Bat-Signal
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The Bat-Signal is a fictional device appearing in the various interpretations of the Batman mythos. It is a specially modified Klieg searchlight with a stylized symbol of a bat attached to the light so that it projects a large Bat emblem on the sky or buildings of Gotham City. In the stories, the signal is used by the Gotham City Police Department as a method of contacting and summoning Batman to their assistance in the event of a serious crisis.
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[edit] Origins
The origin of the signal varies between timeline and media. In the 1989 Batman film, Batman gave the signal to the police as a gift enabling them to call him when the city is in danger; in 2005's Batman Begins, then-detective James Gordon creates his own signal light, inspired by an incident when Batman strapped the defeated mobster Carmine Falcone to a large searchlight which created a roughly bat-like image from the light's beam. In the comic's post-Crisis continuity the signal was introduced after the Batman's first encounter against the Joker (not unlike the first movie) in Batman: The Man Who Laughs. On Batman: the Animated Series, it was introduced in the episode "The Cape and Cowl Conspiracy." On The Batman, (a new animated series unrelated to the aforementioned one) Gordon invented it to summon Batman in "Night in the City" (somewhat similar to the 2005 film.)
[edit] Basic usage
When Commissioner Gordon needs to summon Batman, he uses the Bat-Signal. In turn, Batman has sophisticated signalling systems that alert him of the signal being lit without having to constantly keep alert to directly see it.
In Frank Miller's Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, the Bat-Signal is used as much to enhance the terror effect of Batman on criminal elements as a signal.
[edit] The Bat-Signal being used by others
Others have used the Bat-Signal for their own purposes. In Detective Comics #466 (1976), the villainous Signalman manages to trap the Batman inside the Batsignal device.
In Legends of the Dark Knight #6, a cadre of crime bosses projects the signal upside down in order to summon Batman to help them fight a killer they can't defeat.
In the Halloween special comic series, Haunted Knight, Scarecrow alters the Bat-Signal to notify Batman that he has kidnapped then-Captain Jim Gordon. By adding an orange bulb and painting "eyes" on the signal, he turns the beam into a stylised Jack-o'-lantern image (with the bat symbol forming the mouth beneath two eyes).
In Batman: Dark Victory, the Hangman sneaks onto the roof of Police Headquarters and turns the Bat-Signal on to lure then-recently appointed Commissioner James Gordon to the roof and try to kill him, but this was thwarted when Two-Face cuts Gordon down.
Near the beginning of the No Man's Land saga, a junior officer creates an improvised Bat-Signal out of spare parts. Gordon doesn't use it, as he is currently angry at Batman.
In the comic book series Gotham Central, the purpose of the Bat-Signal is further expanded on; as Batman's existence is not officially recognised by the Gotham City authorities, the batsignal is explained as a method of using the "urban legend" around Batman to terrify the criminal class of Gotham. As official proven police interaction with the Bat-Signal and Batman himself can lead to cases against criminals arrested by Batman being dismissed, it is up to the civilian employees of the Gotham police department (including the Major Case Squad's civilian attache, Stacy) to operate the signal officially.
Owing to the events in the "War Crimes" sequence of comics, relations between Batman and the Gotham Police Department under Commissioner Michael Akins were officially severed; the Bat-Signal was removed from the roof of Gotham Central, albeit in the 52 series The Question altered an (apparently) still-there Bat-Signal to project a spray-painted question mark. In the "One Year Later" series, however, with the re-installation of James Gordon as commissioner, relations with Batman appear to have thawed; upon Batman's return from one year of self-imposed exile, the Bat-Signal (restored to the roof of police headquarters) is activated once again. The familiar sight of the Bat symbol in the sky prompts cheers of delight from most of the citizens of Gotham, who are largely pleased to see Batman return.
[edit] On film and television
In Joel Schumacher's 1995 film Batman Forever, the criminal psychologist Dr. Chase Meridian uses the Bat-Signal to call Batman, so as to seduce him. Batman is slightly peeved at her usage of the Bat-Signal as a mere "beeper". A music video for "Kiss From A Rose", also from the film, features singer Seal performing the song while standing beside the Bat-Signal. Also in Batman Forever, the Riddler alters the Bat-Signal by projecting a question mark into the sky with the original bat symbol forming the dot at the base. Similarly, in Batman: Dark Victory, after brokering a tentative alliance with Batman, the Riddler changes the signal, projecting a question mark into the sky in order to let Batman know that he has an answer for him.
In Batman & Robin, Poison Ivy alters the Bat-Signal by changing the Bat-symbol to a Robin-symbol to lure Robin into a trap.
In Batman Begins, Batman initially 'improvises' a Bat-signal by draping crime boss Carmine Falcone over a spotlight at the docks after defeating him, his spread-out coat making the light look like a bat. At the conclusion of the movie, Lieutenant Gordon creates the actual Bat-signal to call Batman to the roof for a talk, although he jokingly comments that he only uses it because they couldn't find any mob bosses to strap to it.
In Batman Beyond, Terry McGinnis destroys the Bat-Signal after it is used for the first time in years by Paxton Powers, the son of Derek Powers (Blight), who uses the signal to contact Batman with the intention of using him to locate and deal with his father.
In the teaser trailer for the The Dark Knight, Gordon is shown destroying the Bat-signal with an axe.
[edit] See also
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