Yes. Entertainment is not one of B Forever's problems.
Being a big fan of a certain character, the biggest problem for me is one that starts with "T" and ends with "wo-Face"

But oh well who would've known 2008 would come to deliver

Yes. Entertainment is not one of B Forever's problems.


Everything is collected and referenced here - http://gothamalleys.blogspot.com/2010/11/their-comments-on-others-work.html
Burton's films are very sexual...both of them are. Burton shows all his charcters to be completely outside the society they comment on. Nihilistic supermen fighting each other without reason. As they all have disdain for the law which keeps the society intact.
Nolan's films are very existential showing what elements would create such a vigilante activist hero. The need for a paternal relationships and how fear affects the mind. How fixing the world without and spiritual catharsis leads to a meditation on power and its destructive effects.
Both are extremely deep. Nolan's films are better though. Ebert is right in saying that throughout Burton's films the audience is disconnected to the character. TDK takes the cake though with the differences between Dent and Batman creating a questions that allow for so many different points of view the cometary becomes endless.
Schumacher's films were fun when I was a child, but they were studio controlled and did not allow Schumacher to make films the way he usually does. Dark.
Well, wasn't Burton's fetiche actor who tattoed "Winona Forever" on his arm? Lol.



That's up to each of the audience members to decide. It's really a case by case basis. I'm sure there are some people who didn't at all feel connected to Burton's Batman while others did. While I love both, I actually feel like I identify more with Keaton's Batman. I think to find the answer everyone simply must ask themselves, "If I was Batman, which one would I be(more) like? Keaton or Bale?"
Haha... Some time soon Nolan's films will belong here too.
Sequels???
Damn, I always considered them separate entities. I never even thought B&R and Batman Forever were sequels.

I think Schumaucher's films exist in Burton's world, but the Burton films don't exist in Schumaucher's world if you know what I mean. Schumaucher's movies are clearly "sequels" to Burton's series, but it's also obviously a very soft reboot.