Zaphod said:
Just to reiterate my idea for a Movie!Riddler portrayal:
I would have The Riddler wear a green suit and bowler hat, and while I would indeed go with the question marks all over the green of his general dress, I would abort the purple eye mask for purple tinted lenses, simply because it fits in far better with how I would portray The Riddler in my movies.
You see, The Riddler to me is extremely arrogant, and rather than shieding his persona from the public (which an eye mask, as opposed to lenses, would suggest) he wants to advertise his actions. This may sound like The Joker, but the key difference is that while both characters are flamboyant to a degree, the Joker being a freakin' loon, the Riddler advetisises himself much differently. It would Nygma's Riddles, not his general persona, that he wants Gotham and the authroties to take heed of. Initially, I would have The Riddler as a right hand man to a mob boss in a movie where he first appears; the crime lord in question is using the Riddler as a means of sending authorites chasing down blind alleys, aswell as the Batman, which would infact make more sense since by now the Batman has proved himself a threat to anyone in the crime game, and the Riddler would be much sort after as a means of diverting away the Bat's attention.
In fact, I quite like the idea of the underworld vying for control of Nygma's services, with The Riddler more intellgent than the lot of them and with ability to have them all succumb to him through one big Riddle if he so wished. Another aspect to the Riddlers character I would introduce is to make him into a 'human lie-detector' he would be well versed in 'the riddles of the human body' as he would call them. Whenever an interrogation wasn't turning up answers, the Riddler would simply be called in by his boss to read the pup who isn't squealing!
The Riddler needs to be one seriously dark, nasty, creepy, but yet flamboyant character. I really feel he has potential for a Bat-Movie, even on par with the likes of Joker and Two Face (the latter of who I woul like to be in a movie with the Riddler, although not as partners like in 'Forever' of course). I would of course include scenes of Riddler being at the scene of one of his crime in process, since he is an arrogant bastard who seldom fears seriously being caught due to his seering intelligence and use of riddles.
Thoughts? Sorry if that was all slightly out of order, I'm scatterbrained at the moment and it's late.
This all sounds great. I'm assuming he'll also have his patented Question Mark cane at hand, possibly having been integrated with weaponry by the Penguin's people.
When you say he needs to be "one seriously dark, nasty, creepy, yet flamboyant character," I hope you don't mean you'd want us to push the brutality factor and make him something worse than he's been in the comics. If anything, Riddler should be a "relief" villain, not as in "comic relief," but as in someone who isn't as emotionally draining and horrific as Two-Face and not as psychotic and murderous as the Joker. I mean as in someone the Batman would allow Robin to confront within his first year of training.
If Riddler's in the same movie as Two-Face, I think there ought to be a little bit of "lightness" in contrast to Two-Face's story. I don't mean silliness (anymore than is necessary to even feature a Batman villain, anyway) or unrestricted levity, I mean a piece of the movie where the viewer isn't constantly thinking "What would I do if one of my only real friends turned crazy and I had to stop him... would I let him kill that mobster?" etc. I mean something not as dark, is all. Jim Carey was brilliant in
the role that was written for him in 'Batman Forever' (the same cannot be said for
anyone in 'Batman & Robin,' unfortunately, even allowing for bad writing), but even for a callback to the Silver Age, there was something a little... off... and regardless, that level of zaniness and camp isn't right for the general tone that you and I are going for. That doesn't mean he can't be silly at times, or even that "darker" villains can't, but it's a delicate balance that takes real thought to construct properly.
In other news:
Cullen has put in his two cents on Clayface, saying that if it isn't a monstrous shapeshifter, then there shouldn't be a Clayface at all. I'm personally keeping an open mind to the earlier incanation of Basil Karlo, the crazed actor who had no superpowers but was still a dangerous murderer. Karlo was a classic horror movie actor (you can see a resemblance in the name to another famous monster movie actor) who had starred in a movie called 'Clayface.' When he heard they were making a remake, he snapped, donned the mask of the movie's villain and embarked on a spree killing of the cast and crew.
I demand that there be at the very, very least, a cameo mention of a remake of the movie 'Clayface' in one of the movies, possibly playing at the Monarch Theater if Bruce Wayne has it re-opened, or maybe most of the letters of CLAYFACE can be hanging off the dirty marquee of the abandoned theater, having been the last show to play before they closed it down a few weeks after the Wayne murders ended up killing sales.
I think this guy is a perfect candidate for Arkham Asylum. Can't you just see the Joker critiquing his performance, saying that the Clayface creature was moving in its way, but it lacked personality, accessability, and most of all, a sense of humor. Karlo, through gritted teeth, would say, "He's... not... that... kind... of... villain!!" Heh heh.
You have to admit, if we put in a small sub-plot for the original Clayface, it would be perfectly faithful to the comics without complicating whichever movie it was in, and in the fantasy world where we're co-producers/writers/etc. and giving interviews, you can be damn sure I'd say that the only reason we didn't use a shapeshifter was because I'm not a big fan of those Clayfaces and they require too much development for "minor villain" roles, and that it was never a question of realism.
Thoughts?
