DC Officially Confirms New 12-Part Batman & Robin Series, With Catwoman as the Main Villain

DC is taking Batman fans back to where it all began with the announcement of a new 12-part Batman and Robin series starring the original Dynamic Duo, Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson. Leaning heavily into the classic era of Batman storytelling, the series will also feature Selina “Catwoman” Kyle as one of its primary antagonists.

With Batman boasting 87 years of comic book history, modern Dark Knight stories can often feel far removed from the era that first established the original Dynamic Duo. So much time has passed since Dick Grayson’s days as Robin that four other heroes have since taken up the mantle, each redefining the role. Now, DC is returning to the partnership that started it all, because when it comes to Batman and Robin, it’s hard to top the OGs.

















From the Caped Crusader to The Batman · Eight Questions
How Well Do You Know Batman?
“I’m Batman.”

Bob & BillDetective Comics #27, 1939

The Camp EraAdam West, 1966

Burton & SchumacherKeaton to Clooney, 1989–97

The Dark KnightBale & Ledger, 2005–12

The BatmanPattinson & Reeves, 2022–

01

Batman debuted in Detective Comics #27 in May 1939. Cartoonist Bob Kane received sole credit for creating the character for the next 76 years — on every comic, every TV series, every film — despite being only half of the real partnership. His uncredited collaborator wrote much of the original story, designed the cowl and cape, invented the name “Bruce Wayne,” named Gotham City, and helped create the Joker, the Penguin, the Riddler and Catwoman. DC finally added his name to all Batman credits in 2015. Who?




02

Batman: The Movie — released in July 1966 between the first and second seasons of the ABC TV series, featuring the “Holy Whatever, Batman!” tone, the four super-villain team-up (Joker, Penguin, Riddler, Catwoman), the shark-repellent Bat-spray, and the Batmobile/Batboat/Batcopter — is generally considered the first theatrical Batman feature film. Two earlier 1940s movie serials don’t qualify as standalone features. Which actor played Batman in this first theatrical feature?




03

Batman: The Animated Series (Fox Kids, 1992–1995) — the Bruce Timm/Eric Radomski production with the deco-noir “Dark Deco” backgrounds painted on black paper — is consistently ranked by fans and creators as the definitive screen Batman. Its central performance is so iconic that the actor reprised it across 30 years, every DC Animated Universe series, and a dozen Arkham-series video games. He died on November 10, 2022, and DC essentially treated his passing as the death of Batman’s voice. Name him.




04

Jack Nicholson’s Joker in Tim Burton’s Batman (1989) earned him an estimated $60–$90 million from a film for which his actual on-screen salary was a fairly modest $6 million — making it, dollar-for-dollar, one of the most famously lucrative single roles in Hollywood history. He achieved this by negotiating an unusual deal structure that other actors immediately tried (and largely failed) to copy. What was it?




05

After Ben Affleck stepped down from his planned solo Batman film, Warner Bros. handed the project to a new director who reconceived it as a noir-detective serial-killer story modelled on Se7en and Zodiac, runs 2h 56min, casts Robert Pattinson as a brooding second-year Bruce Wayne, and gives Paul Dano’s Riddler a Zodiac-style cipher gimmick. The Batman (2022) grossed $772 million worldwide. Who directed it?




06

Joel Schumacher’s Batman & Robin (1997) — with Bat-nipples on the suit, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Mr. Freeze spitting ice puns (“Let’s kick some ice!”), Uma Thurman’s Poison Ivy, Alicia Silverstone’s Batgirl, and an estimated $238 million box-office failure on a $125 million budget — is widely regarded as one of the worst superhero films ever made. It killed the live-action Batman franchise for eight years until Batman Begins (2005). Who played Batman in it?




07

Cesar Romero’s Joker on the 1966–1968 ABC Batman series — white grease-paint, green wig, red lipstick, manic giggle — remains one of the most-cited comedic TV villains in American history. Romero, a leading-man matinée idol since the 1930s, agreed to the role on one condition: he refused to do a specific thing for the makeup. You can still see what he refused if you look closely. What did Romero refuse?




08

Todd Phillips’s Joker (2019) — the standalone, R-rated, $1.07-billion-grossing Joaquin Phoenix vehicle that exists outside any DC continuity — was nominated for 11 Academy Awards, the most of any comic-book-derived film at the time. It won Best Actor for Phoenix. It also won exactly one other Oscar that night. Which?




The Bat-Signal Has Faded · Final Scorecard
Your Gotham Standing

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World’s Greatest Detective — or a Gotham red herring?

Set to release on August 12, 2026, Batman and Robin: Year One – Dynamic Duos #1 comes from the creative team of writer Mark Waid and artist Chris Samnee. The issue will kick off a 12-part series that serves as a sequel to the duo’s previously released Batman and Robin: Year One, continuing to explore Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson’s formative years together in this canon tale.

The official synopsis for the debut issue reads: “Batman and Robin are back in action! The Dark Knight and the Boy Wonder have been hard at work cleaning up the streets of Gotham City, and their partnership has only gotten tighter. But when a gang of street kids starts causing mischief, Batman and Robin will need to get to the bottom of where these kids came from and who is in charge!”

Batman and Robin: Year One Returns for a Sequel, With Catwoman as the Villain

Main Cover by Chris Samnee & Mat Lopes for Batman and Robin: Year One – Dynamic Duos #1 (2026)

Fans know that Waid is DC’s go-to writer when it comes to telling canon stories set in earlier periods of the publisher’s timeline, with Batman and Superman: World’s Finest, World’s Finest: Teen Titans, and New History of the DC Universe serving as prime examples. Batman and Robin: Year One also fell into this category, and its sequel will continue Waid’s fan-favorite habit of exploring untold chapters from DC’s past while keeping them firmly rooted in canon.

Readers can expect Batman and Robin: Year One – Dynamic Duos to capture the same tone and storytelling that made the original series such a success, with the narrative once again centering on the partnership between Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson. While it is unlikely that the series will introduce any major lore changes, it will be far from a simple retelling of the duo’s adventures, as the book promises to be “charting new territory for the early Dynamic Duo.”

Among the new territory that Waid and Samnee will explore is the introduction of a brand-new character “who may or may not choose to be Selina Kyle’s sidekick.” This is particularly intriguing because, while Catwoman has taken on a mentor-like role for characters such as Holly Robinson over the years, she has never really had what most fans would consider an iconic sidekick. As a result, this series may finally be introducing exactly that.

Speaking of Catwoman, the legendary Gotham Siren is set to become one of the most destabilizing forces in the series, though not in the typical villainous fashion. Readers of Waid and Samnee’s original Batman and Robin: Year One will remember that much of the story revolved around Bruce and Dick learning how to live together and function as a team. Dynamic Duos, on the other hand, will bring Selina into the mix and place emphasis on how “Catwoman divides them.”

Waid elaborated on this dynamic in an interview with DC Comics, explaining, “Dick’s still too young to understand why Batman doesn’t treat her like every other Gotham criminal, while Catwoman sees this little Robin punk as an obstacle to overcome if she wants to land her next big score…which might involve getting close to Batman! And chaos ensues.”

As a result, while Batman may not view Catwoman as the true villain of the story, Robin almost certainly will. That clash of perspectives looks poised to become one of the book’s biggest sources of conflict, setting the stage for plenty of hijinks and ensuing shenanigans between the original Dynamic Duo of Bruce Wayne’s Batman and Dick Grayson’s Robin.

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Disney’s The Mandalorian and Grogu movie just released, and fans already have a new adventure for the iconic Star Wars duo to look forward to.

Batman and Robin: Year One – Dynamic Duos #1 from DC Comics will be available to read on August 12, 2026!

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