ALP
In The Mountains
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2007
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Tim Burton's BATMAN FOREVER would've had the same sense of gothic fantasy as SLEEPY HOLLOW - no doubt he would redefine many things on his way there, for one thing it wouldn't be in the winter (so I'm thinking lots of thunder and lighting and graveyards for optimum effect). I'm willing to bet my hat that he would've made a Robin-centric film (to appease the reaction from the last film of being too 'non-family-friendly' in a "wait till you see what I do to the kid!") He's always been a poet of childhood. Seeing a young (8-9 year old) Dick Grayson haunted by monstrous figures in the aftermath of his parent's murder - set within the gothic castle-like shadows of Wayne Manor, with a BatMan in the midst (the contrast between the bright, colourful circus and the dead, black and white Wayne manor compelling him for that red costume?) God I could just die.
Michael Keaton's Bruce Wayne, much older and fatherly now, reflecting his pain through Grayson's? I'm looking at ROBIN'S RECKONING from the animated series with a much more detective-oriented storytelling with that bald Riddler with a pet rat, and a Harvey Dent who goes over the edge with an actual split-personality disorder (rather than a lapse in morality from Nolan-verse). Who knows? Maybe an insight into Burton's Asylum (to compare dark, gothic castles). I can't think of the female lead though.
And the classic batmobile ONE MORE TIME! TO ELFMAN'S MUSIC!
Sigh, one could really just die. I miss the old days.
While these are nice ideas and Burton may be or once was a poet of childhood, he clearly had absolutely no interest in Robin. He repeated over and over that Batman was a loner and Robin did not fit. And while he may make soft mushy crap now, in the early 90s Burton was not the type of filmmaker to appease others due to complaints about what he did.