I am curious to see how DC will fair without Cavil now that he's marvel? I don't trust James Gunn and his "direction". Just letting this all get of hand was a mistake honestly.
If true, Burton made the far better choice.
I am curious to see how DC will fair without Cavil now that he's marvel? I don't trust James Gunn and his "direction". Just letting this all get of hand was a mistake honestly.
Batman '89Why are there a bajillion Joker origin movies?
Batman '89
Joker
and????
Batman '89
Joker
and????
Well, that was the problem: Burton's hang-ups about what he saw as "square-jawed hero" (his words) which he did not want, hence the miscasting of Keaton.I’ve always thought Biehn would’ve made a great Batman, albeit that he was more in the traditional square-jawed handsome leading man rather than the more offbeat type Burton wanted to cast.
We've seen the Joker in six films: Batman '66, Batman '89, The Dark Knight, Suicide Squad, the Joker and Joker: Folie à Deux. Has glorified cameos in Harley Quinn, Zack Snyder's Justice League and The Batman. Only two of the films give him an origin.I am probably remembering this wrong but I thought there were at least two more before the one that just came out.
We've seen the Joker in six films: Batman '66, Batman '89, The Dark Knight, Suicide Squad, the Joker and Joker: Folie à Deux. Has glorified cameos in Harley Quinn, Zack Snyder's Justice League and The Batman. Only two of the films give him an origin.
I know I'm gonna regret this. Live Action.Also Batman: Mask of the Phantasm and The Lego Batman Movie, if we're limiting it to theatrical releases.
As for Folie a Deux,
doesn't it end with some guy killing Arthur Fleck and scarring his own mouth, implying that this is the origin of a second Joker, perhaps even the Ledger one?
Although as far as Fleck is concerned, that would make it the opposite of an origin movie.
We've seen the Joker in six films: Batman '66, Batman '89, The Dark Knight, Suicide Squad, the Joker and Joker: Folie à Deux. Has glorified cameos in Harley Quinn, Zack Snyder's Justice League and The Batman. Only two of the films give him an origin.
I know I'm gonna regret this. Live Action.
Did he really smell that bad?Plus he didn't exactly have the best track record with DC in the first place in either BO or audience response.
He might have been miscast as the comic book version of Batman, but worked great for Burton's version. The issue wouldn't be Keaton's casting, the issue would be with how Burton handled the character.Well, that was the problem: Burton's hang-ups about what he saw as "square-jawed hero" (his words) which he did not want, hence the miscasting of Keaton.
Both were great.The issue wouldn't be Keaton's casting, the issue would be with how Burton handled the character.
The issue was the casting--a direct reflection of Burton's rejection of who Bruce Wayne/Batman was supposed to be, and a short, balding comedic actor was not that.
Once I accepted those first two films as Tim Burton's version of Batman, rather than Batman from the comics, I grew to appreciate them a lot more.
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