![]() ![]() Now try rewatching this episode knowing all of this happens. His last scene is apologizing to the new Batman Terry McGinnis, saying he's the only person who cared about him before letting a building collapse on him. ![]() When he gets a second chance in the future and decides to turn a new leaf, the doctors that regrow his body try to kill him, and Freeze snaps again. His body decays to that of an immortal, severed head, making him lose all of his previous standards and going on a murderous rampage. He manages to save Nora who is miraculously alive but still frozen, who then thinks that her husband is dead and marries someone else - the comics reveal that her husband was hiding all of Freeze's letters to her after she recovered. Freeze's arc just gets worse and worse as the DCAU goes on and expands it. Harsher in Hindsight: This episode is already sad.Freeze as a tortured soul rather than a walking gimmick. Growing the Beard: This is generally regarded as the episode that gave the series its well-known popularity, for the mature tone and for reinventing Mr.The episode is always rated as being one of if not the best episodes of the series and benchmark for animated television - there's a reason it won an Emmy. The show treats him with an enormous amount of sympathy (his famous "Never again" monologue) and the target of his vendetta, while not dying, gets his long overdue justice. But his backstory shows that he was trying to save his wife Nora when a heartless exec (who's lauded as a philanthropist) destroyed the lab for wasting money, permanently altering Freeze and nearly killing his wife. Freeze is almost completely unemotional, coldhearted and willing to kill anyone who stops him from getting revenge. ![]()
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