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{{Short description|Season of television series}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2021}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2021}}
{{Infobox television season
{{Infobox television season
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* [[Robin Givens]]
* [[Robin Givens]]
* Nick Creegan
* Nick Creegan
* [[Cillian Murphy]]
* [[Dougray Scott]]
}}
}}
|num_episodes= 10
|num_episodes=10
|network=[[Mob Network]]
|network=[[Mob Network]]
|first_aired={{Start date|2025|1|17}}
|first_aired={{Start date|2025|1|17}}
|last_aired={{End date|2025|3|21}}
|last_aired={{End date|2025|3|21}}
|episode_list=List of Batwoman episodes
|episode_list=List of Batwoman episodes
|image=BW Season 4 Poster 2.png
|image=[[File:BW Season 4 Poster 2.png|250px]]
|caption=Home media cover
|caption=Home media cover
|showrunner=Benjamin Knowles}}
|showrunner=Benjamin Knowles
The fourth and final season of the American television series ''[[Batwoman (TV series)|Batwoman]]'', which is based on the DC Comics character of the same name, premiered on [[The CW]] on January 17, 2025, with 10 episodes and concluded on March 21, 2025. It is set in the [[Arrowverse]], sharing continuity with the other television series of the universe. The season was produced by Berlanti Productions, Warner Bros. Television, and DC Entertainment, with Benjamin Knowles serving as showrunner.
}}
The fourth and final season of the American superhero television series ''[[Batwoman (TV series)|Batwoman]]'', based on the [[DC Comics]] character of the same name, premiered on [[Mob Network]] on January 17, 2025, and concluded on March 21, 2025. The season consists of 10 episodes and is set in the [[Arrowverse]], sharing continuity with the other television series of the franchise. It was produced by Berlanti Productions, Warner Bros. Television, DC Entertainment, and Mob Network Studios, with Benjamin Knowles serving as showrunner.
 
The season follows [[Ryan Wilder / Batwoman]] as she continues protecting [[Gotham City]] while facing a criminal campaign involving [[Doctor Phosphorus]], [[Black Mask]], and [[Carmine Falcone]]. The story also explores Ryan's grief following the death of her mother, Jada Jet, the consequences of Gotham's failed institutions, the redemption of Alice, and the future of the Batwoman legacy after years of masked crime and vigilante conflict. The final season resolves several long-running character arcs while connecting Ryan's future to the wider Arrowverse.


The season was ordered in November 2023 and production began in July 2024. [[Javicia Leslie]] stars as [[Ryan Wilder / Batwoman]], with principal cast members [[Rachel Skarsten]], [[Meagan Tandy]], [[Nicole Kang]], [[Camrus Johnson]], [[Robin Givens]], [[Victoria Cartagena]], [[Cillian Murphy]], and [[Dougray Scott]], who returns from the first two seasons.
The season was ordered in November 2023 after Mob Network revived the series following its previous cancellation. Production began in June 2024 and concluded in November 2024. [[Javicia Leslie]], [[Rachel Skarsten]], [[Meagan Tandy]], Nicole Kang, Camrus Johnson, [[Victoria Cartagena]], [[Robin Givens]], Nick Creegan, [[Cillian Murphy]], and [[Dougray Scott]] star. The season received generally positive reviews from critics, who regarded it as an improvement over the series' earlier seasons and praised Leslie's performance, the darker tone, the final-season structure, and the increased focus on Gotham's criminal underworld. Criticism was directed at the amount of material compressed into the final episodes, though the finale was generally considered a satisfying conclusion to Ryan Wilder's story.


== Episodes ==
== Episodes ==
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== Cast and characters ==
== Cast and characters ==


===Main===
=== Main ===
* [[Javicia Leslie]] as [[Ryan Wilder|Ryan Wilder / Batwoman]]
* [[Javicia Leslie]] as [[Ryan Wilder|Ryan Wilder / Batwoman]], Gotham City's current Batwoman. Ryan begins the season with greater confidence in her role as the city's protector but is forced into a more personal conflict after Doctor Phosphorus targets her family and Carmine Falcone learns her secret identity.
* [[Rachel Skarsten]] as [[Beth Kane (Arrowverse)|Beth Kane / Alice]]
* [[Rachel Skarsten]] as [[Beth Kane (Arrowverse)|Beth Kane / Alice]], Kate Kane's twin sister and a former enemy of Team Batwoman. The final season follows Alice after her return from treatment overseas and places renewed emphasis on her relationship with Mary and Jacob.
* [[Meagan Tandy]] as [[Sophie Moore (Arrowverse)|Sophie Moore]]
* [[Meagan Tandy]] as [[Sophie Moore (Arrowverse)|Sophie Moore]], Ryan's partner and a former Crows agent. Sophie becomes involved in a Department of Defense investigation connected to Alexander Sartorius while also helping Ryan process the loss of Jada.
* Nicole Kang as [[Mary Hamilton (Arrowverse)|Mary Hamilton / Poison Mary]]
* Nicole Kang as [[Mary Hamilton (Arrowverse)|Mary Hamilton / Poison Mary]], a physician and member of Team Batwoman who returns to medical work after her earlier transformation and uses her experience to treat victims of Doctor Phosphorus's radiation attacks.
* Camrus Johnson as [[Luke Fox (Arrowverse)|Luke Fox / Batwing]]
* Camrus Johnson as [[Luke Fox (Arrowverse)|Luke Fox / Batwing]], Ryan's ally and the son of Lucius Fox. Luke continues operating as Batwing while upgrading his suit and investigating the technological components of Carmine's plan.
* [[Cillian Murphy]] as [[Doctor Phosphorus|Alexander Sartorius / Doctor Phosphorus]]
* [[Victoria Cartagena]] as [[Renee Montoya (Arrowverse)|Renee Montoya]], a former Gotham City police officer whose knowledge of Gotham's criminal infrastructure aids Team Batwoman.
* [[Dougray Scott]] as [[Jacob Kane]]
* [[Robin Givens]] as [[Jezebel Jet|Jada Jet]], Ryan's biological mother and the head of Jet Industries, whose death in the premiere becomes a major emotional catalyst for the season.
* Nick Creegan as [[Marquis Jet]], Ryan's half-brother and the previous season's central antagonist, whose death contributes to Alice's final arc.
* [[Cillian Murphy]] as [[Doctor Phosphorus|Alexander Sartorius / Doctor Phosphorus]], a radioactive metahuman who is manipulated into serving a larger criminal conspiracy. The character is initially presented as the season's primary antagonist before being revealed as one of Carmine Falcone's victims.
* [[Dougray Scott]] as [[Jacob Kane]], Kate and Alice's father, who returns to Gotham in an attempt to reconnect with Mary and help the team confront the city's escalating threats.


===Recurring===
=== Recurring ===
* [[Donny Lucas]] as the voice of [[Lucius Fox]] A.I.
* [[Donny Lucas]] as the voice of [[Lucius Fox]] A.I., an artificial intelligence modeled after Luke's father.
* [[Wallis Day]] as [[Kate Kane (Arrowverse)|Kate Kane]], the original Batwoman, who returns in the finale following her travels away from Gotham.
* [[Peter Outerbridge]] as [[Roman Sionis / Black Mask]], a former crime lord who returns after being released through corruption in Gotham's justice system.
* [[Richard Kind]] as [[Carmine Falcone]], a powerful Gotham crime boss who emerges as the architect behind Doctor Phosphorus's actions and the season's central conspiracy.
* [[Natalie Alyn Lind]] as [[Holly Robinson]], a vigilante whose connection to Tobias Whale and knowledge of Promethium draws her into Ryan's fight against Doctor Phosphorus.
* [[Allison Riley]] as Dana DeWitt, an early victim of Doctor Phosphorus whose attack draws Team Batwoman into the larger investigation.
* [[Chad L. Coleman]] as [[Tobias Whale]], Doctor Phosphorus's former employer, whose connection to Holly helps Ryan uncover part of the conspiracy.
* [[Terry Chen]] as Simon Stagg, the head of Stagg Industries, whose murder is used by Carmine Falcone to frame Doctor Phosphorus.


===Guest===
=== Guest ===
* [[Robin Givens]] as [[Jezebel Jet|Jada Jet]]
* [[Joseph Gordon-Levitt]] as [[Killer Moth]], a drone-based serial killer sent to test Batwoman and distract the team from the larger threat.
* Nick Creegan as Marquis Jet
* [[Brendan Fraser]] as [[Kirk Langstrom / Man-Bat]], a monstrous criminal who raids Stagg Industries and works alongside Doctor Phosphorus.
* [[Joseph Gordon-Levitt]] as [[Killer Moth]]
* [[Grant Gustin]] as [[Barry Allen (Arrowverse)|Barry Allen / The Flash]], who appears in the finale's flash-forward sequence.
* [[Javicia Leslie]] as [[Red Death (Arrowverse)|Red Death]], an alternate version of Ryan Wilder seen in connection with the finale's Arrowverse epilogue.


== Production ==
== Production ==
=== Background ===
''Batwoman'' originally aired for three seasons before its revival by Mob Network. The previous season ended with Ryan Wilder defeating Marquis Jet and accepting her place as Gotham's Batwoman, while also leaving several unresolved character threads involving Alice, Mary, Sophie, and the future of Gotham's criminal underworld. After the series moved to Mob Network, the creative team sought to produce a shorter final season that could serve as both a continuation of the third season and a conclusion to Ryan's story.
The revival was positioned as a limited concluding season rather than the beginning of a long-term continuation. The production team intended to avoid undoing the events of the third season and instead used the fourth season to revisit consequences from across the series. The writers also treated Gotham itself as a central presence, using the city's abandoned institutions, corrupt police networks, damaged industrial sites, and criminal families as recurring symbols of the legacy Ryan inherits as Batwoman.
The season's darker crime-focused structure was designed to contrast with the more episodic villain format of earlier seasons. Rather than building the entire season around one costumed antagonist, the writers constructed the season as a chain of escalating threats, beginning with Doctor Phosphorus and gradually revealing Carmine Falcone as the figure controlling the board. This allowed the season to combine metahuman horror, organized crime, and personal drama while giving Ryan a final challenge that was both physical and ideological.


=== Development ===
=== Development ===
A fourth season was ordered after the series was revived by [[Mob Networks]], which is scheduled to premiere on January 17, 2025.
A fourth season was ordered in November 2023 after Mob Network entered negotiations to revive the series. Benjamin Knowles was announced as showrunner and developed the season as a 10-episode final installment. The shorter episode count was selected to keep the story tightly focused and to avoid extending the central mystery beyond its planned conclusion. Knowles described the season as a story about the "last war for Gotham's soul", with Ryan forced to face not only new villains but also the long-term damage left behind by Batman, the Crows, Black Mask, and the city's criminal families.
 
The decision to make the season the final installment was made during early development. Mob Network and the producers agreed that a definitive ending would give the writers more freedom to resolve character arcs instead of leaving major storylines open for a potential fifth season. The writers therefore structured the season around closure: Ryan's future as Batwoman, Alice's redemption, Sophie's relationship with Ryan, Jacob's fractured family, and Luke's identity as Batwing were all mapped before the final scripts were completed.
 
Doctor Phosphorus was chosen as the season's opening villain because the writers wanted a threat who could visually and thematically separate the revival from the previous seasons. His radiation-based powers allowed the production team to stage more destructive action sequences while tying the character to Gotham's industrial history. Carmine Falcone was later selected as the ultimate antagonist because the writers felt the final season needed a villain whose power came from corruption, influence, and control rather than only physical strength. Falcone's presence also allowed the season to explore Gotham before and after Batman, connecting the series finale to the wider mythology of the city.
 
Freddie Goodwin joined the season during development and wrote and directed several later episodes, including the finale. His involvement shaped the second half of the season, which became more serialized and action-heavy after the reveal of Carmine Falcone. The final two episodes were designed as a two-part conclusion, with "Fallout" functioning as the season's large-scale disaster episode and "Gotham Reforged" serving as the emotional finale for Ryan, Alice, Sophie, Mary, Luke, Jacob, and Kate.


=== Writing ===
=== Writing ===
The showrunner for the season Benjamin Knowles has stated that the fourth season of ''Batwoman'' would be shorter and have a similar quality to the third season. He confirmed that the villains: Killer Moth, Doctor Phosphorus, and various other villains would appear in the season. The season will be set in 2022.  
The writing staff began work on the season in early 2024. The writers initially considered building the entire season around Doctor Phosphorus, but later reworked the outline so that he would become a tragic figure manipulated by Carmine Falcone. This change was made to prevent the season from becoming a conventional villain-of-the-season arc and to give Ryan a moral conflict: whether she should defeat Phosphorus or attempt to save him.
 
Ryan's grief over Jada Jet's death became one of the season's main emotional throughlines. The writers used the death to test Ryan's belief that she could build a stable life outside the Batwoman identity. Rather than portraying the loss as a simple revenge motive, the season follows Ryan as she tries to remain compassionate while facing increasingly brutal attacks on Gotham. Her relationship with Sophie was written as the season's emotional anchor, providing Ryan with a contrast to the isolation experienced by Bruce Wayne and Kate Kane.
 
Alice's storyline was planned as the final resolution of the Beth Kane arc that began in the first season. The writers avoided presenting her redemption as immediate or uncomplicated, instead showing her as unstable, remorseful, and still capable of violence. Her killing of Marquis and later Carmine was written to blur the line between punishment and redemption, while her decision to return to prison in the finale was intended to show accountability rather than simple absolution. The decision to have her pardoned was developed as part of the finale's broader theme that Gotham's future requires mercy as well as justice.
 
The season also gives Luke Fox and Mary Hamilton more defined roles within Team Batwoman. Luke's arc focuses on whether he can continue being Batwing without being consumed by the same legacy of secrecy and sacrifice that defined his father and Bruce Wayne. Mary, after her earlier transformation as Poison Mary, is written as someone who deliberately chooses healing over power. The season repeatedly places her in medical scenes, using her work with burn victims and Doctor Phosphorus to reconnect her to her original purpose in the series.
 
The final episode's flash-forward was developed after the writers decided the season should not end solely with Carmine's defeat. Knowles wanted the conclusion to acknowledge Ryan's future in the Arrowverse without turning the finale into a backdoor pilot. The sequence showing Ryan in Central City, Kate's return, Alice's redemption, and Ryan's future family life was written as a broad epilogue rather than a setup for another season.


=== Casting ===
=== Casting ===
[[Javicia Leslie]] reprises her role as [[Ryan Wilder / Batwoman]], [[Meagan Tandy]] as Sophie Moore, [[Camrus Johnson]] as Luke Fox, [[Allison Riley]] as Dana DeWitt, [[Robin Givens]] as Jada Jet, [[Rachel Skarsten]] as Alice, and [[Cillian Murphy]] as Doctor Phosphorus / Alexander Sartorius. [[Dougray Scott]] returns as [[Jacob Kane (Arrowverse)|Jacob Kane]].
Javicia Leslie returned as Ryan Wilder / Batwoman after leading the second and third seasons. Leslie's role in the final season was expanded to include both the physical action of Batwoman and more emotionally restrained scenes focused on grief, legacy, and family. Meagan Tandy, Nicole Kang, and Camrus Johnson also returned as Sophie Moore, Mary Hamilton, and Luke Fox, continuing the core Team Batwoman dynamic established after Ryan became the lead character.
 
Rachel Skarsten returned as Alice / Beth Kane, with the final season placing renewed focus on her relationship with Jacob and Mary. Dougray Scott returned as Jacob Kane after being absent from the third season's main cast. His return was designed to provide closure to the Kane family storyline and allow Jacob to confront the consequences of his earlier failures with Kate, Beth, and Mary. Robin Givens and Nick Creegan returned as Jada Jet and Marquis Jet, though both characters are killed during the season.
 
Cillian Murphy was cast as Alexander Sartorius / Doctor Phosphorus. The role was written as a combination of antagonist, victim, and horror figure, requiring extensive prosthetic and visual-effects work. Murphy's casting was intended to give the character a tragic quality beneath the radioactive threat. Richard Kind joined the season as Carmine Falcone, while Peter Outerbridge returned as Roman Sionis / Black Mask. The use of both Falcone and Black Mask allowed the writers to connect the revived season to Gotham's organized-crime history while differentiating Carmine's more calculated style from Roman's theatrical violence.
 
Wallis Day returned as Kate Kane for the finale. Her appearance was kept limited to preserve Ryan as the season's central Batwoman while still acknowledging Kate's importance to the series' history. Grant Gustin appeared as Barry Allen / The Flash in the finale's epilogue, connecting Ryan's story to the events surrounding Red Death. Leslie also appears as Red Death in archival and flash-forward material, linking the finale to Ryan's multiversal counterpart.


=== Filming ===
=== Filming ===
Filming began production on June 19, 2024, and concluded on November 22.
Filming began on June 19, 2024, and concluded on November 22, 2024. Production took place primarily in Vancouver, British Columbia, with additional exterior photography used for Gotham City establishing shots. The season used a mixture of standing sets, industrial locations, nighttime street photography, and digitally extended cityscapes to create a heavier and more damaged version of Gotham than the previous season.
 
The production schedule was built around the season's increasing scale. Early episodes focused on crime scenes, medical settings, rooftops, and Wayne Tower interiors, while the final episodes required larger sets representing Stagg Industries, damaged city blocks, Wayne Industries, the GCPD armory, and Carmine's Promethium reactor facility. The production team reused several existing Gotham sets from earlier seasons but redressed them to reflect the city's decline after years of attacks, corruption, and vigilante conflict.
 
Action sequences were designed to distinguish the main threats. Doctor Phosphorus's fights emphasized radiation bursts, heat distortion, and close-contact danger, while Black Mask's return used more traditional hostage and siege staging. Carmine Falcone's sequences relied more heavily on machinery, corrupted police, plant-based attacks, and citywide destruction. Luke's Batwing suit was modified for the final season to appear heavier and more armored, reflecting his preparation for metahuman threats.
 
The finale required the most extensive production work. Several scenes involving Ivy's tendrils, the destruction of Batwing's suit, Ryan's disappearance, and the flash-forward to Central City were completed with a combination of practical sets and visual effects. The final montage was filmed near the end of production so that returning cast members could complete their scenes together.
 
=== Design and visual effects ===
Doctor Phosphorus's design was one of the season's main visual challenges. The production team avoided making him appear fully skeletal in every scene, instead using a combination of burned skin textures, glowing fissures, heat distortion, and radioactive light to suggest instability. His look becomes progressively weaker and more damaged as Carmine subjects him to further radiation experiments.
 
Carmine's Promethium reactor was designed as a contrast to the Batcave and Wayne technology. While Wayne Industries is presented with colder lighting and precision engineering, Carmine's reactor facility uses harsher industrial architecture, exposed wiring, and unstable energy pulses. The reactor's visual language was intended to make Gotham's criminal infrastructure feel as technologically dangerous as its superheroes.
 
The Batwing suit received new armor plating and reinforced wings for the final season. The changes were designed to make Luke appear more prepared for large-scale threats, which makes the destruction of the suit in the finale more significant. Wayne Industries sets were also updated to include more visible security systems, reflecting the season's focus on stolen technology and surveillance.
 
The visual-effects team created recurring radiation effects for Doctor Phosphorus, Promethium energy, Metallo's power source, and Ivy's plant-based attacks. The plane crash in "Fallout" was the largest visual-effects sequence of the season and was designed to be shown largely through aftermath and character reaction rather than prolonged spectacle, allowing the episode to focus on Ryan's guilt and Gotham's devastation.
 
=== Music ===
The season's score continues the darker electronic and orchestral sound used in earlier seasons while adding harsher industrial elements for Doctor Phosphorus and Carmine Falcone. Ryan's theme is used more sparingly in the first half of the season, often appearing in quieter arrangements during scenes with Sophie, Jada, and Mary. As the season moves toward the finale, the theme returns in fuller form to emphasize Ryan's acceptance of her role as Gotham's long-term protector.
 
Alice's music uses fragments of earlier motifs from the series, but they are slowed and softened during scenes where she attempts to reconnect with Mary and Jacob. Doctor Phosphorus is accompanied by distorted pulses and unstable radiation-like tones, while Carmine's scenes use lower brass, strings, and mechanical percussion. The finale combines Ryan, Kate, and Alice's motifs during the closing montage.
 
== Themes ==
The final season focuses on legacy, accountability, and whether Gotham can change without erasing its violent past. Ryan's conflict with Doctor Phosphorus and Carmine Falcone forces her to confront different forms of inherited damage. Doctor Phosphorus represents a victim turned weapon, while Carmine represents a criminal system that survives by controlling victims, institutions, and public fear.
 
The season also contrasts justice with revenge. Ryan repeatedly attempts to prevent the people around her from becoming defined by retaliation, particularly Holly, Alice, and Jacob. Alice's arc is the clearest expression of this theme, as the finale does not erase her crimes but allows her to choose a more self-aware form of redemption. Mary and Luke's arcs similarly emphasize repair rather than punishment, with Mary returning to medicine and Luke working to protect Gotham without depending entirely on the Batwing identity.
 
Family remains a central theme. Ryan's relationship with Jada is cut short, leaving her to process forgiveness after death. Jacob's return allows the season to revisit the Kane family's unresolved pain, while Kate's finale appearance closes the gap between the show's original premise and Ryan's era as Batwoman. The final flash-forward reframes family as something Ryan builds rather than something she inherits, ending with her marriage to Sophie and their child.
 
== Release ==


== Broadcast ==
=== Broadcast ===
The season premiered on the [[Mob Network]] on January 17, 2025. The season consisted of 10 episodes and concluded on March 21, 2025.
The season premiered on Mob Network on January 17, 2025. New episodes aired weekly on Fridays until the finale on March 21, 2025. The season consisted of 10 episodes, making it the shortest season of the series. The broadcast schedule was designed to air without major interruptions, allowing the serialized story to unfold across ten consecutive weeks.


== Reception ==<!--===Ratings===-->
Although the series had previously aired on The CW, the fourth season was promoted as a Mob Network revival and final-season event. Marketing emphasized Ryan Wilder's final battle for Gotham, the return of Alice and Jacob Kane, and the introduction of Doctor Phosphorus. The second half of the campaign shifted attention toward Carmine Falcone after his identity was revealed in "The Crime Master".
 
=== Marketing ===
Mob Network released the first promotional poster for the season in late 2024, featuring Ryan in the Batwoman suit standing over a burning Gotham skyline. Subsequent trailers focused on Doctor Phosphorus, the death of Jada Jet, and Alice's return. Early marketing avoided revealing Carmine Falcone as the main antagonist and instead positioned Doctor Phosphorus as the season's primary villain.
 
The mid-season trailer released after "Under the Mask" highlighted the return of Black Mask, the growing threat against Wayne Industries, and the phrase "Gotham will kneel", which became associated with Carmine's campaign in later episodes. Marketing for the finale included footage of Batwing's damaged suit, Alice's release from custody, and Ryan's confrontation with Carmine, but kept Kate Kane's return and the Central City flash-forward secret until broadcast.
 
=== Home media and streaming ===
The season was made available on Mob Network's streaming service after each episode aired. A complete-season digital release followed the finale, with the home media release using ''Batwoman: The Final Season'' branding. Bonus features included deleted scenes, a featurette on Ryan Wilder's legacy, behind-the-scenes material on Doctor Phosphorus's makeup and visual effects, and cast interviews discussing the end of the series.
 
== Reception ==
 
=== Ratings ===
The season premiered to 0.59 million viewers and rose slightly for its second episode before dipping to a season low of 0.52 million viewers for "Inferno Rising". Viewership increased after Freddie Goodwin began writing and directing the second half of the season, with "Under the Mask" drawing 0.81 million viewers. The finale, "Gotham Reforged", was the most-watched episode of the season with 0.92 million viewers.
 
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center"
|+ Viewership and ratings per episode of ''Batwoman'' season 4
! scope="col" style="width:5%;" | No.
! scope="col" style="width:30%;" | Title
! scope="col" style="width:18%;" | Air date
! scope="col" style="width:18%;" | Viewers<br />(millions)
|-
! scope="row" | 1
| "The Ashes of Gotham"
| January 17, 2025
| 0.59
|-
! scope="row" | 2
| "The Burning Agenda"
| January 24, 2025
| 0.61
|-
! scope="row" | 3
| "Radiation Rising"
| January 31, 2025
| 0.56
|-
! scope="row" | 4
| "Inferno Rising"
| February 7, 2025
| 0.52
|-
! scope="row" | 5
| "Under the Mask"
| February 14, 2025
| 0.81
|-
! scope="row" | 6
| "Radiant Shadows"
| February 21, 2025
| 0.78
|-
! scope="row" | 7
| "The Crime Master"
| February 28, 2025
| 0.82
|-
! scope="row" | 8
| "Burnout"
| March 7, 2025
| 0.81
|-
! scope="row" | 9
| "Fallout"
| March 14, 2025
| 0.83
|-
! scope="row" | 10
| "Gotham Reforged"
| March 21, 2025
| 0.92
|}
 
=== Critical response ===
The fourth season received generally positive reviews from critics. Reviewers praised the season for giving the series a more focused final arc and for returning the show to a Gotham-centered crime story. Javicia Leslie's performance received particular praise, with critics noting that the season allowed Ryan to show grief, anger, restraint, and maturity without reducing her to a replacement for Kate Kane. The relationship between Ryan and Sophie was also positively received, especially for functioning as a stable emotional foundation during a season built around violence and loss.
 
Critics also responded positively to the use of Doctor Phosphorus as a tragic antagonist. His storyline was praised for avoiding a simple monster-of-the-week structure and for giving Ryan a moral dilemma rather than only a physical enemy. Cillian Murphy's performance was highlighted for bringing vulnerability to the character even beneath the makeup and effects. The reveal that Carmine Falcone had manipulated Doctor Phosphorus was generally seen as an effective shift that made the second half of the season more urgent.
 
The season's darker tone was considered an improvement by several reviewers, who felt that the shorter episode count prevented the story from drifting. The focus on Gotham's corruption, the return of Black Mask, and Carmine's attempt to weaponize the city's fear were described as stronger uses of the show's setting than some of the earlier seasons' more scattered plots. The production design, lighting, and action sequences were also considered more polished than expected for a revival season.
 
Some criticism was directed at the pacing. Several reviewers felt that the season introduced too many villains and concepts for only 10 episodes, particularly in the transition from Doctor Phosphorus to Carmine Falcone, Metallo, Poison Ivy's plant, and the finale's Arrowverse epilogue. "Fallout" was praised for scale but criticized by some for resolving the plane crash aftermath too quickly. The finale was also described as emotionally satisfying but crowded, with some critics arguing that Kate Kane's return and the flash-forward deserved more screen time.
 
Alice's ending received mixed-to-positive responses. Many critics praised Rachel Skarsten's performance and the decision to give Alice accountability rather than a clean heroic transformation. Others felt that her pardon happened too quickly after her history of violence. However, the scene in which she chooses to return to prison before being pardoned was widely described as one of the finale's strongest character moments.
 
=== Accolades ===
The season received recognition from genre television outlets for Leslie's performance and its series finale. "Gotham Reforged" was included on several year-end lists of notable superhero television finales, while the visual-effects work for Doctor Phosphorus and the Promethium reactor sequences received praise in technical reviews.
 
{| class="wikitable"
! Year
! Award
! Category
! Nominee(s)
! Result
|-
| rowspan="4" | 2025
| Saturn Television Awards
| Best Superhero Television Series
| ''Batwoman''
| {{nom}}
|-
| Saturn Television Awards
| Best Actress in a Superhero Series
| Javicia Leslie
| {{nom}}
|-
| Critics' Genre Television Honors
| Best Supporting Actress in a Superhero Series
| Rachel Skarsten
| {{nom}}
|-
| Genre Visual Effects Guild Awards
| Outstanding Visual Effects in a Broadcast Series
| "Fallout"
| {{nom}}
|}
 
== Analysis ==
Commentators viewed the fourth season as an attempt to reframe ''Batwoman'' around Ryan Wilder's completed legacy rather than the circumstances under which she originally inherited the mantle. Earlier seasons often positioned Ryan in relation to Kate Kane, Bruce Wayne, or the absent Batman, but the final season repeatedly places her decisions at the center of Gotham's future. By the finale, Ryan is no longer defined by being the second Batwoman; she becomes the version of Batwoman who remains after Gotham's old systems fail.
 
The season's use of Carmine Falcone was also analyzed as a return to grounded Gotham crime after several seasons involving larger comic-book threats. His power comes from corruption, fear, police control, stolen technology, and the manipulation of damaged people. This makes him a thematic opposite to Ryan, who spends the season building trust with Sophie, Luke, Mary, Jacob, and eventually Alice. The conflict is therefore less about whether Batwoman can defeat one villain and more about whether Gotham's protectors can prevent the city from surrendering to fear.
 
Ryan and Sophie's relationship was interpreted as one of the season's clearest statements of hope. Unlike Bruce Wayne, Kate Kane, or Alice, Ryan is allowed to imagine a future beyond trauma. The flash-forward showing her marriage to Sophie and their child presents heroism as something compatible with love and family, rather than something that requires total isolation. This ending was frequently contrasted with the darker fates of other Gotham vigilantes.
 
Alice's redemption arc was more divisive because it asks the audience to accept accountability and forgiveness without pretending her actions can be erased. Her final choice to stop Carmine and then return to custody suggests that redemption in the series is not a reward but a responsibility. Jacob forgiving her in the epilogue completes the Kane family storyline while still leaving the consequences of Alice's past intact.
 
== Legacy ==
The fourth season became the final entry of ''Batwoman'' and served as Ryan Wilder's closing chapter within the series. Its finale resolved the major relationships among Ryan, Sophie, Luke, Mary, Alice, Jacob, and Kate, while leaving Ryan active as a protector of Gotham and occasional ally of Earth-Prime's heroes. The season's final montage was intended to function as a definitive ending rather than a setup for a continuation.
 
The revival was later credited by fans of the series with giving ''Batwoman'' a more complete conclusion than it had received after its third season. Ryan's marriage to Sophie, Alice's return to the name Beth, and Kate's peaceful retirement were frequently cited as examples of the finale's attempt to provide closure to both the Ryan Wilder era and the original Kane family storyline. The season also strengthened Ryan's status within the Arrowverse by connecting her future to Central City and the Red Death storyline.
 
Although the season ended the series, its final scene left Ryan alive and active in Gotham, allowing the character to remain part of the wider Arrowverse continuity. Mob Network did not announce a direct spin-off after the finale, and the creative team stated that "Gotham Reforged" was written as the intended ending of the show.


== References ==
== References ==
<references group="" responsive="1"></references>
{{Reflist}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
* {{Official website}}
* {{IMDb title|tt8712204|Batwoman}}
{{Batwoman}}
{{Arrowverse}}
{{DC Comics television}}
[[Category:2025 American television seasons]]
[[Category:Batwoman (TV series)]]

Latest revision as of 10:46, 20 May 2026

Batwoman
Season 4
Home media cover
ShowrunnerBenjamin Knowles
Starring
No. of episodes10
Release
Original networkMob Network
Original releaseJanuary 17 (2025-01-17) –
March 21, 2025 (2025-03-21)
Season chronology
← Previous
Season 3
List of episodes

The fourth and final season of the American superhero television series Batwoman, based on the DC Comics character of the same name, premiered on Mob Network on January 17, 2025, and concluded on March 21, 2025. The season consists of 10 episodes and is set in the Arrowverse, sharing continuity with the other television series of the franchise. It was produced by Berlanti Productions, Warner Bros. Television, DC Entertainment, and Mob Network Studios, with Benjamin Knowles serving as showrunner.

The season follows Ryan Wilder / Batwoman as she continues protecting Gotham City while facing a criminal campaign involving Doctor Phosphorus, Black Mask, and Carmine Falcone. The story also explores Ryan's grief following the death of her mother, Jada Jet, the consequences of Gotham's failed institutions, the redemption of Alice, and the future of the Batwoman legacy after years of masked crime and vigilante conflict. The final season resolves several long-running character arcs while connecting Ryan's future to the wider Arrowverse.

The season was ordered in November 2023 after Mob Network revived the series following its previous cancellation. Production began in June 2024 and concluded in November 2024. Javicia Leslie, Rachel Skarsten, Meagan Tandy, Nicole Kang, Camrus Johnson, Victoria Cartagena, Robin Givens, Nick Creegan, Cillian Murphy, and Dougray Scott star. The season received generally positive reviews from critics, who regarded it as an improvement over the series' earlier seasons and praised Leslie's performance, the darker tone, the final-season structure, and the increased focus on Gotham's criminal underworld. Criticism was directed at the amount of material compressed into the final episodes, though the finale was generally considered a satisfying conclusion to Ryan Wilder's story.

Episodes

No.
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No. in
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TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
U.S. viewers
(millions)
521"The Ashes of Gotham"Patrick ReidBenjamin KnowlesJanuary 17, 2025 (2025-01-17)4–010.59
Months after the defeat of Marquis Jet, Ryan Wilder and Sophie Moore deepen their relationship as Ryan continues her vigilant work as Batwoman in Gotham City. Luke Fox uncovers that Dana DeWitt was hospitalized by a disfigured attacker later identified as Doctor Phosphorus. As Ryan struggles to repair her relationship with her mother, Jada Jet, who apologizes for abandoning her, Alice unexpectedly returns from a sanitarium overseas. Downtown Gotham comes under attack by Doctor Phosphorus, prompting Batwoman to intervene. During their confrontation, Phosphorus, revealed to be Alexander Sartorius, shares his tragic transformation after falling into a nuclear reactor during a battle with Batman. He shocks Ryan by claiming responsibility for Batman’s death before fleeing. Sophie is offered a position at the DOD, where she is tasked with investigating Alexander. Doctor Phosphorus kidnaps Jada and kills her when she refuses to reveal Batwoman’s identity. Meanwhile, Ryan learns from Luke that Doctor Phosphorus is being manipulated by an unknown force.
532"The Burning Agenda"Rabia NicholsonGeorgiana ValentineJanuary 24, 2025 (2025-01-24)4–020.61
Ryan, Sophie, Luke, and Mary Hamilton attend Jada's funeral, where Ryan forgives her mother for abandoning her. In the days that follow, Ryan struggles to process her grief, but Sophie helps her confront and release her emotions. Mary apologizes to Luke for her recent absence and returns to her medical practice, where she treats victims suffering burns from Doctor Phosphorus’s attacks. Meanwhile, Luke upgrades his Batwing suit to enhance its durability and begins tracking Doctor Phosphorus. Jacob Kane returns to Gotham to spend time with Mary in honor of Catherine Hamilton-Kane's birthday. Doctor Phosphorus strikes again, attacking a local factory and killing everyone inside to steal a Power Core Suppressor. Batwoman confronts him, but she is overpowered, allowing him to escape. Mary and Luke discover a potential substance that could neutralize Doctor Phosphorus’s powers. Sophie and Ryan decide to take a short vacation. Doctor Phosphorus meets with a shadowy figure, demanding guidance on his next move.
543"Radiation Rising"Cleo RubioHomer GutierrezJanuary 31, 2025 (2025-01-31)4–030.56
After returning from their vacation, Ryan is approached by Jacob, who asks for her help in locating and bringing Kate Kane back home. Meanwhile, a mysterious figure reveals their plan to use a powerful machine to enhance Doctor Phosphorus’s abilities and destroy Gotham, ensuring their dominance over the city. Amid the chaos, a serial killer calling himself "Killer Moth" unleashes a swarm of drones across Gotham, forcing Batwoman to intervene. Following a brief battle, Killer Moth takes his own life, warning that he was acting under orders from a higher power who wants Batwoman dead. Ryan updates the team, and Mary convinces Jacob to focus on helping them take down Gotham's villains instead of pursuing Kate. Alice attempts to apologize to Jacob for her past actions, but he refuses to forgive her and demands she stay away. Doctor Phosphorus strikes again, stealing Promethium, a rare and dangerous nuclear fuel, from a shipment yard. Ryan meets Holly Robinson, who shares knowledge of how to neutralize Promethium. Holly reveals her connection to Tobias Whale, Doctor Phosphorus’s former boss, who fired him when he plotted to kill his wife. Ryan uncovers Tobias's involvement in Gotham’s schemes, leading to his arrest. Holly agrees to join Ryan in the fight to stop Doctor Phosphorus.
554"Inferno Rising"Rebecca OlsonBridie LindseyFebruary 7, 2025 (2025-02-07)4–040.52
Luke, as Batwing, investigates a mysterious murder involving a unique poison, but his efforts are complicated when the GCPD pressures him to reveal his identity, which he firmly refuses. Reporting his findings to Ryan, Luke warns that a new killer is active, and they must act quickly. Meanwhile, Holly takes down armed thieves downtown, prompting Ryan to grow concerned over her reckless approach to crime-fighting. Alice murders Marquis and confesses to Mary, pleading for Mary to end her life. Instead, Mary has Alice arrested and sent back to Arkham Asylum. Jacob reopens an old Crows case and discovers Roman Sionis was released due to corruption in the system, prompting him to strategize on how to bring Roman to justice. Ryan confronts Holly about her aggressive crime-fighting methods, but Holly dismisses her concerns. Batwing uncovers a keyring with the initials "B.M." during his patrol, but Doctor Phosphorus appears, overpowers him, and steals the keyring before escaping. Alice vows to break out of Arkham, Mary informs Ryan of Marquis’ death, and the team learns of Alice’s role in the crime. The situation escalates as Doctor Phosphorus launches an assault on the GCPD, stealing all the weapons from their armory.
565"Under the Mask"Freddie GoodwinFreddie GoodwinFebruary 14, 2025 (2025-02-14)4–050.81
Kirk Langstrom, known as "Man-Bat," raids Stagg Industries and steals a powerful weapon capable of toppling entire buildings. Luke theorizes that Doctor Phosphorus is working for Black Mask and warns the team, prompting their return to Wayne Industries to regroup. Ryan joins Luke's investigation as Doctor Phosphorus and Man-Bat unleash chaos across Gotham, demanding Batwoman reveal her identity. Batwoman confronts the villains, managing to defeat Man-Bat, but Doctor Phosphorus escapes using advanced technology. Meanwhile, Luke, as Batwing, infiltrates Stagg Industries and discovers a massive machine equipped with the stolen Power Core Suppressor but is forced to retreat when Doctor Phosphorus intervenes. Ryan vows to bring Doctor Phosphorus to justice as Luke shares his findings with the team. A mysterious man assembles a puzzle besides a black mask.
576"Radiant Shadows"Freddie GoodwinFreddie GoodwinFebruary 21, 2025 (2025-02-21)4–060.78
Doctor Phosphorus begins experiencing dangerous radiation bursts that cause him to blackout, forcing him to coerce Mary into treating him. Mary, suspecting his condition is beyond help, warns that his radiation is incurable, but he refuses to believe it and flees. Concerned, Mary contacts Ryan and informs her of the situation. Doctor Phosphorus publicly broadcasts his ability to control radiation, warning Batwoman that while he could kill her effortlessly, he is under orders to keep her alive. Meanwhile, Roman dons his Black Mask once more and sends his rogues to raid Wayne Industries, taking Mary, Jacob, Sophie, and Luke hostage. Batwoman confronts Roman, disarms him, and learns he has been acting under someone else’s orders. As he attempts to escape, Roman is mysteriously thrown off the building by an unseen force. Batwoman subdues the rogues and frees her team. Back at the Batcave, Ryan suggests they might need to save Doctor Phosphorus rather than stop him, a notion Jacob questions as he speculates about the true cause of Roman’s death. Sophie begins to suspect an even larger threat is looming. The mysterious man smashes a television displaying Roman’s demise, ominously declaring, "time for a new plan."
587"The Crime Master"Freddie GoodwinFreddie GoodwinFebruary 28, 2025 (2025-02-28)4–070.82
The mysterious man is revealed to be Carmine Falcone, who orchestrated Simon Stagg’s murder and framed Doctor Phosphorus to manipulate him into servitude. Carmine consolidates his power by corrupting the GCPD, coercing most officers to work for him as he vows to rid Gotham of vigilantes, including Batwoman. Luke uncovers Carmine’s control over Doctor Phosphorus and informs Ryan. Meanwhile, Mary and Sophie share a heartfelt conversation about the escalating dangers Gotham has faced over the past four years. Doctor Phosphorus launches an attack downtown but escapes with Luke’s suit battery after Batwoman and Batwing unsuccessfully attempt to sway him against Carmine. At a factory, Carmine activates a machine he has been constructing, plunging Gotham into darkness by cutting all power. Luke uses his suit’s technology to confirm Carmine’s role in Stagg’s murder. Seeking evidence, Batwoman infiltrates Stagg Industries but is confronted by Carmine, who reveals he knows her true identity and vows to kill her. She narrowly escapes as GCPD forces arrive. Viewing Doctor Phosphorus as a liability, Carmine traps him in containment, tightening his grip on the city as his plans near completion.
598"Burnout"Freddie GoodwinFreddie GoodwinMarch 7, 2025 (2025-03-07)4–080.81
After capturing Doctor Phosphorus, Carmine subjects him to intense radiation shocks in an attempt to amplify his powers. However, the procedure backfires, leaving Doctor Phosphorus severely weakened and desperate to escape. A week later, Luke locates Doctor Phosphorus's containment site at Stagg Industries and informs Ryan. As Batwoman and Batwing, they infiltrate the facility, finding Doctor Phosphorus begging for rescue, but he succumbs to his injuries before they can save him. Carmine confronts them, using advanced security technology to disable their efforts, and unmasks Ryan, revealing he learned her identity from Alice. Carmine admits he orchestrated Marquis’s murder by manipulating Alice. He escalates his plans by breaking into Wayne Industries, stealing Poison Ivy’s plant, and experimenting with its components to find the perfect host. Ryan’s attempt to stop him fails, forcing her to warn the team and the GCPD. Meanwhile, Sophie and Holly express concern for Mary’s safety, though Mary reassures them of her resolve. Carmine, now armed with the stolen plant and a collection of the Joker’s deadly gadgets, declares his intent to use them to seize control of Gotham.
609"Fallout"Freddie GoodwinFreddie GoodwinMarch 14, 2025 (2025-03-14)4–090.83
Carmine activates the Promethium reactor, triggering widespread destruction across Gotham as buildings collapse into rubble. Simultaneously, he orders his men to hijack a plane headed for Gotham, rigged with explosives. Luke uncovers the plot and links it directly to Carmine. As Batwoman and Batwing confront Carmine, he uses Poison Ivy’s plant properties to launch an assault, delaying their efforts to save the plane. Tragically, the plane crashes into Gotham’s streets, devastating the area. Carmine reveals his initial target was Wayne Industries but opted to target the city instead to demonstrate his dominance before escaping. The heroes search desperately for survivors but find none, leaving Ryan wracked with guilt over the loss of innocent lives. Mary reassures her that her efforts as a hero still matter. Meanwhile, Carmine deploys a robot named "Metallo" to attack Wayne Industries. After a fierce battle, Batwing disables Metallo and retrieves its power source, advising Ryan to secure it to prevent future misuse. As Gotham reels from the catastrophe, Jacob publicly condemns the attack, expressing hope for Carmine's downfall. From a high vantage point, Carmine surveys the devastated city, reveling in his control as fearful citizens begin kneeling to him.
6110"Gotham Reforged"Freddie GoodwinFreddie GoodwinMarch 21, 2025 (2025-03-21)4–100.92
In a flashback, Holly strikes a deal with Carmine, agreeing to leave Gotham in exchange for her safety after narrowly surviving his attack. In the present, Holly departs Gotham, apologizing to Ryan, who urges Mary to remain on standby for emergencies and tasks Luke with guiding the public to safety. Meanwhile, Carmine uses Poison Ivy’s plant to launch a devastating assault, capturing Batwing and destroying his suit. Batwoman confronts Carmine in a fierce battle, gaining the upper hand until Ivy’s tendrils penetrate her suit, leaving her unconscious. Determined to end the chaos, Jacob orders Alice’s release and tasks her with stopping Carmine. In a climactic showdown, Alice kills Carmine and requests to return to prison, but she is pardoned for her heroic actions. With Carmine defeated, Ryan mysteriously vanishes after experiencing visions of another Batwoman. One year later, she reappears in Central City, helping Barry Allen defeat the Red Death, and reunites with Luke, Mary, and Kate, who has returned from her travels. Kate reveals the truth about Ryan’s visions—there are two versions of her—before departing. Over the next decade, Ryan continues protecting Gotham while collaborating with Earth-Prime’s heroes. She and Sophie marry, raise a child, and vow to safeguard the world. Alice redeems herself, adopting the name Beth once again and earning Jacob’s forgiveness, while Kate briefly dons the Batwoman suit before retiring to live peacefully with her family.

Cast and characters

Main

  • Javicia Leslie as Ryan Wilder / Batwoman, Gotham City's current Batwoman. Ryan begins the season with greater confidence in her role as the city's protector but is forced into a more personal conflict after Doctor Phosphorus targets her family and Carmine Falcone learns her secret identity.
  • Rachel Skarsten as Beth Kane / Alice, Kate Kane's twin sister and a former enemy of Team Batwoman. The final season follows Alice after her return from treatment overseas and places renewed emphasis on her relationship with Mary and Jacob.
  • Meagan Tandy as Sophie Moore, Ryan's partner and a former Crows agent. Sophie becomes involved in a Department of Defense investigation connected to Alexander Sartorius while also helping Ryan process the loss of Jada.
  • Nicole Kang as Mary Hamilton / Poison Mary, a physician and member of Team Batwoman who returns to medical work after her earlier transformation and uses her experience to treat victims of Doctor Phosphorus's radiation attacks.
  • Camrus Johnson as Luke Fox / Batwing, Ryan's ally and the son of Lucius Fox. Luke continues operating as Batwing while upgrading his suit and investigating the technological components of Carmine's plan.
  • Victoria Cartagena as Renee Montoya, a former Gotham City police officer whose knowledge of Gotham's criminal infrastructure aids Team Batwoman.
  • Robin Givens as Jada Jet, Ryan's biological mother and the head of Jet Industries, whose death in the premiere becomes a major emotional catalyst for the season.
  • Nick Creegan as Marquis Jet, Ryan's half-brother and the previous season's central antagonist, whose death contributes to Alice's final arc.
  • Cillian Murphy as Alexander Sartorius / Doctor Phosphorus, a radioactive metahuman who is manipulated into serving a larger criminal conspiracy. The character is initially presented as the season's primary antagonist before being revealed as one of Carmine Falcone's victims.
  • Dougray Scott as Jacob Kane, Kate and Alice's father, who returns to Gotham in an attempt to reconnect with Mary and help the team confront the city's escalating threats.

Recurring

  • Donny Lucas as the voice of Lucius Fox A.I., an artificial intelligence modeled after Luke's father.
  • Wallis Day as Kate Kane, the original Batwoman, who returns in the finale following her travels away from Gotham.
  • Peter Outerbridge as Roman Sionis / Black Mask, a former crime lord who returns after being released through corruption in Gotham's justice system.
  • Richard Kind as Carmine Falcone, a powerful Gotham crime boss who emerges as the architect behind Doctor Phosphorus's actions and the season's central conspiracy.
  • Natalie Alyn Lind as Holly Robinson, a vigilante whose connection to Tobias Whale and knowledge of Promethium draws her into Ryan's fight against Doctor Phosphorus.
  • Allison Riley as Dana DeWitt, an early victim of Doctor Phosphorus whose attack draws Team Batwoman into the larger investigation.
  • Chad L. Coleman as Tobias Whale, Doctor Phosphorus's former employer, whose connection to Holly helps Ryan uncover part of the conspiracy.
  • Terry Chen as Simon Stagg, the head of Stagg Industries, whose murder is used by Carmine Falcone to frame Doctor Phosphorus.

Guest

Production

Background

Batwoman originally aired for three seasons before its revival by Mob Network. The previous season ended with Ryan Wilder defeating Marquis Jet and accepting her place as Gotham's Batwoman, while also leaving several unresolved character threads involving Alice, Mary, Sophie, and the future of Gotham's criminal underworld. After the series moved to Mob Network, the creative team sought to produce a shorter final season that could serve as both a continuation of the third season and a conclusion to Ryan's story.

The revival was positioned as a limited concluding season rather than the beginning of a long-term continuation. The production team intended to avoid undoing the events of the third season and instead used the fourth season to revisit consequences from across the series. The writers also treated Gotham itself as a central presence, using the city's abandoned institutions, corrupt police networks, damaged industrial sites, and criminal families as recurring symbols of the legacy Ryan inherits as Batwoman.

The season's darker crime-focused structure was designed to contrast with the more episodic villain format of earlier seasons. Rather than building the entire season around one costumed antagonist, the writers constructed the season as a chain of escalating threats, beginning with Doctor Phosphorus and gradually revealing Carmine Falcone as the figure controlling the board. This allowed the season to combine metahuman horror, organized crime, and personal drama while giving Ryan a final challenge that was both physical and ideological.

Development

A fourth season was ordered in November 2023 after Mob Network entered negotiations to revive the series. Benjamin Knowles was announced as showrunner and developed the season as a 10-episode final installment. The shorter episode count was selected to keep the story tightly focused and to avoid extending the central mystery beyond its planned conclusion. Knowles described the season as a story about the "last war for Gotham's soul", with Ryan forced to face not only new villains but also the long-term damage left behind by Batman, the Crows, Black Mask, and the city's criminal families.

The decision to make the season the final installment was made during early development. Mob Network and the producers agreed that a definitive ending would give the writers more freedom to resolve character arcs instead of leaving major storylines open for a potential fifth season. The writers therefore structured the season around closure: Ryan's future as Batwoman, Alice's redemption, Sophie's relationship with Ryan, Jacob's fractured family, and Luke's identity as Batwing were all mapped before the final scripts were completed.

Doctor Phosphorus was chosen as the season's opening villain because the writers wanted a threat who could visually and thematically separate the revival from the previous seasons. His radiation-based powers allowed the production team to stage more destructive action sequences while tying the character to Gotham's industrial history. Carmine Falcone was later selected as the ultimate antagonist because the writers felt the final season needed a villain whose power came from corruption, influence, and control rather than only physical strength. Falcone's presence also allowed the season to explore Gotham before and after Batman, connecting the series finale to the wider mythology of the city.

Freddie Goodwin joined the season during development and wrote and directed several later episodes, including the finale. His involvement shaped the second half of the season, which became more serialized and action-heavy after the reveal of Carmine Falcone. The final two episodes were designed as a two-part conclusion, with "Fallout" functioning as the season's large-scale disaster episode and "Gotham Reforged" serving as the emotional finale for Ryan, Alice, Sophie, Mary, Luke, Jacob, and Kate.

Writing

The writing staff began work on the season in early 2024. The writers initially considered building the entire season around Doctor Phosphorus, but later reworked the outline so that he would become a tragic figure manipulated by Carmine Falcone. This change was made to prevent the season from becoming a conventional villain-of-the-season arc and to give Ryan a moral conflict: whether she should defeat Phosphorus or attempt to save him.

Ryan's grief over Jada Jet's death became one of the season's main emotional throughlines. The writers used the death to test Ryan's belief that she could build a stable life outside the Batwoman identity. Rather than portraying the loss as a simple revenge motive, the season follows Ryan as she tries to remain compassionate while facing increasingly brutal attacks on Gotham. Her relationship with Sophie was written as the season's emotional anchor, providing Ryan with a contrast to the isolation experienced by Bruce Wayne and Kate Kane.

Alice's storyline was planned as the final resolution of the Beth Kane arc that began in the first season. The writers avoided presenting her redemption as immediate or uncomplicated, instead showing her as unstable, remorseful, and still capable of violence. Her killing of Marquis and later Carmine was written to blur the line between punishment and redemption, while her decision to return to prison in the finale was intended to show accountability rather than simple absolution. The decision to have her pardoned was developed as part of the finale's broader theme that Gotham's future requires mercy as well as justice.

The season also gives Luke Fox and Mary Hamilton more defined roles within Team Batwoman. Luke's arc focuses on whether he can continue being Batwing without being consumed by the same legacy of secrecy and sacrifice that defined his father and Bruce Wayne. Mary, after her earlier transformation as Poison Mary, is written as someone who deliberately chooses healing over power. The season repeatedly places her in medical scenes, using her work with burn victims and Doctor Phosphorus to reconnect her to her original purpose in the series.

The final episode's flash-forward was developed after the writers decided the season should not end solely with Carmine's defeat. Knowles wanted the conclusion to acknowledge Ryan's future in the Arrowverse without turning the finale into a backdoor pilot. The sequence showing Ryan in Central City, Kate's return, Alice's redemption, and Ryan's future family life was written as a broad epilogue rather than a setup for another season.

Casting

Javicia Leslie returned as Ryan Wilder / Batwoman after leading the second and third seasons. Leslie's role in the final season was expanded to include both the physical action of Batwoman and more emotionally restrained scenes focused on grief, legacy, and family. Meagan Tandy, Nicole Kang, and Camrus Johnson also returned as Sophie Moore, Mary Hamilton, and Luke Fox, continuing the core Team Batwoman dynamic established after Ryan became the lead character.

Rachel Skarsten returned as Alice / Beth Kane, with the final season placing renewed focus on her relationship with Jacob and Mary. Dougray Scott returned as Jacob Kane after being absent from the third season's main cast. His return was designed to provide closure to the Kane family storyline and allow Jacob to confront the consequences of his earlier failures with Kate, Beth, and Mary. Robin Givens and Nick Creegan returned as Jada Jet and Marquis Jet, though both characters are killed during the season.

Cillian Murphy was cast as Alexander Sartorius / Doctor Phosphorus. The role was written as a combination of antagonist, victim, and horror figure, requiring extensive prosthetic and visual-effects work. Murphy's casting was intended to give the character a tragic quality beneath the radioactive threat. Richard Kind joined the season as Carmine Falcone, while Peter Outerbridge returned as Roman Sionis / Black Mask. The use of both Falcone and Black Mask allowed the writers to connect the revived season to Gotham's organized-crime history while differentiating Carmine's more calculated style from Roman's theatrical violence.

Wallis Day returned as Kate Kane for the finale. Her appearance was kept limited to preserve Ryan as the season's central Batwoman while still acknowledging Kate's importance to the series' history. Grant Gustin appeared as Barry Allen / The Flash in the finale's epilogue, connecting Ryan's story to the events surrounding Red Death. Leslie also appears as Red Death in archival and flash-forward material, linking the finale to Ryan's multiversal counterpart.

Filming

Filming began on June 19, 2024, and concluded on November 22, 2024. Production took place primarily in Vancouver, British Columbia, with additional exterior photography used for Gotham City establishing shots. The season used a mixture of standing sets, industrial locations, nighttime street photography, and digitally extended cityscapes to create a heavier and more damaged version of Gotham than the previous season.

The production schedule was built around the season's increasing scale. Early episodes focused on crime scenes, medical settings, rooftops, and Wayne Tower interiors, while the final episodes required larger sets representing Stagg Industries, damaged city blocks, Wayne Industries, the GCPD armory, and Carmine's Promethium reactor facility. The production team reused several existing Gotham sets from earlier seasons but redressed them to reflect the city's decline after years of attacks, corruption, and vigilante conflict.

Action sequences were designed to distinguish the main threats. Doctor Phosphorus's fights emphasized radiation bursts, heat distortion, and close-contact danger, while Black Mask's return used more traditional hostage and siege staging. Carmine Falcone's sequences relied more heavily on machinery, corrupted police, plant-based attacks, and citywide destruction. Luke's Batwing suit was modified for the final season to appear heavier and more armored, reflecting his preparation for metahuman threats.

The finale required the most extensive production work. Several scenes involving Ivy's tendrils, the destruction of Batwing's suit, Ryan's disappearance, and the flash-forward to Central City were completed with a combination of practical sets and visual effects. The final montage was filmed near the end of production so that returning cast members could complete their scenes together.

Design and visual effects

Doctor Phosphorus's design was one of the season's main visual challenges. The production team avoided making him appear fully skeletal in every scene, instead using a combination of burned skin textures, glowing fissures, heat distortion, and radioactive light to suggest instability. His look becomes progressively weaker and more damaged as Carmine subjects him to further radiation experiments.

Carmine's Promethium reactor was designed as a contrast to the Batcave and Wayne technology. While Wayne Industries is presented with colder lighting and precision engineering, Carmine's reactor facility uses harsher industrial architecture, exposed wiring, and unstable energy pulses. The reactor's visual language was intended to make Gotham's criminal infrastructure feel as technologically dangerous as its superheroes.

The Batwing suit received new armor plating and reinforced wings for the final season. The changes were designed to make Luke appear more prepared for large-scale threats, which makes the destruction of the suit in the finale more significant. Wayne Industries sets were also updated to include more visible security systems, reflecting the season's focus on stolen technology and surveillance.

The visual-effects team created recurring radiation effects for Doctor Phosphorus, Promethium energy, Metallo's power source, and Ivy's plant-based attacks. The plane crash in "Fallout" was the largest visual-effects sequence of the season and was designed to be shown largely through aftermath and character reaction rather than prolonged spectacle, allowing the episode to focus on Ryan's guilt and Gotham's devastation.

Music

The season's score continues the darker electronic and orchestral sound used in earlier seasons while adding harsher industrial elements for Doctor Phosphorus and Carmine Falcone. Ryan's theme is used more sparingly in the first half of the season, often appearing in quieter arrangements during scenes with Sophie, Jada, and Mary. As the season moves toward the finale, the theme returns in fuller form to emphasize Ryan's acceptance of her role as Gotham's long-term protector.

Alice's music uses fragments of earlier motifs from the series, but they are slowed and softened during scenes where she attempts to reconnect with Mary and Jacob. Doctor Phosphorus is accompanied by distorted pulses and unstable radiation-like tones, while Carmine's scenes use lower brass, strings, and mechanical percussion. The finale combines Ryan, Kate, and Alice's motifs during the closing montage.

Themes

The final season focuses on legacy, accountability, and whether Gotham can change without erasing its violent past. Ryan's conflict with Doctor Phosphorus and Carmine Falcone forces her to confront different forms of inherited damage. Doctor Phosphorus represents a victim turned weapon, while Carmine represents a criminal system that survives by controlling victims, institutions, and public fear.

The season also contrasts justice with revenge. Ryan repeatedly attempts to prevent the people around her from becoming defined by retaliation, particularly Holly, Alice, and Jacob. Alice's arc is the clearest expression of this theme, as the finale does not erase her crimes but allows her to choose a more self-aware form of redemption. Mary and Luke's arcs similarly emphasize repair rather than punishment, with Mary returning to medicine and Luke working to protect Gotham without depending entirely on the Batwing identity.

Family remains a central theme. Ryan's relationship with Jada is cut short, leaving her to process forgiveness after death. Jacob's return allows the season to revisit the Kane family's unresolved pain, while Kate's finale appearance closes the gap between the show's original premise and Ryan's era as Batwoman. The final flash-forward reframes family as something Ryan builds rather than something she inherits, ending with her marriage to Sophie and their child.

Release

Broadcast

The season premiered on Mob Network on January 17, 2025. New episodes aired weekly on Fridays until the finale on March 21, 2025. The season consisted of 10 episodes, making it the shortest season of the series. The broadcast schedule was designed to air without major interruptions, allowing the serialized story to unfold across ten consecutive weeks.

Although the series had previously aired on The CW, the fourth season was promoted as a Mob Network revival and final-season event. Marketing emphasized Ryan Wilder's final battle for Gotham, the return of Alice and Jacob Kane, and the introduction of Doctor Phosphorus. The second half of the campaign shifted attention toward Carmine Falcone after his identity was revealed in "The Crime Master".

Marketing

Mob Network released the first promotional poster for the season in late 2024, featuring Ryan in the Batwoman suit standing over a burning Gotham skyline. Subsequent trailers focused on Doctor Phosphorus, the death of Jada Jet, and Alice's return. Early marketing avoided revealing Carmine Falcone as the main antagonist and instead positioned Doctor Phosphorus as the season's primary villain.

The mid-season trailer released after "Under the Mask" highlighted the return of Black Mask, the growing threat against Wayne Industries, and the phrase "Gotham will kneel", which became associated with Carmine's campaign in later episodes. Marketing for the finale included footage of Batwing's damaged suit, Alice's release from custody, and Ryan's confrontation with Carmine, but kept Kate Kane's return and the Central City flash-forward secret until broadcast.

Home media and streaming

The season was made available on Mob Network's streaming service after each episode aired. A complete-season digital release followed the finale, with the home media release using Batwoman: The Final Season branding. Bonus features included deleted scenes, a featurette on Ryan Wilder's legacy, behind-the-scenes material on Doctor Phosphorus's makeup and visual effects, and cast interviews discussing the end of the series.

Reception

Ratings

The season premiered to 0.59 million viewers and rose slightly for its second episode before dipping to a season low of 0.52 million viewers for "Inferno Rising". Viewership increased after Freddie Goodwin began writing and directing the second half of the season, with "Under the Mask" drawing 0.81 million viewers. The finale, "Gotham Reforged", was the most-watched episode of the season with 0.92 million viewers.

Viewership and ratings per episode of Batwoman season 4
No. Title Air date Viewers
(millions)
1 "The Ashes of Gotham" January 17, 2025 0.59
2 "The Burning Agenda" January 24, 2025 0.61
3 "Radiation Rising" January 31, 2025 0.56
4 "Inferno Rising" February 7, 2025 0.52
5 "Under the Mask" February 14, 2025 0.81
6 "Radiant Shadows" February 21, 2025 0.78
7 "The Crime Master" February 28, 2025 0.82
8 "Burnout" March 7, 2025 0.81
9 "Fallout" March 14, 2025 0.83
10 "Gotham Reforged" March 21, 2025 0.92

Critical response

The fourth season received generally positive reviews from critics. Reviewers praised the season for giving the series a more focused final arc and for returning the show to a Gotham-centered crime story. Javicia Leslie's performance received particular praise, with critics noting that the season allowed Ryan to show grief, anger, restraint, and maturity without reducing her to a replacement for Kate Kane. The relationship between Ryan and Sophie was also positively received, especially for functioning as a stable emotional foundation during a season built around violence and loss.

Critics also responded positively to the use of Doctor Phosphorus as a tragic antagonist. His storyline was praised for avoiding a simple monster-of-the-week structure and for giving Ryan a moral dilemma rather than only a physical enemy. Cillian Murphy's performance was highlighted for bringing vulnerability to the character even beneath the makeup and effects. The reveal that Carmine Falcone had manipulated Doctor Phosphorus was generally seen as an effective shift that made the second half of the season more urgent.

The season's darker tone was considered an improvement by several reviewers, who felt that the shorter episode count prevented the story from drifting. The focus on Gotham's corruption, the return of Black Mask, and Carmine's attempt to weaponize the city's fear were described as stronger uses of the show's setting than some of the earlier seasons' more scattered plots. The production design, lighting, and action sequences were also considered more polished than expected for a revival season.

Some criticism was directed at the pacing. Several reviewers felt that the season introduced too many villains and concepts for only 10 episodes, particularly in the transition from Doctor Phosphorus to Carmine Falcone, Metallo, Poison Ivy's plant, and the finale's Arrowverse epilogue. "Fallout" was praised for scale but criticized by some for resolving the plane crash aftermath too quickly. The finale was also described as emotionally satisfying but crowded, with some critics arguing that Kate Kane's return and the flash-forward deserved more screen time.

Alice's ending received mixed-to-positive responses. Many critics praised Rachel Skarsten's performance and the decision to give Alice accountability rather than a clean heroic transformation. Others felt that her pardon happened too quickly after her history of violence. However, the scene in which she chooses to return to prison before being pardoned was widely described as one of the finale's strongest character moments.

Accolades

The season received recognition from genre television outlets for Leslie's performance and its series finale. "Gotham Reforged" was included on several year-end lists of notable superhero television finales, while the visual-effects work for Doctor Phosphorus and the Promethium reactor sequences received praise in technical reviews.

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result
2025 Saturn Television Awards Best Superhero Television Series Batwoman Nominated
Saturn Television Awards Best Actress in a Superhero Series Javicia Leslie Nominated
Critics' Genre Television Honors Best Supporting Actress in a Superhero Series Rachel Skarsten Nominated
Genre Visual Effects Guild Awards Outstanding Visual Effects in a Broadcast Series "Fallout" Nominated

Analysis

Commentators viewed the fourth season as an attempt to reframe Batwoman around Ryan Wilder's completed legacy rather than the circumstances under which she originally inherited the mantle. Earlier seasons often positioned Ryan in relation to Kate Kane, Bruce Wayne, or the absent Batman, but the final season repeatedly places her decisions at the center of Gotham's future. By the finale, Ryan is no longer defined by being the second Batwoman; she becomes the version of Batwoman who remains after Gotham's old systems fail.

The season's use of Carmine Falcone was also analyzed as a return to grounded Gotham crime after several seasons involving larger comic-book threats. His power comes from corruption, fear, police control, stolen technology, and the manipulation of damaged people. This makes him a thematic opposite to Ryan, who spends the season building trust with Sophie, Luke, Mary, Jacob, and eventually Alice. The conflict is therefore less about whether Batwoman can defeat one villain and more about whether Gotham's protectors can prevent the city from surrendering to fear.

Ryan and Sophie's relationship was interpreted as one of the season's clearest statements of hope. Unlike Bruce Wayne, Kate Kane, or Alice, Ryan is allowed to imagine a future beyond trauma. The flash-forward showing her marriage to Sophie and their child presents heroism as something compatible with love and family, rather than something that requires total isolation. This ending was frequently contrasted with the darker fates of other Gotham vigilantes.

Alice's redemption arc was more divisive because it asks the audience to accept accountability and forgiveness without pretending her actions can be erased. Her final choice to stop Carmine and then return to custody suggests that redemption in the series is not a reward but a responsibility. Jacob forgiving her in the epilogue completes the Kane family storyline while still leaving the consequences of Alice's past intact.

Legacy

The fourth season became the final entry of Batwoman and served as Ryan Wilder's closing chapter within the series. Its finale resolved the major relationships among Ryan, Sophie, Luke, Mary, Alice, Jacob, and Kate, while leaving Ryan active as a protector of Gotham and occasional ally of Earth-Prime's heroes. The season's final montage was intended to function as a definitive ending rather than a setup for a continuation.

The revival was later credited by fans of the series with giving Batwoman a more complete conclusion than it had received after its third season. Ryan's marriage to Sophie, Alice's return to the name Beth, and Kate's peaceful retirement were frequently cited as examples of the finale's attempt to provide closure to both the Ryan Wilder era and the original Kane family storyline. The season also strengthened Ryan's status within the Arrowverse by connecting her future to Central City and the Red Death storyline.

Although the season ended the series, its final scene left Ryan alive and active in Gotham, allowing the character to remain part of the wider Arrowverse continuity. Mob Network did not announce a direct spin-off after the finale, and the creative team stated that "Gotham Reforged" was written as the intended ending of the show.

References

External links

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