The Official Batman Returns Thread

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Surely soccer moms neither had the political or legal backing to enforce such a change.

Yeah, but they have a thing called MONEY. You see...kids don't have any money. So...whose gonna buy the toys? Seriously, dude, look at the first Ninja Turtles movie and then look at the second. What happened there? Soccer moms! So, this is not the first time it had happened.

It still doesn't help your argument that a film needs to have silly moments

TDK had silly moments within its action scenes. Or do I need to remind you of those two little kids pretending to shoot at cars and then seeing an explosion and Batman drive by? Who do you think that scene was for?
 
I think I agree with this. And again, my main problem was that Batman just seemed so damn inept. He walked into Penguin's trap, he let his guard down for Catwoman every time. He could've easily saved the Ice Princess-f*** up after f*** up after f*** up. And it's true-I felt a lot of the time like Burton just wouldn't get out of the movie's way.

Mh, Batman has been fallible many times, included in TDK. Joker owned him even when Batman was sure he was owning Joker.

If the hero can't fail then we have a 20 minutes movie where he just goes and gets the villian. But writers and people prefer conflict.
 
Yeah, but they have a thing called MONEY. You see...kids don't have any money. So...whose gonna buy the toys? Seriously, dude, look at the first Ninja Turtles movie and then look at the second. What happened there? Soccer moms! So, this is not the first time it had happened.

Your position is one contradiction after another. Apparently soccer moms were troubled with their children seeing BR's gruesome moments, but had no problems whatsoever taking their kids to see a homicidal maniac that carves smiles in people's faces, blows them up every other second (including a hospital, of all places), hangs a copycat of the film's main character from a building after a torture scene very reminiscent of execution videos...oh, oh, and let's not forget, a madman with half his face charred to the bone threatening to kill a helpless woman with her two terrified children and then holding a gun against a weeping, whimpering boy's head in the film's climactic scene. Yes, no child would find those scenes disturbing at all. Yet these very soccer moms took their kids to see the film...all after every single review from critics warning parents that TDK is not a kid-friendly movie. :rolleyes:

TDK had silly moments within its action scenes. Or do I need to remind you of those two little kids pretending to shoot at cars and then seeing an explosion and Batman drive by? Who do you think that scene was for?

A plausible light-hearted moment or a simple one-liner joke does not equal the bizarreness of watching the Penguin eat raw fish, bite a man's nose, bleeding blue goo, Catwoman swallowing a living bird and so much more...the silly scenes in BR are not the ones that are funny, but the ones like these that are too campy for adults and too grotesque for kids.
 
Your position is one contradiction after another. Apparently soccer moms were troubled with their children seeing BR's gruesome moments, but had no problems whatsoever taking their kids to see a homicidal maniac that carves smiles in people's faces, blows them up every other second (including a hospital, of all places), hangs a copycat of the film's main character from a building after a torture scene very reminiscent of execution videos...oh, oh, and let's not forget, a madman with half his face charred to the bone threatening to kill a helpless woman with her two terrified children and then holding a gun against a weeping, whimpering boy's head in the film's climactic scene. Yes, no child would find those scenes disturbing at all. Yet these very soccer moms took their kids to see the film...all after every single review from critics warning parents that TDK is not a kid-friendly movie. :rolleyes:

Well, it would seem like people's sensitivities change in a lapse of 16 years. In fact 1992's teenagers could be today's soccer mums. :)

And well, as you said, every critics warned people abouit the nature of TDK. One of the problems of BR was that it was marketed as a kid-friendly movie (get your bat-happy meal kids) when it was not.
 
Well, it would seem like people's sensitivities change in a lapse of 16 years. In fact 1992's teenagers could be today's soccer mums. :)

And well, as you said, every critics warned people about the nature of TDK. One of the problems of BR was that it was marketed as a kid-friendly movie (get your bat-happy meal kids) when it was not.

Well, according to Catman, thanks to the number of silly scenes in BR made specifically for kids, it wasn't a very adult-friendly movie either. :yellow:

I think it is best we all accept that the silly scenes in Batman Returns had nothing to do with making the film for kids and were Burton's own little quirks. The writing and most of the content of the actual film itself makes it inescapably clear that it was never intended for kids. Heck, if it weren't for the occasional silliness and macabre, it would've been the darkest and most mature comic book movie even today.
 
Please...stop generalizing.

BATMAN RETURNS wasn't as hated as people like to pretend. There was a small amount of letters that WB Received, and it was palpable that the movie was a bit grotesque and weird. But I recall kids loving it at the time. I also recall the toys selling like hotcakes.

The Penguin was always a bit crazy. And Pre-Crisis Catwoman was always pretty nutso.

BATMAN RETURNS has cheese and silliness not just because of Burton (though that's certainly part of it), but for the same reason that BATMAN had some. The comics did.

And RETURNS made money, therefore it was a financial success. Who cares if it made quite as much as BATMAN?
 
I love Batman returns. Love the look, love the score, love the characters(even the minor ones like Chip, in a love to hate way), love the fact that Penguin wasn't a lame ass gangster with delusions of grandeur, love the fact that Catwoman was really quite disturbed.

And I mean, that first scene of Bruce Wayne brooding in the darkness as the Bat signal comes on...that is just ****ing insanely brilliant. THAT'S Batman/Bruce for me. Brooding in the dark on his own, until he is called to dispense his own brand of justice on his city.
 
Please...stop generalizing.

BATMAN RETURNS wasn't as hated as people like to pretend.

"It wasn't a complete failure, but it wasn't a complete success either."

"...a commercial disappointment."

How is that generalizing?

BATMAN RETURNS has cheese and silliness not just because of Burton (though that's certainly part of it), but for the same reason that BATMAN had some. The comics did.

Yes, because we all know Burton incorporated all that silliness and camp because he was trying so hard to make his films faithful to the comics. :whatever:

It's a good thing he didn't, because The Penguin was a far more interesting and superior character in BR than what he was in the comics. And the Catwoman from the comics wouldn't have worked half as well in the context of the film as the shattered and contemptuous victim hell bent on revenge.

I think it is high time for people to stop using fidelity to the comics as an excuse all the time for poor filmmaking decisions. The comics aren't exactly a mine full of undiscovered gems. In fact, a significant percentage of it is utter trash. So saying that Burton was trying to stay true to the source material (a lot of which wasn't very good in the first place) with the silliness is hardly a compelling argument in his favor.
 
How is that generalizing?

I'm talking about the perceived parent/children reaction to the film. This whole "Kids hated BR" thing.

I probably should have said "People, please, stop generalizing", etc, but I'm feeling lazy today.

Yes, because we all know Burton incorporated all that silliness and camp because he was trying so hard to make his films faithful to the comics.

No, clearly it's an element he liked well enough, because he used it. Burton and his writers were clearly interested in bringing some of the elements from the comics to their films. There's silliness in the film. Some of it's just Burton weirdness, sure, but much of it is the kind of thing that's been seen in the comics for years. Puns, melodrama, soap opera plots, etc.

I think it is high time for people to stop using fidelity to the comics as an excuse all the time for poor filmmaking decisions.

I didn't realize I used it in a defensive capacity. I could have sworn I just made a statement about why such elements are in the movie.

I think it's time for people to stop generalizing everything that's not ultra serious and dark in a Batman movie as "silliness" and "campy" and "poor", especially when these elements have been a part of Batman's lore for decades. Even current Batman comics and movies still use some of these elements, albeit more sparingly.

The comics aren't exactly a mine full of undiscovered gems. In fact, a significant percentage of it is utter trash. So saying that Burton was trying to stay true to the source material (a lot of which wasn't very good in the first place) with the silliness is hardly a compelling argument in his favor.

I didn't say it was all good. I said it's clear why that stuff was in the movie. There's an inherent weirdness, even a silliness to Batman. There always has been, and probably always should be, in some sense. Burton and his writers were cognizant of that.

And good lord...it was 1992. Do you all remember 1992?

I mean...1992?
 
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Apparently soccer moms were troubled with their children seeing BR's gruesome moments, but had no problems whatsoever taking their kids to see a homicidal maniac

You act as if 1992 was the other day. 1992 was 17 years ago. Times change. Remember when parents hated the Beatles because they had LONG HAIR! Times change. People change. And people also learn from the past. We live in the Internet era. Parents can research things beforehand and determine whether the movie is approriate for their children. Plus, the studio marketed the movie differently.

I think it is best we all accept that the silly scenes in Batman Returns had nothing to do with making the film for kids and were Burton's own little quirks.

Have you seen Nightmare Before Christmas? You're telling me that's NOT a kids movie? Obviously Burton has his own way of entertaining children. Which, of course, some parents find disturbing.

And RETURNS made money, therefore it was a financial success. Who cares if it made quite as much as BATMAN?

Look at it this way, has a sequel to Superman Returns been greenlit yet? No. Yet, Batman Forever was greenlit right away! So, obviously WB was happy enough to greenlit a sequel right away.
 
Love the look, love the score

Yeah, I thought the score and atmosphere were awesome.

love the fact that Penguin wasn't a lame ass gangster with delusions of grandeur

Penguins portrayal was good but I never found the Gangster version lame, maybe because I like Mafia films.

love the fact that Catwoman was really quite disturbed.

I disliked the disturbed psychopathic portrayal.

And I mean, that first scene of Bruce Wayne brooding in the darkness as the Bat signal comes on...that is just ****ing insanely brilliant. THAT'S Batman/Bruce for me. Brooding in the dark on his own, until he is called to dispense his own brand of justice on his city.

As much as I disliked the film. I got to admit, that scene was brilliant. Very Batman like moment. :woot:
 
Here Batman says Catwoman needs a psychiatrist. She is showing symptoms of Bipolar Disorder. Rapid violent mood swings. This is from Batman #355 (1983).
0a1a1245111718batman355.jpg

0a1a1245111557batman355.jpg

There is more explanation and humanity in that panel that I think Batman Returns lacked. One thing I never understood about Batman Returns was that, why did she want revenge against Batman??? And what other comics have shown these symptoms of Bipolar???
 
There is more explanation and humanity in that panel that I think Batman Returns lacked.

There is touching humanity like that in Batman Returns, for me it's particularly the scene when Batman revealed himself to her, opening up. Every time I watch that scene I'm struck by how sincerely moving it is. He is really looking for love and acceptance from her. Yet, tragically, she is for Batman a love object beyond the pale, however much she fascinates him. It is as a costumed villainess that Catwoman captures Batman's attention and holds his interest. The excitement and exhilaration of the relationship lie largely in the chase.

One thing I never understood about Batman Returns was that, why did she want revenge against Batman???

Because Batman napalmed her arm and hit her and knocked her off a building.

And what other comics have shown these symptoms of Bipolar???

Catwoman had shown violent mood swings in many of her appearances in the Batman comics, particularly the early ones. She had a love-hate relationship with Batman.
 
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There is touching humanity like that in Batman Returns, for me it's particularly the scene when Batman revealed himself to her, opening up.

Still, I never noticed that humanity in the scene you're talking about but I'll have to analyze it since I have not seen Batman Returns in a long time.

Because Batman napalmed her arm and hit her and knocked her off a building.

That kind of makes sense. People with disorders tend to find it difficult to forgive the mistakes that others make.

Catwoman had shown violent mood swings in many of her appearances in the Batman comics, particularly the early ones.

I guess Tim Burton used that characteristic from those comics you're talking about. Characterization do keep changing in the comics, Batman went from dark to light, light to campy, campy to dark.
 
EDIT: Double Post
 
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I'm talking about the perceived parent/children reaction to the film. This whole "Kids hated BR" thing.

Care to explain why then BR made only about half as much money as its predecessor then?

No, clearly it's an element he liked well enough, because he used it. Burton and his writers were clearly interested in bringing some of the elements from the comics to their films. There's silliness in the film. Some of it's just Burton weirdness, sure, but much of it is the kind of thing that's been seen in the comics for years. Puns, melodrama, soap opera plots, etc.

I never said Batman Returns was criticized for its puns or melodrama. I'm talking about the fact that Batman Returns feeling like the bastard child of Beetlejuice and the original B89. Its tone was just all over the place. One minute it is dark and serious, and in a blink of an eye becomes outlandish, ridiculous and childish. Sure, there were comics at the time that were inherently silly, but there were also enough comics that were consistent in their serious and sober tone. And it is these mature stories like Year One, The Dark Knight, The Killing Joke and Arkham Asylum that were responsible for revitalizing the character's mainstream popularity at the time, not campy drivel from the pre-crisis and Adam West era that Batman is so often ridiculed for. Sure, people may have loved it at the time for what it was - hilarious and entertaining, but the darker classic iterations of the character were what made the people to take the character seriously as a legitimately engaging superhero. So even if you make the argument that Burton picked the silliness from the comics, it doesn't make him look any better because it seems he picked from the bottom of the litter. It's okay to have a few lighthearted moments or a few tongue-in-cheek one liners in a predominantly serious film to lighten the mood (like B89) but it's a whole different thing for a film to come off just as juvenile as it is mature.

I think it's time for people to stop generalizing everything that's not ultra serious and dark in a Batman movie as "silliness" and "campy" and "poor", especially when these elements have been a part of Batman's lore for decades. Even current Batman comics and movies still use some of these elements, albeit more sparingly.

That's exactly it. No one's begrudging a little humor and silliness with anything Batman related. At it's core, he is after all a comic book character. Do not make the foolish assumption that anyone who dreads the excess of campy and silliness of Batman stories completely hates anything and everything even slightly cheesy altogether. Just because someone likes Batman does not mean they have to love everything associated with the character throughout its history. If I or anyone else happens to completely despise the Adam West Batman, it doesn't make one any less of a fan. It simply means they like one iteration of the character over the other. Besides, Batman was originally a darker character, was he not?

I didn't say it was all good. I said it's clear why that stuff was in the movie. There's an inherent weirdness, even a silliness to Batman. There always has been, and probably always should be, in some sense. Burton and his writers were cognizant of that.

Perhaps too cognizant, because there was simply too much of it than what was necessary.
 
Care to explain why then BR made only about half as much money as its predecessor then?

I suspect that BATMAN made more money than BATMAN RETURNS because more people saw BATMAN than saw BATMAN RETURNS. Simple enough, really.

Frankly, I don't care why it didn't make as much money as BATMAN. I only care about the idea that has been out there that a majority of children hated the movie. I see, and saw, as a child who watched BATMAN RETURNS, no evidence of that.

I think BATMAN was a curiousity. It became a fad, even more than something like THE DARK KNIGHT did, which has been one of the most high profile and successful films of all time. BATMAN made a ridiculous, ridiculous amount of money for a character that, while known to many people in 1989, was not all that beloved. You have to remember...there was no animated series back then. Most people of Batman through the Adam West series, and only knew of that sparingly. And most kids had seen Superfriends at some point, and there was a small percentage of the population who were die hard comic book fans...and that's really about it. It wasn't like today, where BATMAN BEGINS and THE DARK KNIGHT came into a public conscousness that has seen more serious approaches to the character, four major Batman films, something like four or five animated series, and countless toylines, videogames, etc.

I never said Batman Returns was criticized for its puns or melodrama. I'm talking about the fact that Batman Returns feeling like the bastard child of Beetlejuice and the original B89.

I see where you're going with that...but I don't think it was quite THAT weird. BATMAN had a lot of weird elements, too. It just had The Joker's brand of weirdness VS The Penguin's.

Its tone was just all over the place. One minute it is dark and serious, and in a blink of an eye becomes outlandish, ridiculous and childish.

Again, though, a majority of comic books, even the ones that were considered serious approaches, had this element in the late eighties and early 1990's as well. If your issue is that the tone of the movie is uneven...then yeah, the tone of the movie is sort of uneven. It's clearly intentional on the part of the filmmakers, not some horrible failure to keep a dramatic film in a consistent tone. When the film needed to maintain a consistent tone, it did.

Sure, there were comics at the time that were inherently silly, but there were also enough comics that were consistent in their serious and sober tone. And it is these mature stories like Year One, The Dark Knight, The Killing Joke and Arkham Asylum that were responsible for revitalizing the character's mainstream popularity at the time, not campy drivel from the pre-crisis and Adam West era that Batman is so often ridiculed for.

And it's all well and good to want those comics to be the comics the movies are/were based on...but that's just not the way it was. Nor is that the way it is. Even THE DARK KNIGHT only took a few basic elements from any of these, as did BATMAN BEGINS.

YEAR ONE, THE DARK KNIGHT, ARKHAM ASYLUM and THE KILLING JOKE are certainly great stories...but they're also not the norm in comics. In general, even after those projects came out, even after their influence started to be felt in the mainstream titles, comic books were still pretty damn silly. They alternated a bit more between serious and silly, but the only period I can think of where they were mostly serious came long, long after BATMAN RETURNS was written.

Now don't get me wrong. I honor the elements of the Batman mythology, but I love dark, serious, explorative Batman stories. I'd rather see that brought to life on film. But I'm cognizant that there was a time when the rest of the world didn't feel this way. Some people still don't.

Sure, people may have loved it at the time for what it was - hilarious and entertaining, but the darker classic iterations of the character were what made the people to take the character seriously as a legitimately engaging superhero.

In a sense. Those classics you mentioned didn't exactly cause the general public to clamor for an uber serious third Batman movie (FOREVER was a blockbuster despite it's silliness). I don't think there were too many people looking for engagement who came out of BATMAN and BATMAN RETURNS not being engaged with Bruce Wayne/Batman himself on some level.

The issue isn't really Batman, who was the straight man in it all, and was appropriately dark in both BATMAN and BATMAN RETURNS. The issue was the villains. The Penguin was ridiculous. And he was ridiculous because he'd always been ridiculous. Batman's rogues, for a long, long time, were mostly zany, ridiculous psychopaths. The Joker was ridiculous in BATMAN, and it worked. Penguin was then ridiculous in RETURNS, and it...sort of worked. Catwoman wasn't too ridiculous comparatively speaking, so I don't consider her much of an issue with RETURNS.

So even if you make the argument that Burton picked the silliness from the comics, it doesn't make him look any better because it seems he picked from the bottom of the litter. It's okay to have a few lighthearted moments or a few tongue-in-cheek one liners in a predominantly serious film to lighten the mood (like B89) but it's a whole different thing for a film to come off just as juvenile as it is mature.

I don't feel RETURNS came off as entirely juvenile, save for a few short sequences, many of which were in character, and had a darker undertone to the juvenile antics. I would debate that heartily.

Do not make the foolish assumption that anyone who dreads the excess of campy and silliness of Batman stories completely hates anything and everything even slightly cheesy altogether.

I don't recall doing so.

Just because someone likes Batman does not mean they have to love everything associated with the character throughout its history. If I or anyone else happens to completely despise the Adam West Batman, it doesn't make one any less of a fan. It simply means they like one iteration of the character over the other. Besides, Batman was originally a darker character, was he not?

Yes, but again...unless you just weren't around in 1992, you will remember the nature of the comics of the era, and of movies in general.

Batman wasn't the uber-dark, serious comic book character he became later on.

Perhaps too cognizant, because there was simply too much of it than what was necessary.

I guess that depends. I thought most of the zaniness and the various weird element fit the characters quite well as they were written, if not in comparison to an entirely serious adaption of their comic book counterparts. I guess I'd need specific examples of what you think was "too much".
 
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Care to explain why then BR made only about half as much money as its predecessor then?

Tim Burton explained that in Starlog #180 (1992). "The reality is that Batman was a success because Batman was a cultural phenomena, which had less to do with the movie than with something else." It was a Bat-mania trend in the late 1980s that was happening before the movie, which was a combination of the 1960s nostalgia in the late '80s and Frank Miller's Batman: The Dark Knight Returns and Alan Moore/Brian Bolland's Batman: The Killing Joke crossing over into the mainstream. People were wearing clothes with the Batman logo, earings of the batsymbol and some teenage guys even shaved the back of their high top hairstyle into the Batman logo. Were these people true Batman fans? Most of them were not, they were just following the current trend. By 1992, Bat-mania was dead. '80s glam and excess was over. The '90s jaded grunge trend with a too cool to care attitude was in. Trends are idiotic. Don't follow like sheep. Be yourself, people.

And other than the fact that the '80s Bat-mania was over, Batman Returns wasn't as big of a hit because considered too artsy, dark and depressing and Gothic and gloomy and gross and ugly by mainstream audiences, but I love it. Batman Forever was a bigger hit than Batman Returns because it was considered funny and fun and colorful and sexy escapism by mainstream audiences, but I've never liked it. And Batman & Robin flopped because it was considered too campy and ridiculous, which it is. Batman Begins was a hit because it's very much a mainstream action movie with plenty of fistfights, swordfights, shootings, car chases and crashes. Liam Nelson helped it appeal to the Star Wars fans. Casting leading actors Michael Caine and Gary Oldman and Morgan Freeman as Alfred and Gordon and Fox certainly helped it appeal to mainstream audiences, and giving Morgan Freeman a role like Q in the James Bond films presenting all the gadgets appealed to Bond fans. The Dark Knight was a hit because it is also very much a mainstream action film with lots of shootings, car chases and lots of explosions. Heath Ledger was a teen heartthrob and brought that element to his Joker making it a teen icon. The make up and long hair similar to Brandon Lee's The Crow helped it appeal to teens. The fact that Heath Ledger died before it was released, like Brandon Lee with The Crow, certainly added extra fascination to the film. People were even connecting Heath Ledger's death to The Dark Knight.
 
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One of my favorite movies of all time. This is by far better than BB and just as good as TDK IMO.
 
Happy 17th birthday Batman Returns. Can't believe it's been that long since I saw this on opening weekend.
 
In my eyes, this was the best Batman film.
I know right? It got something right no other Batman movie got right a good actress that had good chemistry with Bruce and Batman and was super sexy! That alone puts it on top. Let alone it had the best action of all the movies to date.
 
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