Nerd Processor

A Farewell to ‘Gotham,’ Which Defied Everything Superhero Entertainment Is Supposed to Be

Most comic book shows cater to hardcore fans. But ‘Gotham’ went its own way.

Rob Bricken
OneZero
Published in
5 min readApr 26, 2019

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Credit: Fox/Getty Images

AA major cornerstone of superhero entertainment ended this week — and no, it wasn’t the Marvel Cinematic Universe. With the finale of Gotham, we lose a wild TV show that knew how to make comic book material weird as hell. While its contemporaries try to honor their source material to please hardcore nerds, Gotham made the bold decision to not give a damn about what longtime Batman fans wanted. The result was a show that was divisive, frequently baffling, crazy as the Joker — and very, very entertaining.

That’s not how it started, though. Gotham was created to be something more like a crime procedural than an action series where costumed heroes and villains square off with all the power of that week’s visual effects budget. It primarily focused on new Gotham City cop Jim Gordon — the future Commissioner Gordon — and nascent crimelord-to-be Oswald “Penguin” Cobblepot, with frequent check-ins on a school-age Bruce Wayne as he grappled with his parents’ murder.

As someone who recapped the show from the beginning, I can attest that this was a tremendously boring premise. The…

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Rob Bricken
OneZero

The former editor of io9.com, Rob Bricken has been a professional nerd since 2001. He also often cries at children's cartoons.