Hmm, looking at the casting done so far by Nolan, I think I see just how he chooses actors for their roles.
Tim Burton focused on the world of the strange, macabre and different, and cast accordingly for B89 and BR (Keaton as the main hero, DeVito as a mutant penguin-human, Michelle Pfeiffer as the ambiguous Catwoman, Walken as the vampire-like businessman) Only Nicholson seems like a studio demand rather than Burton's firm no.1 choice, probably due to needing a big name. He wasn't as interested in the big names as he was in the unusual casting for the strange worlds.
Joel Schumacher was more interested in the casting of villains, and seemed only interested in having a good-looking face for Batman. He was focussed on casting either big names or future big stars for the villain roles (Kidman, Carrey, Jones, Schwarzeneggar, Thurman, McPherson), with no thematic connection to the story.
Nolan has cast according to his own interpretation of Batman, and can now be seen far more clearly after BB and initial casting for TDK. Nolan likes looking at the grey area between good and evil, ambiguity of the characters and defining them as reflections of others (Bale and Jackman in The Prestige, Pacino and Williams in Insomnia, Guy Pearce and Sammy Jenkins in Memento). He's less interested in how big the actor is, and more interested in their capabilities of performance.
Basically, Nolan only casts actors who are a potential Bruce Wayne / Batman as the villain.
It may sound a bit obvious, but it does make sense. In BB, the 3 main villains were Scarecrow, Ra's and Earle (Falcone doesn't count, because he's not an enemy of Bruce / Batman, but for the world in general). Each role was played by a potential Batman actor (Murphy was a candidate for the role in BB, Neeson auditioned for Bond over 12 years ago (so it's not that hard to see him for this role), and look at Hauer in Blade Runner - a physically perfect person acting renegade, avoiding capture from the authorities to save a life, albeit his own? Sounds a bit like Batman to me.)
Now look at TDK and the casting of Ledger as the Joker. You could argue that he would NEVER be able to play Batman, but he was rumoured to up for 3 superhero roles, 2 of which were confirmed - Spider-man and Superman (3rd was Batman).
As for the casting of Harvey Dent, I could definitely see Bailey for the role far more than Norton or Foxx (Norton doesn't have that sensitivity to make you care for the character - you'd rather hate him than feel sorry for him.
Foxx is wrong not because of his skin colour, but compare him to Denzel - who would be more real as Batman?)
Tim Burton focused on the world of the strange, macabre and different, and cast accordingly for B89 and BR (Keaton as the main hero, DeVito as a mutant penguin-human, Michelle Pfeiffer as the ambiguous Catwoman, Walken as the vampire-like businessman) Only Nicholson seems like a studio demand rather than Burton's firm no.1 choice, probably due to needing a big name. He wasn't as interested in the big names as he was in the unusual casting for the strange worlds.
Joel Schumacher was more interested in the casting of villains, and seemed only interested in having a good-looking face for Batman. He was focussed on casting either big names or future big stars for the villain roles (Kidman, Carrey, Jones, Schwarzeneggar, Thurman, McPherson), with no thematic connection to the story.
Nolan has cast according to his own interpretation of Batman, and can now be seen far more clearly after BB and initial casting for TDK. Nolan likes looking at the grey area between good and evil, ambiguity of the characters and defining them as reflections of others (Bale and Jackman in The Prestige, Pacino and Williams in Insomnia, Guy Pearce and Sammy Jenkins in Memento). He's less interested in how big the actor is, and more interested in their capabilities of performance.
Basically, Nolan only casts actors who are a potential Bruce Wayne / Batman as the villain.
It may sound a bit obvious, but it does make sense. In BB, the 3 main villains were Scarecrow, Ra's and Earle (Falcone doesn't count, because he's not an enemy of Bruce / Batman, but for the world in general). Each role was played by a potential Batman actor (Murphy was a candidate for the role in BB, Neeson auditioned for Bond over 12 years ago (so it's not that hard to see him for this role), and look at Hauer in Blade Runner - a physically perfect person acting renegade, avoiding capture from the authorities to save a life, albeit his own? Sounds a bit like Batman to me.)
Now look at TDK and the casting of Ledger as the Joker. You could argue that he would NEVER be able to play Batman, but he was rumoured to up for 3 superhero roles, 2 of which were confirmed - Spider-man and Superman (3rd was Batman).
As for the casting of Harvey Dent, I could definitely see Bailey for the role far more than Norton or Foxx (Norton doesn't have that sensitivity to make you care for the character - you'd rather hate him than feel sorry for him.
Foxx is wrong not because of his skin colour, but compare him to Denzel - who would be more real as Batman?)