Batman: The Ring of Wax (1966)
Season 1, Episode 23
8/10
The Gorshin Riddler Keeps On The BAT-TLING (and getting Ratings, too)
26 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
WITH THE FIRST season of the BATMAN Series well underway, we were presented with this; being the first half of the third Riddler story. This gave us yet another look at Mr. Frank Gorshin's interpretation of that lexiconically obsessed master of the cryptic messages, Edward Nigma (E. Nigma for short). Although that was his name in the relatively few Batman comics stories that the green leotard clad baddie appeared in, it was never used in the TV series.*

AS FOR THIS particular installment, there is much to recommend it. It has a great comic book opening. The storyline, which like all of these earliest episodes, would doubtless hold up as an installment of any other detective story. In the area of title and central theme, the installment borrowed heavily from that already present in Hollywood and Nashville Pop Culture.

FROM THE MOVIE capital, we had MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM (remade in 3D as HOUSE OF WAX), both of which were horror stories, and RING OF FEAR; the Clyde Beatty/Mickey Spillane "B" detective story. The contribution from the Country Music people is found in Johnny Cash's RING OF FIRE.

THE STORY MOVES quickly and without as much as a wasted frame of film from the initial challenge from Riddler to the robbery of a rare manuscript from the Gotham City Public Library to the capture of the Dynamic Duo and having them about to be "preserved" in molten wax by being lowered by pulley into the huge cauldron of molten paraffin.

THIS OF COURSE led to the inevitable cliffhanger ending and the melodramatic voice over by Producer/Narrator William Dozier of:

"BE SURE TO TUNE IN TOMORROW, SAME BAT-TIME, SAME......." PLEASE DO TAKE a look-see at our review for part 2, Give 'Em the Ax! (As soon as we get around to writing it!)

NOTE: * While the true identity of the Riddler of Edward Nigma/E. Nigma was never used in this 1966-68 TV Series, in the feature film BATMAN FOREVER (1995) the Riddler (Jim Carrey) had his name revealed but with a change in spelling. The surname was spelled Nygma, for reasons unknown; unless the revision would be less likely to appear to be akin to any offensive other word.
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