Zaphod said:
After these events, which would take place at the beggining of the third act, the Batman would establish his connections with Gordan and later on Dent, and begin his investigation proper into Falcone's criminal operations. One scenario I would have is Bruce Wayne, again disguised as a lowly worker, visiting the docks in daylight, and after sneaking about a little, takes some shots of a cargo-manifest which details a 'classified-shipment, unmarked'. At the same time, Bruce would also note a routine, and obscenely large quantity shipment of exotic bird-seed making it's way into Gotham harbour. Noting this down for it's oddity, Bruce pays it little attention, until later on (when at the opera scene you mentioned, with Falcone family, Cobblepot, and the Maroni's) Bruce gathers intell on The Penguin (perhaps Bruce has planted microphones in all three of the key player's booths), and linking what he found at the docks (the large deliveries of bird-seed) with the profile of Cobblepot (it would be mentioned he's bird-keeping and fascination), discovers a new0lead and another name in Gotham's underworld who needs bringing down.
Wait, the beginning of the third act? How many acts are supposed to be in a movie? I thought it was three, but I could easily be wrong. My view of it was this (not complete, just main points that come to mind right now):
The first act would cover the Batman's childhood, training and very preliminary recon, which results in the failed crime-fighting attempt, and culminating with the defining moment with that damn bat flying through the window ("I will
become the Bat.")
The second act would cover the Batman making his presence known ("You don't own the night!" "I
am the night"), tipping his hand to Leslie Thompkins, gathering more solid info, Bruce Wayne officially returning to Gotham, Wayne business being sorted out, Batman doing surveillance on the major players (Falcone, Maroni, Penguin, Dent, and Lt. Gordon, the first Batmobile unveiled, who catches his eye based on his accolades and reputation as being incorruptible), the Batman making contact with James Gordon, the Batman confronting the Penguin and getting chased off, the docks scenario you just laid out
The third act would cover Gordon getting jumped by Flass, etc., the Batman brooding in the cave, Flass getting jumped by Gordon, the Batman making contact with Harvey Dent and aggressively pursuing the conspiracy case, the police chasing the Batman and losing a firefight, the Batman going back to the Penguin to do the job right this time, Gordon meeting the Batman after the Bat-signal shines for the first time.
Again, that's a basic sketch. Let me know the total number of acts you're talking about and we can proceed with more clarity.
Oh, I almost forgot! Yeah, I like the stuff you mentioned, with the bird-seed and so forth. I think it's a good idea to show Bruce Wayne diguised as a completely alternate persona seperate from Wayne or the Batman more than once. His face should be almost unrecognizable, though. This is Alfred's
disguise and makeup lessons in play.
I don't know about putting microphones in the various booths at the opera. Not writing it off, but I'm on the fence. I would say he should be using several miniaturized directional microphones (only two if Maroni is sitting with Falcone), pointed at the different targets, but that won't work easily if it's the opera (I think there's a way to isolate the voices from the music, but not sure). If it's a play, then that's no problem, but an opera is a much easier sell for Falcone, Maroni, Cobblepot and Bruce Wayne all at the same place. It's something to think about, anyway. Perhaps your idea is the best. I don't know a damn thing about opera houses, but I'm sure Wayne could arrange it so he knows where these players will be sitting, if he could find out they were going in the first place.
From here, Batman would later pay a visit to The Penguin, and cue the first big action 'Batman vs. Villain' set-peice of the movie, in the first Penguin/Batman meeting you described. Batman's 'motus-operandi' for going to the Penguin in the first place, would be as I say, to "kill-two-birds-with- one-stone" (you like that dont you

), in that he wants both information from him on Falcone's operation, and also with the intention on putting some fear into the birded foe, to bring his criminal antics down a peg or two.
"Two birds with one stone." It's obligatory!
Unfortunately, the Batman doesn't get either bird, since the Penguin doesn't know much about Falcone that the Batman couldn't have figured out from other sources (they don't talk to him at all, but as other gangs rise up in Gotham over the subsequent films, the Penguin will have info on them), won't talk anyway for now, and he proves more than prepared for the Batman. Trained animals... why didn't he think of that!
Throughout the investigation Batman makes into the GCPD corruption, and Falcone's operations in organzied-crime all over Gotham, the Batman should make use of documents and files, secretly-recorded conversations, prints, and all the the other crime-scene investigation equipment used in conjunction with exposing a culprit (in this case, Commisioner Loeb). I haven't planned out the ins and outs of the evidence which will be brought against the Commisioner, or the way in which it will incriminate him aswell as how Batman will collect it, past what I've described above.
A lot of the evidence the Batman collects isn't admissible. Regardless, it leads him to more information, and even if
none of it was admissible, he'd still be in a position to personally intervene. However, the way I see it, in addition to bringing documents, pictures and other evidence that can be analyzed and potentially cleared of suspicion of fabrication, the Batman's intel can legitimately be used to draw police attention to criminal activity where they're in a position to follow those leads without coming up against the
exclusionary rule (evidence not obtained constitutionally is useless in court, and any leads directly picked up from that illicit evidence is invalid under the
fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine... all this will be laid out for the audience in conversations between the Batman, Gordon and Dent). If I haven't got this all screwed up, an anonymous tip can be a valid lead if provided in abundant detail. If those details hold weight, that's grounds for reasonable suspicion.
Can you imagine the wealth of verifiable details someone like the Batman could just drop in a cop's lap? That would make for a great scene, wouldn't it? Gordon's in his office late at night, having already been contacted by the Batman earlier in the movie (which would be something like initial contact in 'Begins'). The Batman appears silently in the shadows, scaring the living crap out of Gordon. Gordon mentions the news reports and rumors regarding the Batman's activity, edgy as hell in his presence, and the Batman guides the conversation back to the case at hand. The Batman pulls out one piece of evidence after another (I don't have it all mapped out, and I'm unclear on a few things) and lays it on Gordon's desk-- photos, audio recordings, documents, and whatever else could be used by the police (fingerprints and hair and fiber samples taken by the Batman only help the Batman; I'm assuming that an anonymous informant handing you lifted fingerprints, etc. is worthless). When Gordon asks what equipment the Batman used, playing devil's advocate to address the prosecutor second-guessing the validity and not taking the chance in court or the defense's argument against it, the Batman supplies both digital and more traditional versions. The photos are digital. Hey, here are some Polaroids, so they'll have to prove either set of pictures were altered in the face of an expert's analysis, or let the case proceed. These here are digital recordings... my young daughter Barbara can manipulate digital audio files on her computer. What's that? Audio tapes that can be ruled out as being a second-hand copy (having been recorded from the digital being played instead of first-hand recorded alongside the digital), and you challenge me to find the seams where the tape would have been cut or audio gaps where the tape was stopped and then started again? Same deal with video recordings? This document is a copy, but you have the original in a safe place? This is a five page list of all the drug stash houses and weapon caches you've uncovered in Gotham in the past two weeks? Well hot damn!
All that would move a lot faster in movie time, of course, and in character. I would want to add Gordon being suspicious of the Batman's thorough knowledge of the legal system and the fact that the D.A. the Batman reccommends as their contact in that office is Harvey Dent. Dent is new to Gotham. He arrived just a little while before the Batman first appeared. So did James Gordon, the Batman would point out. "Wait, so are you suggesting that I'm secretly you, or that Harvey Dent is secretly me?" The Batman hasn't slept in several nights, and it just caught up to him, hopefully to the audience's amusement. Ninja vanish at the first available opportunity. Gordon is too excited to sleep after this and can't even find enough space to store everything the Batman just handed him.
Perhaps that scene should be thrown out completely. I don't know.
I would have James Gordon tap several police officers he knows he can trust to help him out on the case being built, unofficially at first. That's more plausible than if it was one cop, one "anonymous source" and one D.A. building a valid case. Maybe Officer Renee Montoya (fresh out of the academy) could be one, Detective Bullock (being a long way from making sergeant) another, and other named police characters from the mythos who would fit the time frame.
If Falcone is only to be weakend in the movie, how would it be done? Would Batman threaten evidence and force Falcone to relinquish a great deal of his practices, or would Batman lay waste by force to some of Falcone's practises/operations when he knows there isn't evidence to formulate a complete conviction?
If my idea of Falcone figuring out that the Batman is a detective and not just a caped freak is amenable to you (and I don't change my mind about it), then both. On top of what the Batman says or does to Falcone personally, he's handed a huge chunk of viable evidence to people who can run it through the system, putting a large number of Falcone's men away and bringing real scrutiny on the syndicate for the first time in years. They're weakened and they also need to be more cautious.
The Penguin would be kept seperate from Falcone's machinations in the movie, with all Cobblepots character analogy intanct which you mentioned in your last post.
Cool.
Talking about the Batmobile, how about about if Bruce modified a black-sports car from his Fathers own former personal-collection? Batman Forever, in the very least it did well, showed to us a hefty garage with plenty of priceless automobiles belonging, or at least inherited to Bruce. I wouldn't mind seeing a garage similar to that in 'The Batman', with Bruce working on one to modify into the first Batmobile (again, he would get the equipment neccesary to make the changes through Wayne Industries, and the shipping). The idea of having the first one impounded by the Police is a good idea, only for Bruce to begin plans on another, more improved version. Batman should also have a motorcycle, used in such cases as speeding alleyway-pursuits and the like (in any case where a car would be too large or inable). This would probaly be better if left too a second movie though.
My first reaction is to not have a vintage car be the basis of the Batmobile. That's more easily tracable, even though it would still be hard. The Batman is perfectly willing to drive around in a car everyone can see belongs to him, because then it's about who's faster or more maneuverable, but I don't see him taking risks as far using things that can be traced back to Bruce Wayne. That's one reason why I'm sure as hell not using a one-of-a-kind military prototype as a costume. Is he wearing military body armor? Who's to know unless he gets killed or knocked out long enough to examine? Is that a wetsuit or just a unitard? Damned if anyone but Bruce and Alfred know. What car does that look like? It a brand new model, armored up and nitro-injected like a street racer. Someone with money or a gift for car theft and some very specialized training could get one of these babies. Who did the Bat-themed design? Damn, it looks like it could well have been a fastidious car buff with steady hands and the right rools in his own garage. Everything in the trunk was destroyed by explosives remotely detonated when the Batman got out of his car and had guns pointed at him by police.
That's my take on it, anyway. I don't want the Batman taking anything out into the field given him by his parents that can be seen by the human eye (except his body, of course). His headquarters is at the family manor because he's got a big, honkin' space down underneath. The combination to the Cave entrance is the exact hour and minute his folks got murdered, but that doesn't mean the wall will swing open twice a day, possibly while company is there (you have to
pull the lever while the clock is at 10:47.) His gear is paid for with Wayne money, but that doesn't mean he took it straight out of Wayne Enterprises' corporate office (damn this gas-pellet vending machine... always takes my money without coughing up the goods... no, not the flashbang, the smoke!! *bang*).
Would you have Batman pay his second visit to The Penguin at the end of the first movie (after the general investigation of this plot is over), or would it be featured before hand, mid-way? The way you made it sound is that you'll be ending the Batman's exploits in this first movie on his second visit to The Penguin, but i'm not to sure about this. I would also like to introduced Lucious Fox by the end of the movie, perhaps as a moment very end as a way to set the character up for the next movie. I would have Bruce mention and hint at a new arrival at Wayne Industries throughout the movie whenever his is in 'playboy Bruce Wayne', and then those clues and tips of the hat would be made clear when Fox enters at the end as the new CEO.
Thought's on that?
I want the Penguin thing to happen very close to the end of the movie. Perhaps it could happen right after Fox takes his position in the company, leaving Bruce free to finally get back to the Penguin. Since Bruce is, in both personas, very forgetful about his Bruce Wayne appointments, I don't think it would be too out of line to show him checking off tasks on his palm pilot.
-Review Monarch contract and sign
-Cancel date with Mindy
-Finalize paperwork for Fox
-Fire [
name of previous CEO]
-Announce Fox as new CEO
-Return P.'s message
"Mr. Wayne, I hear you financed the renovation of the Monarch Theater, which has been closed for almost two decades. Will you be attending the grand opening this evening?"
"Unlikely. I have to go see a man about some birdseed."
"What a strange man."
After the Batman leaves the Penguin gasping for breath and seriously consider leaving town, after the scene I described some time earlier, Cobblepot looks out the window he was just hanging out and see the Bat-Signal in the sky.
The Batman meets Captain Gordon and the audience geeks out.
Comments?
