CaptainClown
Papa SPANK!!!
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2007
- Messages
- 25,611
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 31
That is why I say basically make him like the thing
A man trapped inside a grotesque image, after being so used to being the "IT" guy, shows a great downfall. Sure he can take on any image he wants, but the important thing is he can't maintain that look forever. If I remember correctly, he constantly needs to take in that special chemical to retain his form. If that's so, it's even more interesting adding in the addiction element. Something that hasn't been really done before with a villain.
Timm and Dini managed to make something deep out of a shallow shell. All this, for a kid's cartoon mind you. There are limitless possibilities with Clayface. He has more potential than Sandman.
Batman is so far (other than the Hulk), the only franchise to have a reboot so quickly after the last run. That's one of the reasons that having villains who've already featured in the previous Bat-movies kinda gets to me.
Don't get me wrong - I loved Batman Begins and I'm really, REALLY loving what I've seen of TDK. But what about how the general public would see it? It's possible that a lot of people will still be thinking of Jack Nicholson when the movie comes out and wonder, "The Joker and Two-face? Didn't they already do those guys?" And considering that Batman probably has the coolest rogues gallery, it might have been possible to have looked at others.
That's what I liked about BB - I'd never seen Ra's or Scarecrow on screen. But now we're gonna definitely have Joker and Two-face again. Then there's speculation about the Riddler, Penguin and Catwoman in the third installment as possibilities.
I don't know why, but it does kinda bother me.
In fact, I've always wondered why comic-book movies don't utilize their platform to say show us a new villain and this goes for most franchises. I think it'd be kinda cool to announce a new villain who we know nothing about and it would be interesting to see how the hype for that would build up.
Opinions?
The villains were without a doubt the weakest aspect of Begins. Based on the reactions to the Wizard World footage this promblem appears to have been fixed.
Does it really matter?
If Joker LOOKS the same (deadly clown with white skin, green hair, red lips), and he ACTS the same (homicidal, crazy, maniacal), then what's the difference about what his origin or costuming methodolgy is? I mean, if he's so crazy that he feels he has to dress up like this scary-looking, killer clown - isn't that good? Isn't that yet another indication of just how screwed up he is?
Over the years, Batman characters have changed and evolved - sometimes radically. In the 60s, the Joker was truly a joke of a character - ridiculous, non-threatening. And somebody had to make him deadly, psychotic, and threatening again. Similarly, Nolan is trying to do the same - a twist on an old theme, making it somewhat "new" again, synthesizing the best elements for a new, better mix.
Batman is so far (other than the Hulk), the only franchise to have a reboot so quickly after the last run. That's one of the reasons that having villains who've already featured in the previous Bat-movies kinda gets to me.
Don't get me wrong - I loved Batman Begins and I'm really, REALLY loving what I've seen of TDK. But what about how the general public would see it? It's possible that a lot of people will still be thinking of Jack Nicholson when the movie comes out and wonder, "The Joker and Two-face? Didn't they already do those guys?" And considering that Batman probably has the coolest rogues gallery, it might have been possible to have looked at others.
That's what I liked about BB - I'd never seen Ra's or Scarecrow on screen. But now we're gonna definitely have Joker and Two-face again. Then there's speculation about the Riddler, Penguin and Catwoman in the third installment as possibilities.
I don't know why, but it does kinda bother me.
In fact, I've always wondered why comic-book movies don't utilize their platform to say show us a new villain and this goes for most franchises. I think it'd be kinda cool to announce a new villain who we know nothing about and it would be interesting to see how the hype for that would build up.
Opinions?
After reading a lot of the posts, I kinda wonder if we're taking for granted the very nature of Nolan's interpretation of Batman's villains.
People keep saying, we're finally going to see it done right, etc. when we haven't really seen much to justify that. I mean, who knows? The joker might dominate the film again. We'd need to see the final film.
In fact, now that I think about it, I do believe that the villains in Begins were part of the weaker aspects of the movie.
For me, the only thing that I didn't like was the lack of the fantastical, EVEN THOUGH I LOVED BEGINS SOOOO MUCH, but do you remember from Batman 89 when Bats took the plane up into the heavens and it silohoutted his symbol through the moon and then started blasted everything....that was awe-inspiring, I miss "fantastical" moments like that...I want more of them with TDK
Look at it this way....B89 came out 21 years after the 60s show ended...no one thought that was too soon. Now we've got TDK giving us the Joker on screen for the first time in 19 years....that's not much of a difference. Then there's Scarecrow that was never in a previous movie, and Two-Face who will have been seen last 13 years ago (when TDK comes out). Maroni, Falcone, Gamble, not on film.
So out of lots of bad guys, only one will have been on screen in the last 13 years and that's Two-Face.
This thread has no merit.
Does it really matter?
If Joker LOOKS the same (deadly clown with white skin, green hair, red lips), and he ACTS the same (homicidal, crazy, maniacal), then what's the difference about what his origin or costuming methodolgy is? I mean, if he's so crazy that he feels he has to dress up like this scary-looking, killer clown - isn't that good? Isn't that yet another indication of just how screwed up he is?
Over the years, Batman characters have changed and evolved - sometimes radically. In the 60s, the Joker was truly a joke of a character - ridiculous, non-threatening. And somebody had to make him deadly, psychotic, and threatening again. Similarly, Nolan is trying to do the same - a twist on an old theme, making it somewhat "new" again, synthesizing the best elements for a new, better mix.
I understand that he's reimagining a character for a new medium, but come on.... I don't care how many fanboys protect Nolan or his vision, but Joker is not Joker unless he suffered a chemical-accident. Him dressing up as a clown yes makes him sick in the head, but sorry it doesn't cut it for me, because if that's the case than I guess we'll see Riddler walking around as a big question mark, and Penguin with webbed hands again.
Maybe we'll see a flashback of what really happened to him to make him The Joker, but an anarchist doesn't really become an anarchist unless there is a reason. A protestor doesn't become a protestor unless given a reason to protest.
I mean I had no problem with Scarecrow or Rahs Al-Ghul in "Begins" because it worked. They tied it where Scarecrow was working with Rahs and Falcone had no idea what the two were planning behind his back. To me it fit and worked.
What turned me off about hearing stuff from the new trailer is that Joker's makeup runs and smears. Sorry, the Joker I know and comic-book fans know, does not wear runny makeup. It's stuck, it's permanent, it's a part of his face. He's basically an albino with weird lips and dead hair. If Nolan were to just make Joker that without the chemical bath, I would've been fine, but instead it seems like he had diarreha and took a massive dump on the Joker's origins.
If the Joker's not Perma-white, then I hate it, the only thing that I don't want revamped or recycled or whatever, he falls into an effing bath and becomes the Joker, period..why is it suddenly okay, for people to neccesarily change it just because it becomes a movie, what to stay realistically, A Man dresses up as an effing bat dammit
I disagree. I think Neeson and Cillian did a brillant job as Ducard/Ra´s and Crane/Scarecrow and they served the story well.
On the topic, recycling villains at this point is inevitable. Almost every important Batman villain has been used in either the Burton/Schumacher movies or Begins. The idea is simply to give them fresh interpretations.
He's only that IF you don't include the character elements we've just discussed. Giving him the literal appearance of a monster only helps to amplify what's already there, a man with a lost identity who has to resort to mimicking others and taking in chemicals. I don't see why we can't have both.Yeah that's exactly what clayface should be. But does being 'trapped in a grotesque image' have to involve the giant fists and mud slinging? Not if he's what you described above he doesn't. It's great for a cartoon but my point was simply that the same charcter can be preserved in a more realisitc fashion suited for a more mature crime movie. He has a droopy face and has to live by impersonating others. That's enough to make it work.
And yeah he is basically Mystique, except crucially, he can't return to his natural form and he can't accepted for who he is (Mystique is accepted by other mutants). This has got to cause all kinds of identity problems and frustrations for Clayface and creates a clear connection to Batman, a celebrity who juggles different identites. The powers distract from the real meat and bones of the character, they're just for comic book covers and fight scenes, to make him visually exciting and uniquly threatening.
Damn straight.So if Joker and Two Face have the same amount of screentime and exposition as Ra's and Scarecrow did in the next two Batman films, you will be satisfied?
Because I know many on this board, myself included, surely won't.
He's only that IF you don't include the character elements we've just discussed. Giving him the literal appearance of a monster only helps to amplify what's already there, a man with a lost identity who has to resort to mimicking others and taking in chemicals. I don't see why we can't have both.
Imo, simplifying him into a guy with a messed up, albeit malleable face, isn't enough. It stinks of trying to tone down a character to fit the "real world". A method I'm frankly tired of. We shouldn't be afraid of translating these characters into live-action to fit a certain image. The most important part is treating the material seriously and passion.
The visuals will be backed up by quality writing, not plausibility.