^ You didn't know? Batman Begins is so awesome it allows for time travel!
Ha!
Fixed.
^ You didn't know? Batman Begins is so awesome it allows for time travel!
^ You didn't know? Batman Begins is so awesome it allows for time travel!
Ha!
Fixed.
You better flip that order there, because we were pretty aware of the fact that Batman: Mask of the Phantasm came out theatrically in 1993, but the majority of us caught it on VHS in 1994, like myself from a Christmas present from my father.Batman Forever (1995)
After some massive uproar from parents who took their kids to see Batman Returns completely not expecting a drooling deformed villain, Warner Bros. turned the franchise over to Joel Schumacher with an order to lighten things up. He delivers with an entertaining, if relatively fluffy, piece that once again tends to give more screentime to the villains than our stalwart hero. It also returns to a stock love interest who makes no sense, and manages to shoehorn Robin in there as well, though as a teenager to circumvent those pesky child endangerment issues. Val Kilmer phones in a performance as Bruce Wayne, but Jim Carrey as a plainly homoerotic Edward Nygma (the Riddler) is fun. Tommy Lee Jones' Two-Face is useless. You could see it, you could skip it - it won't really matter.
Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993 - animated)
Yeah, I know they're listed out of order. Most people missed Mask of the Phantasm during its original theatrical run, and it gained its reputation in circulation on video and DVD. A spin off of The Animated Series, this is actually one of the best Batman movies ever made. Before the Chris Nolan movies, it was by far the most faithful to the Dark Knight interpretation of Batman from the comics. Dear to my heart, it has a real film noir flair, combining a gangster story, a tragic love story and a somewaht weak, but still fun Joker story. Like most Batman stories, there's little justification for why Bruce Wayne would fall in love with Andrea Beaumont, but the love story itself isn't bad, and there's real character exploration of Bruce Wayne, something the live action movies didn't achieve until Batman Begins. Definitely recommended.
I myself do not particularly need that DVD in my personal collection, because I already have a picture of Mickey Rooney right here:You know, if you want to stop Good Will Riker's latest mindless tirade, just tell him that Clooney and Soderberg both have Breakfast at Tiffany's in their DVD collections. Then he'll suddenly hate The Dark Knight because of that.![]()
I'll spare you my even longer look at TDK - at least for the moment...
Back on topic, I incidentally come across that "bufoonish caricature" footage of Rooney as the nosey neighbor in Breakfast at Tiffany's...blah blah blah Hollywood is racist...
^ You didn't know? Batman Begins is so awesome it allows for time travel!
Ha!
Fixed.
ah, but still Batman Returns
I'll spare you my even longer look at TDK - at least for the moment...
You're on a roll. Go ahead.
Ah, you fixed it......cool!Ha!
Fixed.
ah, but still Batman Returns
Nitpicker.![]()
Batman (1989) is dated
Prince music, and some effects (Joker's fall!).
Lapis, that's a really nice piece of writing. If you don't critique films professionally, you should.Just remember - you asked for this.
[snip]
I'll spare you my even longer look at TDK - at least for the moment...
It's a very fine piece of writing, and yes, she should.
Nonetheless, please don't quote huge messages like that to make a short comment.![]()
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