My Crossword Maker Logo
Powered by BrightSprout
Save Status:
or to save your progress. The page will not refresh.
Controls:
SPACEBAR SWITCHES TYPING DIRECTION
Answer Key:
Edit a Copy:
Make Your Own:
Crucigrama Sopa de Letras Hoja de Trabajo
Calificar este Puzzle:
Log in or sign up to rate this puzzle.

1960's TV & Movie Batman

Horizontales
Originally, the Batman TV show was serious, but it soon became this adjective associated with comedy, play and satire.
This is the name of the butler character who had been killed in the comic books but who was brought back to life for the sake of the Batman TV show. After, both future movies and comic books decided to keep him alive in order to support Batman.
The location of this one particular set of the 1960's Batman show was the same as the set of the King Kong's 1933 Skull Island.
This word describes the emotional attitude of many Batman comic-book fans who wanted Batman to be taken seriously.
Batman magazines, t-shirts, costumes, posters, banners, records, etc. were everywhere in this marketing reality. In 1966, this thing of marketing made it become the biggest marketing craze since the rock group Beatles of 1964.
The formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named (e.g., pow! bam! splat, sizzle, etc.). for rhetorical effect.
The 1960's TV series actually popularized this once minor Batman villain and made him into one of Batman's infamous nemeses.
Verticales
This Las Vegas icon and entertainer was a huge fan of Batman and he actually expressed keen interest in acting out the Joker villain role.
Robin's character used this cliched adjective 352 times during the show's three years. Besides meaning "sacred," it also can be part of an an interjection which expresses humorous surprise and dismay.
The 1960's Batman had many of these a short appearances or "descriptive sketches that neatly encapsulates a short appearance of someone.
The bust of this English playwright was used to hide a secret switch to open the bookcase that opens up to the Batcave's fireman poles.
During the show's third and final season, this new character was added. The character never quite fit in but reportedly her character did bring in younger male viewers to the third year of the 1960's show.
In all the scenes of the villains' hideouts, the camera was filmed at an angle described this way by this English past participle. This camera shot is also known as an "oblique" or "dutch" angle.
Each main villain had their own particular, distinctive type of kind of music.