The Boy Who Loved Batman
theodp writes "As a young boy, Batman producer Michael Uslan — a self-described 'ultimate comic book geek' — was traumatized to see the Caped Crusader being 'murdered' in front of his very eyes by the camp 60's TV series. 'I was horrified,' Uslan told a Harper College audience last week. 'I was horrified because the whole world was laughing at Batman, and that just killed me.' At that point, the 13-year-old vowed to teach the world about the Batman he knew, about the crusader who lurked in the shadows, about a darker, grittier superhero. As told in his memoir The Boy Who Loved Batman, he made good on that vow: Uslan has served as the executive producer of all Batman major motion pictures, from 1989's Batman to the upcoming The Dark Knight Rises (trailer)."
So he made a few more movies where everyone laughed at Batman, and then he made Batman Begins? Why would he do that?
Adam West is the one true Batman!
* Carthago Delenda Est *
people who are preoccupied with homosexuality and predisposed to see it in everything
The problem is how common such people are in modern American society. Otherwise, we wouldn't have had the Teletubbies scandal with Po accused of calling Tinky Winky a "faggot faggot" over purple fur, a triangular antenna, and a purse.
Nolan's batman is no less funny. Short, with an undecipherable fake voice, horrible fighting style, a moping bruce wayne...don't get me started. Jesus I don't know why any comic book fan would like this latest set of Batman movies. But everyone else seems to think they're the cat's whiskers.
FTFA
At that point, the 13-year-old vowed to teach the world about the Batman he knew, about the crusader who lurked in the shadows, about a darker, grittier superhero.
And then he goes out and becomes executive producer of Batman Returns, Batman Forever, Batman & Robin, and the shit-tastic Halley Berry classic Catwoman.
More like he wanted to show the world that he could cash in on the caped crusader as much as everyone else.
Batman was never about the main character himself, but his foes.
That's ultimately the case with any quality super hero. The hero is only as great as the villains and Batman has some of the greatest villains ever created. Same goes for James Bond, the Bond films that don't work are generally the ones where the villain sucked.
Have you seen the fan-made trailer for a movie called "Grayson"? It's remarkably good. They never made it into a full movie, but when you watch the trailer, you can't help wishing they did:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQyfQ7RMOXs
Wait wait, don't start a Batman vs. Star Wars argument!
Ooh but let's!
1. Dresses in dark colours with cape and mask.
2. Is a reclusive loner who doesn't play by the book
3. Emotionally scarred by the death of a parent.
4. Dedicated his life to ridding society of criminal scum.
5. Is competent in close-quarters combat without firearms
6. Has a son who follows his father's ways but with a different philosophy
7. Uses his advanced mental powers to keep enemies terrified and off-guard
8. Meets in secret with an authority figure who acts as a mentor, but doesn't always follow their advice
9. Flies a distinctive personal vehicle with curved wings
10. Can choke people over a videophone
vs
10. Carries exploding shark repellant at all times
I think it's a tie.
You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
People escape from Arkham, which is technically a hospital. There are very few escapes from Blackgate, which is the prison. Also, most Batman villains represent an attribute of Batman, which leads to a conflict. Riddler, for instance, is the Batman's intelligence, Two-Face is the Batman's sense of justice. Most of his villains is an equal-opposite which is what makes them significant. Also, the Penguin is awesome. Batman has few villains he can interact with as Batman AND Bruce Wayne. Penguin doesn't use trick umbrellas that often by the way.