Hole Shot
Better Than Smurfberries
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Epic Fail Guy.
oh.
Look it up
Technically, I just did. Thank you.
Epic Fail Guy.
Look it up
I am not saying that V was the lead. However he was still able to convey large amounts of emotion through his actions and tone of voice. The identity was a mystery however he still was able to let the audience gather their own impression.
No, they just had the TDK logo (bat with blue flames) on their suits.http://jalopnik.com/397684/batmobile-to-lap-silverstone-alongside-toyota-f1-car
I hear that this thursdays grand prix toyota's driver overall would be made to look like the batsuit.. any on here have pics on that?
Does anyone think that's the same cowl from BB,The only thing that change is the neck.Some angles look diferent coz he had more movement this time,so when his head looks down or crouches his nose apears to look bigger.That didn't happen much in BB coz the bracing of the neck,it keeps the cowl intact coz it's in one piece.
The lenses look the same as BTAS, I don't see why some people are saying their too big. I think their prefect.
I'm sure it'll look fine in the movie, Nolan's not a ******, he knows what looks good and what doesn't.
So I woke up this morning...and I love the suit.
Just kidding. I still hate most of it.
t:Yeah, but you cant have batman's face fixed with that empty look. It only works for comics and animation because they move the lenses to express emotion.I personally love the lenses.
1) He only uses them for a couple of scenes, or well, maybe more, but definitely not for the whole movie anyway, so it's no big deal.
2) Brings him closer to a comic book or BTAS look.
3) Looks hauntingly badass.
4) Any good actor will tell you that your body language is enough to bring a character to life. I'm not saying that having the most perfect body language and the fakest diction ever will get you an oscar, but just that not seeing his eyes should not be an issue in Bale's general performance.
Yeah, but you cant have batman's face fixed with that empty look. It only works for comics and animation because they move the lenses to express emotion.
Although you have a point for saying that the writers/artists of the comics/BTAS Batman can use his eyes to carry emotion because of how the "lenses" (if lenses they are) get narrower or wider, it doesn't change a thing to what I said.
I said that actors don't necessarily need their eyes to convey appropriately an emotion. Using his limbs, posture, and his lower facial features, since they are still exposed, Bale or any other actor with talent would be able to provide a top notch performance. The fact that his eyes appear or not is irrelevant. So is the fact that the lenses don't change size.
I really don't think that just adding lenses to the Batsuit would in anyway deprive a good actor of his ability to act correctly.
Full-time lenses are really unnecessary for a Batman film and the minute or two we get of these is just a small nod to fans.
I never said they were necessary. I said that the fact they're here does NOT lessen the actor's performance.
I wouldn't say sonar - it's reminiscent of the "Sonar" suit from Forever but I doubt the function of the lenses has anything to do with sonar.
Says who? You? We can argue all day about whether or not seeing Bale's eyes make a significant difference in his performance. Do lenses completely invalidate it? No. Do they lessen it? Maybe.Do I really have to repeat myself once more? I mean, really... Read my posts.
Ok, one last time:
The fact that an actor's eyes are visible or not does not affect the general performance of said-actor.
It does because you are pulling your point out of your ass. There is no proof one way or the other that lenses would affect his performance. You can't simply say, "lenses have no effect" and it becomes true.THEREFORE, lenses on the cowl will not affect Bale's (or whoever else is playing Batman) performance. Meaning : It won't make the performance better or worse, and if the actor is not just a fake and has some talent, he will be able to portray the character just as well as if his eyes were visible.
The fact that the lenses appear in TDK for a split-second only has nothing to do with my point.
Oh and when you say that "He does not wear the lenses in any performance", you're wrong. The "performance" is "performed" every single second spent on-screen. Every appearance of any character in a movie is a performance.