The Caped Knight
Shield Avenger
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2004
- Messages
- 36,482
- Reaction score
- 7,417
- Points
- 103
I love the cowl it was elegant yet full of iconic imagery worthy of Batman. Especially in the prefect lighting.
A funny scene from Top Secret where Val's character goes up to sing, thinking he's being honoured instead of the actual Nazi performer. The anachronistic rock 'n' roll songs in this movie are hilarious.
I honestly think that reports about the initial Batman Forever cut have always been overblown. Of course seeing the deleted scenes (and some additional and alternate shots) properly edited into the movie could move the needle a little bit and give it a little grounding, but in an old article from back when the movie was released, Schumacher confirms that they shaved about 15 minutes off his original cut for the theatrical release. That's it. You should find it on 1995batman.com. It's one of the scanned magazine articles.Got really excited for a second, since some places are sharing a banner image that includes the DC Studios logo above it, making me think this was some sort of official release--but it isn't. Another niche theater is showing the bootlegged cut that Smith did.
To be honest, having read extensive breakdowns of this particular cut, it isn't quite the very special new version of the movie that we've all been waiting for--most of the material that's in it is already available on the DVD special features and only has like two more minutes of little extra bits that aren't found there. Its runtime isn't any longer than the fan edits that are floating around. This one is temp-tracked with a lot of Elfman's Batman music though, which does make it a curiosity. There's a lot of misinformation around about what's in this particular version--aside from some more subdued line-readings from Jones and Carrey, this doesn't have a hugely different tone than the theatrical. It just has all the deleted scenes put back in, really.
There's still probably a good fifteen minutes of material we know was shot that still haven't been seen, some of which helps tie into the film's greater themes (mostly focusing on Bruce's past history of killing and his guilt about it), and unless an earlier cut somehow surfaces, I don't know that we'll ever see them. At this point, while I think WB could someday be persuaded to put this cut out, going into the vaults to find the other pieces are probably more effort than they'd be willing to put in.
Well, the overblown bits are more from people misinterpreting the facts--yes, there was a lot of narrative meat that was trimmed from the theatrical cut, but people conflate that with the idea that the initial cuts were tonally darker, when that's never been proven. I get the impression that people think Two-Face and Riddler act completely differently in this mythical cut, but they don't. The best you'll get is maybe they delivered their lines a little less bombastically on-set as opposed to when they did ADR. While one can argue that with the deleted material, the film is darker thematically, it isn't any less campy--which isn't a bad thing to me as camp is part-and-parcel of Batman.I honestly think that reports about the initial Batman Forever cut have always been overblown. Of course seeing the deleted scenes (and some additional and alternate shots) properly edited into the movie could move the needle a little bit and give it a little grounding, but in an old article from back when the movie was released, Schumacher confirms that they shaved about 15 minutes off his original cut for the theatrical release. That's it. You should find it on 1995batman.com. It's one of the scanned magazine articles.
Jim Carrey knew the assignment for this film. Go out there and have fun, that's exactly what he does. In some form he channels a bit of frank gorshin Riddler, mixed with his own brand of flare to create this over the top version of The Riddler that totally steals the show and you love him for it.