Zaphod said:
Great stuff Herr
We discussed the Batmans belt and trunks someway back in this thread. I'd certainly want a utility belt modeled of off material pouches, as you say, it should closely resemble military equipment in this respect. The belt should also be a dark bage/brown colour, not yellow. I agree with what you said about Flass working for Loeb, who works for Falcone. Flass should be Loebs 'hatchet man' in many respects, the 'dirty dealin' arm' of Loebs force. I'd imagine Loeb would been seen meeting with Falcone at least once or twice in this movie, much like how Flass met with Falcone in
Begins. The difference here is that Falcone would order Loeb to have his man Flass carry out the business, instead of Loeb doing it directly himself (which is obviously unrealistic since he is Commisioner and wouldn't want to jeporadise his position within the force, where's Flass is far better suited to the grunt work, so to speak).
Speaking of Dent and Batman however, would their relationship be an indirect one, through Lieutenant Gordan, or would Dent be in close cahoots with Bats more so then Gordan himself? How would you go about Dents character development in this movie, or would this be saved to a later movie?
If Batman's general investigation in this movie is to be unearthing to the corruption within the GCPD, then where would this leave Scarecrow? I'm trying to think something up for Crane's character, any ideas of your own?
Thank you kindly, Zaphod, and great questions.
Regarding Harvey Dent, I imagine him being a critical part of the cops/corruption plot, but not as prominent in this movie as Gordon. We don't follow his story and see his fears and dreams the way we do Gordon's and the Batman's, but we know what the Batman thinks of him. He probably would have a closer relationship with the Batman than with Gordon, but the Batman is closer to Gordon than Dent. Both Gordon and the Batman sense darkness in Dent, but know he's not corrupt and that he's an idealist rather than merely a politician.
Basically, his character is developed further in future movies. You might see him flipping the two-headed coin-- the memento of his terrible childhood that he can't bring himself to discard-- while alone in his office, and he quickly puts it away as soon as he's aware that the Batman is with him. Also, he shows very little fear with regard to other people. He isn't afraid of the Batman hardly at all, and though he is startled by the Batman doing his ninja-sneak into his office late at night, his reaction is the same as if it were a colleague or aquaintance who had appeared out of nowhere. Dent is happy as hell that the Batman is in action and working through the system, because now he can actually get things done, so he acts amiably and mostly relaxed around the Batman. Gordon is scared of the Batman, as well as his fellow officers, although he nevers behaves in a cowardly manner. Dent literally shows no indication of real fear toward anyone, except when he's alone. Short explanation is, Bad Harvey is the personification of fear and how we deal with fear, and Good Harvey is the idealist who stands for justice and doesn't yield. Harvey isn't afraid of the Batman because he lives with something infinitely scarier in private. We don't see Bad Harvey make more than the most extremely subtle (nice oxymoron, huh?) signs of himself until the second movie, where Dent seems more stressed out and more willing to bend the rules. He doesn't meet with Gordon and the Batman on a rooftop until the second movie, but the Batman may be listening in on one of Dent's private meetings with Gordon where he either doesn't know or doesn't care that he's there. Gordon refers to his "source" when talking to Dent, and by the time he's shown meeting with him, Dent has pretty much figured out who the lieutenant is referring to. If the Batman isn't hiding in the shadows, Dent figures that Gordon will relay any important info to him.
Dent will briefly be shown looking on with approval at the very end when the Batsignal is first turned on. He may put away his coin when he first notices it, indicating it makes him feel safer.
The more I think about involving the Batman directly in Gordon's plot with the GCPD, the more I think I don't actually need the Scarecrow. The biggest reason I want the Scarecrow in is, aside from the fact that it would be good to have a major villain who is psychotic in addition to one who is merely eccentric (Penguin), I wanted to use the plot point from 'Begins' that allow for Arkham Asylum being busted wide open and releasing dozens of criminally insane people into the city. In the comics, the Batman appeared in Gotham first, and the colorful, costumed villains appeared afterward. While 'Begins' is marked by a few failures that came out of trying to be "realistic," it succeeded in potentially explaining why there were criminally insane people in Gotham City before the Batman, but they didn't use gimmicks and extreme tactics until the Batman showed up. I say "potentially" because it's obvious that they want to water down every colorful villain in the rogue's gallery (the Scarecrow wasn't even going to wear a mask, and they aren't even going to give the Joker a purple suit, which is just plain ****ing heresy and there's no excuse for it whatsoever). Come to think of it, that didn't explain the Scarecrow's gimmick, so it applies to all the other villains but Scarecrow and R'as Al Ghul. Anyway, I think the idea of the Asylum emptying out into the city and the Batman inspiring escalation in these people would be a decent way to go. However, it isn't necessary. By not having this element, that leaves the ongoing ambiguity that has surrounded the Batman mythos from early on. Is he actually attracting these nutjobs? Is he making Gotham a crazier place to live?
Anyway, if the Scarecrow wasn't in the movie, then the story would reflect the faithful and widely usable (meaning, it doesn't only work if you know that Frank Miller wrote it and is showing off how gritty, edgy and over-the-top he can be) elements of 'Year One,' with a large emphasis on the Batman fighting street crime, detective work, and the growing relationship between Gordon and the Batman that will allow both of them to hopefully make Gotham a safer place to live.
There would, however, be the Penguin, no matter what. Even if there are no psychotic villains in the first movie, there has to be a colorful rogue, no matter what. Oswald Cobblepot is perfect, since he obviously fits that category and he would essentially be just another crime boss who gets a courtesy visit from the Batman to let them know about new the "city ordinances". I also really like the idea of having the Penguin inspire the Batman into using the subsonic bat-call to evade police. Cobblepot uses trained animals that are his namesake (not that he chose a bird's name himself or uses penguins specifically, but it fits with the source material all too perfectly) to help him against his enemies. I figure the Batman will experience that (as well as his deadly umbrellas) at some point before he finds himself chased by an enormous police task force, and he will have taken the lesson to heart and modified the idea. The Batman can't train bats in a short amount of time, and does not make friends with them, as Cobblepot does with birds, but he has a lot of money and a company that makes high-tech gadgets, so he can make it work.
If the Penguin was the only classic rogue in the movie, then he would probably play a slightly bigger role. I want this movie, like any other based on classic, prominent superhero cultural icons I conceptualize, to be about 3 hours, two and a half at the very least. There's definitely room enough for everything without the Scarecrow, and although my original idea for the Batman confronting the Penguin a second time was directly related to the Scarecrow threatening to poison the city, I'm sure he can find a good reason besides that. In the second confrontation, the Batman has learned from his first encounter and adapted, showing that this is how he operates. In the comics, at this late stage in continuity, the Batman's ingenuity often is a joke because of how supernally, unreasonable capable he is, and his ability to adapt is drastically stunted by the fact that he doesn't kill when he knows it will save lives. In a movie franchise, however, it's relatively easy to show how smart he is, and those opportunities should be taken advantage of.
If, however, the story does include the Scarecrow, then Crane's plot will be mostly independent of the rest of what's going on. Jonathon Crane will be everything he was in the comics, but in addition to having been a professor at Gotham University (and fired from there due to his highly unethical experiments), he will, like in 'Begins' start out in the film as a psychopharmacologist at Arkham Asylum. Unlike in 'Begins,' he does not
run the asylum, or appear to do so, and he will be fired from his position the similar reasons as his being fired from the university. This event will push him over the edge and lead him to become fear itself-- the Scarecrow, with the full costume and everything.
The connection between the Scarecrow and the Penguin-- which is why in my original idea the Batman pays another visit to Cobblepot after having been driven off-- is merely that Crane hires thugs to help him in his monstrous campaign against Gotham, and the Penguin has his finger on the pulse of the criminal underworld of Gotham. He's got the info. No respectable person in organized crime will have anything to do with Scarecrow (plus the Penguin, who is not considered by the local mobs to be truly respectable, but rather an eccentric, "new-money" charlatan with pretensions of standing), because he's not out for profit and the smart ones know that, even if the dumb thugs believe they'll actually get paid for their labor.
The Scarecrow will test the effect of his fear toxin delivered through liquid consumption. Perhaps at a high-society ball where all the drinks-- not just the alcoholic ones, or it wouldn't effect Bruce Wayne-- are spiked with the fear toxin? Bruce Wayne would be there, acting shallow and bored, and people would gradually start to freak out and panic. Bruce, during the panic, would notice a suspicious person dressed as a caterer/waiter/bartender sneaking out of the chaos, and he would follow him. The hireling leads him back to the the Scarecrow and his gang. After beating up the crew, the Batman comes face to face with the Scarecrow, and while he'd been fighting the fear drug's effects this entire time and rising above it, he cracks when he sees Crane in his costume. He is distracted enough by his hallucinations of unrelenting swarms of bats and his parents getting murdered over and over again that the Scarecrow kicks his ass using amateur martial arts and... I don't know, a rake or something. Anyway, the Batman would escape and return to the Cave, either by having Alfred pick him up or by climbing into his car and having the Batmobile's autopilot do the driving. As he stays in the Cave and waits for the toxin to run its course, he's too messed up in the head to even read over the case files he knows he should be reviewing for when he goes back into action. In fact, he can't even stay in the Cave because the bats are terrifying him. He has nightmares of his parents' murder, of the bats coming upstairs and assimilating his childhood home into the darkness that has become his life, of Alfred and Leslie being murdered, and of his getting taken down like a rank amateur by a flock of trained birds, a poisoned glass of ginger ale, and a spindly psychopath dressed in straw-stuffed burlap. He fears that all the years he spent training his mind and body to nigh-perfection were all a pathetic waste. He fears that his deliberate efforts to make Bruce Wayne a hopeless ditz in the eyes of the world have left him without a fruitful future, because he fears that he will have to give up his crusade and his playboy persona is all he'll be left with. He's left in this state for about two days, with the standard duration of the effects of the toxin (uttered by the Scarecrow to his hirelings, not to Bruce Wayne) for someone his size being about three or four days. After two days, he gets out of bed and goes back down to the Cave, staring down the bats, opening up his crime files, doing about a two thousand pushups (because he's behind on his exercises, you see), testing out all his most difficult athletic moves, and finally putting on his costume and staring himself down in the mirror. He's horrified by his own masked visage, but the renewed knowledge of the fear he inspires empowers him to carry on his war on crime and chaos.
This movie emphasizes intelligence, creativity, the power of fear (shown through organized crime, Bruce Wayne and the Batman's inner and outer conflicts, and the Scarecrow) and obsession more than passion and idealism, although there is that, too (more obviously portrayed on Gordon's part, though). There isn't going to be any damn kids saying "Batman will save us." I'd wait until at least the second film for the innocents of Gotham to trust the Batman at all. Even though the police will pursue the Batman in force, the fact that they fail to catch him strengthens the public's notion that he's an urban legend. He is an
aggressive urban legend.He wants some ambiguity, but he truly does want people to spread the word. It helps him strike fear into the hearts of superstitious and cowardly men if they're thinking about him before he actually shows up.
I'd like to hear the Batman say a line that was changed in 'BATMAN':
Batman: You're trespassing.
Criminal: You don't own the night.
Batman: I
am the night.
I'd also like him to say something ominous and dramatic to a gang leader, along the lines of:
"You're afraid. You've been afraid from the beginning. You hurt innocent people to make yourself feel strong. Strong enough to stand up to the things in the darkness that make you feel small and afraid. Strong enough to look that demon in the eye and tell it that you're not afraid anymore. Well, I'm here and I'm listening.
Always here and listening. Is there something you'd like to tell me now?"
Thoughts on all that?
