark content. Neither are they better through it.
I never stated that I expect all translations to equal a mature and dark content.
It is aspiring to achieve the greatness that is BTAS by doing something daring and new.
Doing something daring and new? There is really nothing new about this Batman. This is the 1950s/1960s Silver Age Batman who still existed on TV in the 1970s on the Super Friends and The New Adventures of Batman cartoon shows I watched when I was a kid. And team ups are nothing new or daring.
It would of surely failed had it tried what you would have wanted.
How do you figure that?
Fortunately they surprised us with a refreshing take on the caped crusader with snappy dialog and a Batman who isn't constantly reminding us his parents are dead, while still remaining in character.
There is nothing refreshing or new about this Super Friends take to me. And the Batman in
Batman: The Animated Series isn't constantly reminding us his parents are dead.
If you are to point out criticisms try and find them in dialog, plotting, animation and scripts as opposed to constantly mocking the fun premise.
Alright, since you asked, in my opinion the dialogue is really bland and generic, Batman is goofy looking, the theme song is ridiculously peppy for Batman, and the plotting and scripts are is far too light, silly and whimsical for my tastes without being truly funny. With Batman - he can either be dark and mysterious, or he can become softer, mushier, nicer, in which case he just don't work as a character because the whole point of becoming Batman is to become a frightening creature of the night striking terror. They seem to have castrated the character in this series for kids. Batman only really works as a character if the world is essentially a malevolent, frightening place.