The Green Hornet--in the Bat cave? With their partners Robin and Kato held prisoner, Batman and the Green Hornet are forced to put aside differences and plan their next move together.
Overall: Possibly the strongest issue yet, it starts high, and that energy never falters throughout the issue. There are laughs, there's peril, and the plot is coming together in a pretty logical manner. A genuinely great comic that demonstrates how Batman can be used believably in most any situation. Read Full Review
Batman '66 Meets The Green Hornet continues its campy quest through the digital medium. Though the overall plot is progressing slowly courtesy of the digital medium, brilliant banter and astonishing art more than make this worth a $1.99 purchase. Garman and Smith have even managed to include narration panels, which one can't help but read in the voice of the late, great William Dozier. Surely, the former showrunner is looking at this comic from the beyond with a smile that would put the Joker to shame. Read Full Review
Batman '66 meets the Green Hornet #5 was one of the better issues of the series. It was fun and that's something I've found missing from the book as a whole. Smith and Garman finally deliver the dialogue and situations I was hoping for and Ty Templeton's art remains great. Recommended. Read Full Review
This series can't lose! Anything that seems like lazy writing, like just letting the villains walk away with your sidekick, just adds the campy charm and it probably done on purpose.