

Batman: The Long Halloween, Part Two
The clock is ticking. The days are numbered. The end has just begun.
As Gotham City's young vigilante, the Batman, struggles to pursue a brutal serial killer, district attorney Harvey Dent gets caught in a feud involving the criminal family of the Falcones.
Why watch Batman: The Long Halloween, Part Two
Jensen Ackles delivers a Batman stripped of invincibility—weary, doubting, genuinely outmatched by a killer who knows his city better than he does. This isn't the cape-and-cowl spectacle of the Snyder films; it's a noir detective story with the moral weight of True Detective compressed into animation, where every clue pulls you deeper into Gotham's criminal web instead of toward easy answers.
The pacing is relentless. Part Two wastes no time on exposition, trusting you've met these characters and diving straight into the suffocating pressure cooker where Harvey Dent's ambitions collide with the Falcone family's vengeance. The animation—dark, angular, deliberately unglamorous—matches the tone: this is a city where corruption isn't theatrical; it's suffocating. Naya Rivera's Catwoman and Titus Welliver's Carmine Falcone crackle with menace in every scene.
This is for anyone who loved the Arkham games' storytelling or appreciated Batman: The Animated Series when it got genuinely dark. You'll finish tonight with one of those twists that recontextualizes everything you just watched—the kind that'll have you immediately wanting to rewind and catch what you missed the first time.
— The What2Watch desk · US
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As Gotham City's young vigilante, the Batman, struggles to pursue a brutal serial killer, district attorney Harvey Dent gets caught in a feud involving the criminal family of the Falcones.
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8.1Reviews & ratings

Conclusion to the The Long Halloween is solid and taken as a whole, a fine adaptation to a great graphic novel. It's not to the standards of The Dark Knight Returns animated movie but a step up from Batman: Hush and its lame change to the villain's identity. Some nice character moments and decent voice work but no real stand outs. Looking forward to the release bridging the two parts together and checking it out in o…Show more
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