Batman Begins
I still love you honey, but that's exactly what I was talking about: The marketing for that movie was stellar; the movie itself was (to me) crap. But it worked, so I guess I should just shut up.R00k wrote:I loved Batman 1. I saw it when I was younger, and I must have watched it a hundred times. :icon32:
But I won't!

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i personally think that the burton/elfman combination results in marvelous filmmaking. i agree that the stories arent always -all that- though. ofcourse a director doesnt write the stories, he only translates them
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Well I wasn't in a state to critique the finer elements of it at 13 years old, but it will always be a great movie to me as one of those films I loved when I was a kid.diego wrote:I still love you honey, but that's exactly what I was talking about: The marketing for that movie was stellar; the movie itself was (to me) crap. But it worked, so I guess I should just shut up.R00k wrote:I loved Batman 1. I saw it when I was younger, and I must have watched it a hundred times. :icon32:
But I won't!
I'm sure if I'd never seen it before and watched it now I'd be able to find a lot more flaws in it, but it's preserved to me as a great movie, and I'll always love it.
And while Keaton may not have been the best physical fit for Batman, you have to admit he played a great Bruce Wayne.
And "Big Fish", "Edward Scissorhands", "Beetle Juice", "Pee-wee's Big Adventure", "Nightmare Before Christmas", "Batman", "Gilbert Grape", "Sleepy Hollow" and "Mars Attacks" all had a very distinct, slightly dark atmosphere and feel to them, which is completely due to Tim Burton's influence, and that's what I love the most about his work.
At the end of Batman Begins, you get the impression time had passed between Wayne Towers and Batman's meeting with Lt. Gordon, so Batman had plenty of time to get in a row with Jack Napier. There's no reason the a second film can't go back and filll in that missing timeline. One of the main themes of the major Batman villians is that Batman creates them through his actions. He created the Scarecrow, so I suspect they will make him create the Joker too.Therac-26 wrote:The Joker's origin doesn't actually have a canonical form. Even in The Killing Joke -- in which the Joker is an ex-chemical engineer-turned-comedian who breaks into the chemical plant in order to support his pregnant wife -- his origin is only told from the point of view of his own memories.Dr.FrasierCrane wrote:Im no comic book buff, but Jack Napier is the Joker right?
All I can remember of him in the original film is him getting smacked into the acid, thus creating the grin & the Joker persona. Also he was a lot younger when he killed the Waynes so in theory, there cant be a Joker in a Batman Begins sequel
The only real constant in it is "falling in a vat of chemicals that dies his skin and hair that colour permanently".
The Napier character was created for the first movie, but has since been refernced in the comic continuity as being one of his pseudonyms.
You're thinking of Two-Face in Batman Forever.Dr.FrasierCrane wrote:Im no comic book buff, but Jack Napier is the Joker right?
All I can remember of him in the original film is him getting smacked into the acid, thus creating the grin & the Joker persona. Also he was a lot younger when he killed the Waynes so in theory, there cant be a Joker in a Batman Begins sequel
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He didn't really say whether it was an Arkham escapee or not. He said that there were still a lot of escapees to be apprehended, and then he went on to his 'escalation' talk, about how criminals keep getting better equipment and tools to outdo the cops.
Then he basically said "there's this one guy, he's been leaving his calling card."
So not much explanation at all really.
And yea, the idea that the Joker was Jack Napier, and the same guy who killed his parents, was a creation of Burton in the first movie, which obviously isn't going to be followed by this series.
Then he basically said "there's this one guy, he's been leaving his calling card."
So not much explanation at all really.
And yea, the idea that the Joker was Jack Napier, and the same guy who killed his parents, was a creation of Burton in the first movie, which obviously isn't going to be followed by this series.