Both of these comic book movies have a PeeWee Herman reference who by the way, starred in
both franchises in 1992 and 2014.
Paul Reubens aka PeeWee Herman stars as Penguin's father in Batman Returns and in Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles, Mikey and Donnie dance to Tequila, a song made popular to young audiences 5 years
earlier by PeeWee Herman in PeeWee's Big Adventure.
The movies about these creatures that get thrown in the sewers and are exposed to green
radioactive residue.
The mutants are raised by animals in the sewers and grow up with awkward values so they can't
function in society.
For that reason, the creature stays underground and watches the world down from below staying
hidden in the shadows waiting patiently for the perfect moment to reveal himself.
Crime rates for underground organized crime are at an all time high.
There's more people stealing from one another than in the Grand Theft Auto 3 game.
A nosey woman does some investigating and she thinks she figures out who's behind
it all.
All signs point to the men at city hall.
She tells her boss (audio).
This is a stupid idea because her boss is corrupted and is black mailed by the very
people she's trying to expose (audio).
She's fired for being nosey and hard headed (audio).
We also learn the bad guys have the cops on payroll too during the scene where the reporter
keeps asking all the questions and the men keep saying no comment or whatever.
One night, the woman is walking and minding her own business and the bad guy's goons
grab her and try to beat her up.
She gets saved by this one guy and before she could even say thank you, he disappears.
The woman picks up the weapon left behind at the crime scene and she's all like next
time I'm about to get mugged, I'm gonna use this.
The next time an attack happens in the movie, someone is knocked unconscious and taken down
into the sewers.
When the person wakes up, he or she thinks it's a dream (audio).
The sad part is, it's not a dream, it's really happening.
The city is really under siege and the villain sends his henchman to terrorize innocent people.
His henchman are skilled in the arts of ninjutsu and they're skilled in the arts of blowing up buildings with
no one inside them.
A vigilante gets pissed off and takes the law into his own five fingers.
He's on a rooftop and sees someone in danger a couple of rooftops down.
He barges in and starts a fight with the bad guys then it gets out of hand and somebody
falls through the glass.
The hero tries to save the damsel in distress.
This is quite commendable because most of the time, most of the men in the movie don't
know how to treat a lady so the fact that the vigilante risks his life every
night and day to save helpless woman turns the main chick on in the movie.
They become romantically involved.
While they're busy getting busy, the bad guy decides to put his plan into motion.
He plans on collecting all the sons of the cities and bring them to his underground lair
Afterwards, he kidnaps someone and holds him hostage.
The bad guy gets some paperwork about the good guys and goes crazy.
One of the members on the villain's team thinks he's gone too far.
The villain turns on him because if you're not with him, you're against him.
The underground army scatters and runs out the sewers and takes the fight to the streets.
The vigilante meets up with the henchman and instead of fighting with them, the vigilante
convinces the henchman to betray their master.
They all sell out the bad guy.
It's both a literal and figurative fall from grace for the bad guy because he falls
to his doom after the betrayal.
The girl who got fired meets up with her old boss and he apologizes then gives her an offer
she can't refuse (audio).
At the end, the girl shows she's in charge and forces the man to kiss her (audio).
Both of these films are decent, but both were criticized for being way too dark for kids
at the time of their release.
For that reason, both films made cheesy sequels for younger viewers (audio).
Those are 24 reasons these movies are the same.
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