JAK®
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You don't think we're talking about keeping the glowing LED lights do you?save the Tron design for Batman Beyond
You don't think we're talking about keeping the glowing LED lights do you?save the Tron design for Batman Beyond
A suit like that could work so well for a Batman suit, all I can do is hope. I'm talking style and fabric wise by the way, not the sci fi lights and glow.
They're sleek and allow the actor to move around very well, and could easily have small bits of armor attached on top or even below the surface of the fabric.
Someone honestly tell me why this style of suit wouldn't work on film for Batman.
JAK®;20714907 said:You don't think we're talking about keeping the glowing LED lights do you?
A rubber suit by any other name is still a rubber suit.The TDK Suit is revolutionary in its construction, assembly and ease of movement.
Like Frankenstein.Entirely new concepts and materials were introduced to bring the TDK Batsuit to life.
A rubber suit by any other name is still a rubber suit.
Linda HemmingI didn't say it wasn't a rubber suit...and I'm not debating the rubber suit fact either.
The segmented armor of the TDK Suit and use of Spacer weave for the base undersuit....which is not even an actual textile because it's used for filters... was a first in the Batman movie costume world and while everyone is free to love or hate any look or concept, its design and engineering was brilliant and incredibly well executed.
Sure, it may not be to your liking design wise...but it's just as revolutionary as the 89 Keaton Batsuit was to the world of superhero costume making.
In any case, I chimed in for the comments regarding the TRON Legacy suits, and that they are in fact the same technique used in almost all the Batsuits.
David
Linda Hemming
"The base layer of the suit was made of a polyester mesh material, which is employed by the military and high-tech sports manufacturers because of its moisture-wicking properties. Then individually molded pieces of flexible urethane were attached to the mesh to form the overall armor plating."
The TDK concept is basically moto-bike armor over polyester mesh; that may be "new" to a Batman movie but there's nothing particularly revolutionary about the idea in-and-of-itself.
And for all its purported brilliance and execution the thing still looks a mess.

Those are NOT my words.BUT if what the Military is using in our REAL world is considered 'nothing new' by your own words for Hollywood SPFX and costume making
You're missing the point.
Fine then, moto-bike armor glued to wicking mesh is revolutionary.The TDK Suit is revolutionary in its construction, assembly and ease of movement. Entirely new concepts and materials were introduced to bring the TDK Batsuit to life.
Those are NOT my words.

Point being:
Fine then, moto-bike armor glued to wicking mesh is revolutionary.
Moto-bike armor and rubber glued to polyester meshwhich, as you correctly point out as being a material that has been used in the furniture, automotive, medical, sports, and military industries for yearsis no more revolutionary a material than the idea of a mesh batsuit, and idea which predates even the Begins suit:My point is that just because Hemming commented saying that it's used by the Military, that in itself doesnt make it 'old news' when you consider that something like this is the first time it's been seen in a film Batman costume....and quite possibly as a full wearable suit in on its own when it's normally used as either a filter or armor. For the TDK suit it's used as the base undersuit. That's pretty out-of-the-box thinking right there...
Moto-bike armor and rubber glued to polyester meshwhich, as you correctly point out as being a material that has been used in the furniture, automotive, medical, sports, and military industries for yearsis no more revolutionary a material than the idea of a mesh batsuit, and idea which predates even the Begins suit:
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Actually, sorry to chime in. But the method of Batman's suit in The Dark Knight was not revolutionary to Batman. It was already used in the cancelled Justice League: Mortal movie.
And yet TDK was the first to actually do it.

JAK®;20714907 said:You don't think we're talking about keeping the glowing LED lights do you?
Actually the Tron: Legacy suits used Spandex, not neoprene. And the difference is what people like myself who present the Tron: Legacy suits as a reference for how to do it right. I do like that TDK went in the right direction to get out of a full rubber costume, but they just made it look horrible.Actually, the TRON LEGACY suits and ALL Batman Movie Suits with the exception of the TDK Batman costume were all made exactly the same.
Neoprene under-suit with foam latex armor details.
That's how TRON LEGACY and almost all the Batsuits have been made until now. The technique is the same, the designs themselves obviously are different.
It's the application of said concept that went wrong. I'm cool with rubber as long as it's minimal, like in Tron: Legacy and SM1-3.There was a silicone Batman Begins suit for the scene where Bat's is lit on fire, because foam latex is flammable....and some silicone suits here and there in the Schumacher films for the water scenes but otherwise it's the exact same material and principle as TRON LEGACY.
Funny thing about the TDK suit was that it actually weighed more than the BB suit.The TDK Suit is revolutionary in its construction, assembly and ease of movement. Entirely new concepts and materials were introduced to bring the TDK Batsuit to life.
Actually the Tron: Legacy suits used Spandex, not neoprene. And the difference is what people like myself who present the Tron: Legacy suits as a reference for how to do it right. I do like that TDK went in the right direction to get out of a full rubber costume, but they just made it look horrible.
It's the application of said concept that went wrong. I'm cool with rubber as long as it's minimal, like in Tron: Legacy and SM1-3.
Funny thing about the TDK suit was that it actually weighed more than the BB suit.
Honestly, the Batsuits in Nolan's films have the most disappointing aspect about his trilogy.
JAK®;20714907 said:You don't think we're talking about keeping the glowing LED lights do you?
As is often the case with revolutions, someone loses their head.Gee whiz, I didn't think this would happen lol. My point is if the Tron suits are made from the same exact materials as the past batsuits, why could they not use a successful tight fitting design for batman instead of changing the materials and make a "revolutionary" but also awful looking suit.