It’s time for another Theme Week. And
since we’re in the last week of October, a Halloween Theme Week feels most
appropriate. The next seven posts will focus on the most Halloween-y characters
I can think of. Demons, Goblins, a Zombie, and the center of our next villain profile,
an insane psychiatrist. Okay, so his MD doesn’t really fit in with this theme,
but is there anything more Halloween-y than a Scarecrow? I think not. Let’s get
to it, the Scarecrow.
Think Scarecrow ever sticks himself by accident when putting that glove on? |
Jonathan Crane’s life sucked pretty
much from the get go. He was conceived out of wedlock, his father ran off when
he found out, and his mother felt it was a good idea to leave her son with her
abusive mother. Crane’s Nana was a religious zealot whom felt compelled to
torture her grandson because he had the gall to be born. Whenever young
Jonathan did anything his grandma disapproved of, she’d lock him in a crow infested abandoned church in a Scarecrow costume, where he was viciously attacked by the
winged devils. He eventually learned that his dear sweet granny was also a
skilled chemist, as she would prepare the scarecrow costume by dosing it in
chemicals that sent the birds into a frenzy. As you can probably imagine, young
Jonathan was left in a pretty much perpetual state of terror. Anyone else think
that this supervillain’s path could have been corrected with just one call to
Child Services?
Things just got worse as time went
on. As he grew up, Crane became your typical target for bullies. He was lanky,
scrawny, a coward, and a bookworm. It also didn’t help that these traits plus
his last name created parallels to Ichabod Crane from The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Hm… Crane’s bullies must have been
pretty well read to get that connection. Or they saw the Disney animated
feature and weren’t ashamed in High School to admit that they watch Disney
Movies. Weird. Anyway, Jonathan Crane = Nerd, High School = Bad place for
Nerds. The straw that broke the camel’s back for Crane was the latest bit of
humiliation being dished out by local bully Bo Griggs, and cheerleader Sherry
Squires. What was it? High School cliché 30, Popular girl leads nerd on and
then humiliates him by pulling a prank. There prank involved Sherry bringing
Crane into a dark classroom under the premise of make-out time, and then scare
the pants off of him when Bo jumped out of the darkness with a jack-o-lantern on
his head.
Simple, but effective. |
Fed up with being treated like
this, Crane plotted some payback. At the night of the prom, he dressed up in
his scarecrow costume, and then “attacked” Bo and Sherry in the parking lot with
a realistic looking water pistol. This little stunt lead to a car accident that
killed Sherry and left Bo paralyzed from the waist down. Rather than be, well,
disgusted with that his petty revenge completely destroyed two lives, Crane was
pleased with himself. And this incident further developed his interest in “fear.”
An interest that had been growing since those early days stuck in the church
being attacked by birds. Speaking of, Crane decided to seek further vengeance,
this time on Grandma. He exposed her to his variation of the chemicals that she
used to stir up the crows at the church. The fear inducing effects of the
chemicals literally scared the old bat to death. Despite three people connected
to Crane dying or being seriously injured, Crane somehow escaped police
suspicion and went on to college. He majored in Psychology. Who’d of thought?
At Gotham University, Crane became
the favorite student of a psychology professor named Avram Bramowitz. Crane
deeply respected Bramowitz, but also resented his mentor for dismissing “the
psychology of fear” which so deeply fascinated Crane. After receiving his degree,
he attempted to become Bramowitz’ college at Gotham U, but unfortunately there
were no available positions in the Psychology department. Unfortunate for
Bramowitz, that is. Crane returned to his old love, Chemistry, to get what he
wanted. He was able to create an incredibly powerful hallucinogen that caused
people to see their greatest fears. He used it on Bramowitz, whom died from its
effects. Apparently killing his mentor and basically stealing his position was
preferable to getting a job at another school, earn some Professor street cred,
and waiting for a position to open up. Supervillains, man, they can be dumb.
Crane’s new job didn’t last all that long, though. He was fired for nearly
injuring a student. He had shot a flower pot during his lecture to demonstrate
the body’s fear response, and part of the pot nearly took a student’s eye out.
Karma’s a pain, isn’t it, Crane? Crane missed the life lesson here, though, as
he used his fear toxins to kill several members of the Gotham U faculty that
dismissed him.
He was temporarily deputized as a Sinestro Corps member. Seems like a match made in heaven. |
Around this time, he was somehow
able to get a job at Arkham Asylum. Oh, those poor crazy folks. Crane basically
tortured his patients through his fear “experiments.” Thankfully for the folks
at Arkham, the Batman was looking into the deaths of the Gotham U Dean and
Regents that had fired Crane. Batman and Captain James Gordon tracked down
Crane, is his new alias as The Scarecrow. He and Batman duke it out, and Batman
takes him out. Crane is then locked in the very prison he’d turned into his
personal playground. I bet some of the inmates had a few words to share with
their former doctor. Crane has repeatedly escaped Arkham Asylum and is one of
Batman’s most dangerous and deranged foes.
Much like his arch-foe Batman,
Scarecrow has no superhuman abilities other than above average intelligence. He
was able to develop a powerful fear inducing gas that causes their victims to
experience terrifying hallucinations. He uses his Scarecrow mask to both
enhance the fear effects of the gas, and to protect himself from stronger doses
of his chemicals. Repeated exposure has render him immune to the fear toxin, so
now he mostly wears the mask for the “increase freak out” reasons. Despite
being a skinny, physically unintimidating man, Crane has shown to be a very
accomplished fighter. He combines Crane Style Kung Fu with drunken boxing to
create “violent dancing.” That is what he calls it. He also uses a Scythe every
now and then, to fit with his Scarecrow motif.
Scarecrow is one of Batman’s
longest running foes. He dates back all the way to the 1940s, and the original
Batman comics.
Cartoon. Creepier. Full on Nightmare fuel. He'll be joining Venom in my Nightmares. |
He was a recurring character in Batman: The Animated Series. In his
initial episode “Nothing to Fear,” we see him doing his “vengeance on the
school board” plot. He drugs Batman with his fear toxin when the Dark Knight
tries to stop him from burning the Gotham U’s funds. His greatest fear? Not
Bats, seeing Papa Thomas Wayne chastising him for being Batman. Batman is able
to overcome these psychological problems just in time to save the Dean of
Gotham U from a blip that Scarecrow had commandeered. As time goes on Scarecrow
goes through some major design changes. The picture is to the right. Yeah, goes
from cartoony to nightmare fuel in just a handful of years. Creator Bruce Timm
describes him as a western style preacher, with a noose on his neck and an
overall “Texas Chainsaw Massacre Leatherface,” kind of look.
Cillian Murphy portrayed Jonathan
Crane/Scarecrow in every film of the “Dark Knight” film series. He was
introduced as one of two villains in Batman
Begins. He’s a corrupt head psychiatrist at Arkham Asylum. In exchange for transferring
mobster Carmine Falcone’s thugs to Arkham Asylum, a lesser sentence for their
crimes, Falcone smuggled Drugs into Gotham for Crane. After Falcone is captured
and beaten by Batman, and then arrested, he attempts to force Crane to transfer
him to Arkham. Crane, who’s done putting up with this crap, puts on his
Scarecrow mask and doses Falcone with enough fear toxin that his brain is
basically fried. When Batman starts investigating the drug smuggling, he runs
into Scarecrow in the Gotham slums, the Narrows. Scarecrow gets him with the
fear Toxin and then sets him on fire. Batman is saved by butler Alfred, and
family friend Lucius Fox. When Batman’s friend and assistant DA Rachel Dawes
confronts Crane about what he’s doing at Arkham, Crane gives her a dose of the
fear toxin. Batman uncovers Scarecrow’s plot, tracks them down, gets Crane’s
mask off and gives him a taste of his own medicine. Crane completely loses it,
and tells Batman that he was working with Ra’s al Ghul, whom Batman believed he’d
killed. In the finale, where the real Ra’s attacks Gotham with Scarecrow’s fear
toxin, Scarecrow rides a horse and scares the heck out of folks. He takes a
Taser to the face and rides out of the film. Crane has a minor role in The Dark Knight, where he’s become a
drug dealer. He gets captured by Batman in the opening act. He’s given the job
of head of “justice” department in Gotham once Bane takes over the city. He
gives people the choice of death or exile, which involves walking across an only
partially frozen river. He’s arrested in the finale.
He's back and arguably better than ever. I bet he misses his nose, though. |
We see him in Batman: Arkham Asylum, as part of Joker’s attempted takeover the
prison hospital. He uses a glove with hypodermic needles on the fingers to
inject people with his fear toxin. Batman gets injected and taken into a disturbing
nightmare world where he needs to dodge a colossal Scarecrow’s gaze. Once
Batman overcomes the toxin, he flees into the sewers. His plan was to dump a
huge amount of fear toxin into the water, infecting Gotham with his poison. He’s
stopped, not by Batman, but the even more insane Killer Croc. The lizard
looking monster brutalizes Crane. He somehow survives, and can be seen in an
after credits scene grabbing a box of the potent and dangerous upgraded Venom
formula, the Titan formula.
He returns in Batman: Arkham Knight. Much like in Batman: The Animated Series, Scarecrow goes through a major
redesign for his return. Picture is to the left. He works with the Gotham
Knight to take over Gotham and kill Batman.
Much like Black Mask, Scarecrow is
an interesting Mirror Villain to Batman. Like the Dark Knight, Crane uses fear
to cripple and torment his foes. But, unlike Batman, Crane enjoys torturing his
victims with that fear. Which obviously Batman doesn’t. I think. His signature
Fear Toxin, despite being suspiciously similar to Joker’s Laughing Gas, is a
powerful weapon that he uses to devastating effect. It’ll be interesting if he
returns to the big screen universe in the new DC Movie Universe. If they’re
doing Killer Croc, just about anything is possible. He’s the psychotic psychiatrist,
the master of fear, the malevolent Scarecrow. Next time, a monster based on a
rhyme, Solomon Grundy.
http://vignette4.wikia.nocookie.net/batman/images/c/c0/ScarecrowArkham2.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20111031200805
http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/batman/images/7/7b/32322-scarecrow_400.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20080329035709
http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/batman/images/6/60/1454605-scarecrow.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20110829184340
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scarecrow_(DC_Comics)#/media/File:Scarecrow_(Animated).jpg
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