In the scene where Batman feeds the Alphabet spaghetti into the Batcomputer, he clearly leaves a large portion of the letters behind despite saying he has them all and the Batcomputer still manages to produce the secret message from Pinky Pinkston.
Note the odd scene in the episode, right after the Batcomputer goes out, when Robin and Batman basically switch roles. Burt Ward starts talking in a pedantic Batman-style, making incredible deductions, and calling Batman "old chum", while Adam West says "gee" a lot and acts dumb.
While filming the climactic fight, which involves Robin holding his own with Kato, played by world-class martial artist Bruce Lee. Lee initially began doing the fight sequence with Burt Ward in deadly seriousness, ominously coming after him while Burt Ward squawking "It's only a TV show." Lee finally cracked up and burst into laughter.
Filming the climactic fight scene between The Dynamic Duo, Green Hornet and Kato proved to be rather sticky, for the actors involved refused to allow their characters to be defeated! Finally, producer Bill Dozier was summoned to straighten out the whole deal, as the stunt doubles just sat there and waited. Dozier said, "Look, it's a Mexican standoff. Nobody wins. You have this big fight. At the end of it, you just stop it and stare at each other; that's the end of the fight." Thus, the scene was reconstructed to--natch!--"Batman's Satisfaction"!
Batman and The Green Hornet were filmed on the same Culver City lot, and shared the same network and producer.
Edward G. Robinson talking art during the bat-cameo: Edward G. Robinson was best known for his roles as gangsters in films. However, few of his film fans knew he also was a sophisticated art collector.
User Score: 685
User Score: 2367
User Score: 2096
User Score: 181
User Score: 112
User Score: 110
User Score: 107
User Score: 83
User Score: 64
User Score: 57