Tag: adam-west

  • Best Batman Movies Ranked

    Ezra Miller as The Flash, Michael Keaton as Batman and Ezra Miller as The Flash in Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure 'The FLASH,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L to R) Ezra Miller as The Flash, Michael Keaton as Batman and Ezra Miller as The Flash in Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure ‘The FLASH,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures/™ & © DC Comics. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved. TM & © DC.

    Created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger in 1939, Batman has remained a beloved character in pop culture for over 80-years. There have been over a dozen live action movies made about the character since his big screen debut in 1943, as well as several animated features and cameo appearances.

    Acclaimed actors like Michael Keaton, Val Kilmer, George Clooney, Christian Bale, Ben Affleck, and Robert Pattinson have all played the role, and acclaimed filmmakers such as Tim Burton, Christopher Nolan, Zack Snyder, and Matt Reeves have made movies about the Caped Crusader.

    With Michael Keaton returning as Bruse Wayne and Batman in ‘The Flash,’ which opens in theaters on June 16th, Moviefone is counting down the top 14 cinematic Batman appearances of all time! For this list, we are including any live action or animated film featuring Batman, as long as it was originally released theatrically.

    Let’s Begin!!!


    14. ‘Batman & Robin‘ (1997)

    (L to R) Alicia Silverstone, George Clooney, and Chris O'Donnell in 1997's 'Batman & Robin'
    (L to R) Alicia Silverstone, George Clooney, and Chris O’Donnell in 1997’s ‘Batman & Robin’
    Batman (George Clooney) and Robin (Chris O’Donnell) deal with relationship issues while preventing Mr. Freeze (Arnold Schwarzenegger) and Poison Ivy (Uma Thurman) from attacking Gotham City.
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    13. ‘The Dark Knight Rises‘ (2012)

    Tom Hardy as Bane in 'The Dark Knight Rises.'
    Tom Hardy as Bane in ‘The Dark Knight Rises.’

    Following the death of District Attorney Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart), Batman (Christian Bale) assumes responsibility for Dent’s crimes to protect the late attorney’s reputation and is subsequently hunted by the Gotham City Police Department. Eight years later, Batman encounters the mysterious Selina Kyle (Anne Hathaway) and the villainous Bane (Tom Hardy), a new terrorist leader who overwhelms Gotham’s finest. The Dark Knight resurfaces to protect a city that has branded him an enemy.

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    12. ‘Batman Forever‘ (1995)

    Jim Carrey as the Riddler in 'Batman Forever.'
    Jim Carrey as the Riddler in ‘Batman Forever.’

    Batman (Val Kilmer) must battle a disfigured district attorney (Tommy Lee Jones) and a disgruntled former employee (Jim Carrey) with help from an amorous psychologist (Nicole Kidman) and a young circus acrobat (Chris O’Donnell)).

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    11. ‘Batman: Mask of the Phantasm‘ (1993)

    Batman: Mask of the Phantasm movie
    Warner Bros.

    When a powerful criminal, who is connected to Bruce Wayne’s ex-girlfriend (Dana Delany), blames the Dark Knight for killing a crime lord, Batman (Kevin Conroy) decides to fight against him.

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    10. ‘Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice’ (2016)

    Batman looking up in 'Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice' movie
    Warner Bros.

    Fearing the actions of a god-like Super Hero left unchecked, Gotham City’s own formidable, forceful vigilante takes on Metropolis’s most revered, modern-day savior, while the world wrestles with what sort of hero it really needs. With Batman (Ben Affleck) and Superman (Henry Cavill) at war with one another, a new threat quickly arises, putting mankind in greater danger than it’s ever known before.

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    9. ‘Batman‘ (1966)

    Batman and Robin in 'Batman' movie in 1966
    Warner Bros.

    The Dynamic Duo (Adam West and Burt Ward) faces four super-villains, Joker (Cesar Romero), Penguin (Burgess Meredith), Riddler (Frank Gorshin), and Catwoman (Lee Meriwether), who plan to hold the world for ransom with the help of a secret invention that instantly dehydrates people.

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    8. Batman Begins (2005)

    Batman's throwing star in 'Batman Begins' movie
    Warner Bros.

    Driven by tragedy, billionaire Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) dedicates his life to uncovering and defeating the corruption that plagues his home, Gotham City. Unable to work within the system, he instead creates a new identity, a symbol of fear for the criminal underworld – The Batman.

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    7. ‘Batman Returns’ (1992)

    Catwoman in Batman Returns movie
    Warner Bros.

    While Batman (Michael Keaton) deals with a deformed man calling himself the Penguin (Danny DeVito), an employee of a corrupt businessman (Christopher Walken) transforms into the Catwoman (Michelle Pfeiffer).

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    6. ‘The Batman‘ (2022)

    Batman alone
    Robert Pattinson as Batman in Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure ‘The Batman,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Jonathan Olley/™ & © DC Comics. Copyright: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    From Warner Bros. Pictures comes Matt Reeves‘ “The Batman,” starring Robert Pattinson in the dual role of Gotham City’s vigilante detective and his alter ego, reclusive billionaire Bruce Wayne.

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    5. ‘Zack Snyder’s Justice League’ (2021)

    Ben Affleck as Batman in Zack Snyder's Justice League
    Warner Bros.

    Determined to ensure Supermanan’s (Henry Cavill) ultimate sacrifice was not in vain, Bruce Wayne (Ben Affleck) aligns forces with Diana Prince (Gal Gadot) with plans to recruit a team of metahumans to protect the world from an approaching threat of catastrophic proportions. The task proves more difficult than Bruce imagined, as each of the recruits must face the demons of their own pasts to transcend that which has held them back, allowing them to come together, finally forming an unprecedented league of heroes.

    Now united, Batman (Affleck), Wonder Woman (Gadot), Aquaman (Jason Momoa), Cyborg (Ray Fisher), and The Flash (Ezra Miller) may be too late to save the planet from Steppenwolf (Ciaran Hinds), DeSaad (Peter Guinness), and Darkseid (Ray Porter) and their dreadful intentions.

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    4. ‘The Flash‘ (2023)

    Michael Keaton as Batman in Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure 'The Flash,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Michael Keaton as Batman in Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure ‘The Flash,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    When his attempt to save his family inadvertently alters the future, Barry Allen (Ezra Miller) becomes trapped in a reality in which General Zod (Michael Shannon) has returned and there are no Super Heroes to turn to. In order to save the world that he is in and return to the future that he knows, Barry’s only hope is this universe’s Batman (Michael Keaton). But will making the ultimate sacrifice be enough to reset the universe?

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    3. The Lego Batman Movie (2017)

    Batman and Robin in The Lego Batman movie
    Warner Bros.

    A cooler-than-ever Bruce Wayne (Will Arnett) must deal with the usual suspects as they plan to rule Gotham City, while discovering that he has accidentally adopted a teenage orphan who wishes to become his sidekick (Michael Cera).

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    2. Batman (1989)

    Batman 1989 movie
    Warner Bros.

    Batman (Michael Keaton) must face his most ruthless nemesis when a deformed madman calling himself “The Joker” (Jack Nicholson) seizes control of Gotham’s criminal underworld.

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    1. The Dark Knight (2008)

    Batman in The Dark Knight movie
    Warner Bros.

    Batman (Christian Bale) raises the stakes in his war on crime. With the help of Lt. Jim Gordon (Gary Oldman) and District Attorney Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart), Batman sets out to dismantle the remaining criminal organizations that plague the streets. The partnership proves to be effective, but they soon find themselves prey to a reign of chaos unleashed by a rising criminal mastermind known to the terrified citizens of Gotham as the Joker (Heath Ledger).

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  • Adam West Gives One Last Interview About Being Batman

    It takes a special kind of actor to put on a superhero suit and in the same delivery of dialogue believably portray both an upstanding champion of justice and morality to a TV audience under 12 and a knowing, ironic and hipper-than-hip commentator on American pop culture for the adult viewers.

    But that’s just how good Adam West was.

    West, the man under the cowl of TV’s “Batman” from 1966-1969 who passed away over the weekend at age 88 after a brief battle with leukemia, was that rarest of rare actor, mingling a deeply serious and utterly convincing vocal inflection with a twinkle in his eye that also conveyed that this was all in good fun, as well as an athletically thrown punch with compelling POW!

    Bringing the famed DC Comics superhero to television for the first time, West helped make the series an instant (if short-lived) phenomenon, popularized Pop Art interpretations of Americana icons, cemented irony as the prevailing comedic preference of the Baby Boom generation and, in his efforts to support himself after the Bat-craze went POP! with countless personal appearances, laid the foundation of superhero fanboy convention culture that reigns today.

    West was also the very first famous person I met when I moved to Los Angeles over 20 years ago, gamely enduring my devolution into a fumbling Chris Farley-esque admirer during a book-signing at the legendary comic book shop Golden Apple.

    West was always playful, self-deprecating, accommodating and as good humored as one could ever expect the Batman of their childhood to be, and possessed of a keen instinct for comic one-liner. I last spoke with West in the fall of 2016, when he at last returned to the role he made famous for the animated direct-to-video film “Batman: Return of the Caped Crusaders.” In the interview, he looks back on 50 years of being Batman – now to multiple generations – and the effect that it had on his life, then and now. And one thing comes though: on camera and off, West was one of the good guys.
    Adam West: Reporting from the Idaho Batcave! If you behave yourself, we’ll make you a member of the Bat Pack!

    Moviefone: I’m going to be on my best behavior, I promise you.

    Good, because we have a lot of fun.

    What’s fantastic is that we’ve seen this sort of great renaissance of interest in the “Batman” TV series that’s led to this animated movie. It must be really something special for you to see that after 50 years of all these different interpretations and different actors playing Batman, that there’s still a lot of interest in you and your take on the character.

    Well, I won’t lie, Scott. I mean, it’s taken 30 years for the critics to come around, and at last pronounce it as brilliant. It’s important! [Laughs] No, it’s satisfying, because we’ve worked hard. I got a chance to work with some really remarkable people. And the new [animated] movie that Warners has done, I saw it again the other night, and I’d forgotten how wonderfully funny, and interesting, and imaginative, and all those things that we were. I laughed my head off.

    Take me back to that moment when you went from this up-and-coming actor in a superhero suit, having some fun shooting this new show, to the day after people saw it and it became a full-fledged phenomenon. That is an experience that very few actors over the last 50 years have had.

    Luckily, I was a little older, somewhat mature, and had had maybe ten or 15 years of television, radio, and so on. I started as a director in TV, and I had radio experience. When it happened, I was surprised. It knocked my socks off. How do you deal with that?

    It wasn’t easy at first, because when you have children, you try to protect them, and I’m a rather private person. But as it went along, I think I adjusted pretty well, because I loved it when they threw money and hugs and kisses, and all of those warm and wonderful things.

    I don’t mean to sound silly, but you know, the Batman phenomenon, and our older movie, and the series caused such reaction. And you’re right, not many actors go through that, on the cover of LIFE and all that stuff. But I think it’s because maybe, one of the reasons I grew up on a farm and I worked very hard all my life. And dammit, when you have to herd cattle and slop the hogs, you get a little inner strength, I think.
    When you were in the thick of shooting the show and the movie that spun out of it, what was the best part of it for you? What was the aspect that you enjoyed the most, in the moment?

    Creating scenes that were funny and ridiculous, and yet inventively wonderful. For example, first of all, we had great writers, and our directors were good -– most of them. And the wonderful thing is that the executive producer, the late Bill Dozier and the others, Charlie Fitzsimons, and I, we all got together with the same kind of concept about tone and what we were doing, and how we wanted to do it.

    So that when I’m running up and down the Santa Barbara Pier for half a day with a bomb over my head, trying to get rid of it and I can’t, these moments — comedically — become fascinating to cook with. And you sense, as you create these scenes, that they have a good chance of working and having longevity. And that’s what we’ve had, which is very rewarding. We’ve had 50 years of this!

    For you as a young actor in Hollywood, working with these legendary actors who came onto the show as guest stars, that must have been a phenomenal sort of education about your business.

    It was a wonderful challenge. I’d been under contract at Warners as a leading man kind of guy, and I got a chance to work with people, quite a few good ones, but never like what you just described. So it was a learning experience, it was immensely rewarding with humor, and to observe their great energy. You know, we approached these roles as almost Shakespearean, if you will. Much bigger than life. People like Burgess Meredith, Frank Gorshin — they really caught on. They got it.

    Almost as fast as it came on the scene, “Batman” kind of fizzled out after three seasons, and you’ve been very honest about the typecasting issues you faced and the struggles. Tell me a little bit about how you got through that roughly 20-year period before fanboy culture rose up and re-embraced you.

    That’s a wonderful question because suddenly I’m getting terrible stomach pains! Scott, it wasn’t easy. What I did, I went out, I did regional theater, I did dinner theater, I did the Mark Taper Forum in LA, I did really crappy films – anything I could to keep working and developing, and pay the damn bills.

    And I feel as, an actor, that it is essential to keep practicing, keep using your instrument. So I did that, and after five, six, seven years, I began to catch on with a few things. And after ten years or so, I told myself, “Look, idiot. If people love Batman, if they enjoy it so much, and you know the whole family spectrum has made that apparent, then you better love it too, or there’s something wrong with your head.”

    At that point, that’s when fandom started remembering how much they loved you and Burt [Ward] and Julie [Newmar] and everybody else. Having this new superhero culture rise since, I’d say, the ’89 “Batman” movie kicked it off, and being re-embraced and getting to meet thousands of people that grew up on you every year – what’s that experience meant to you over the last couple of decades?

    Well, several things happened. If somebody comes up and tells me, “I lost my father, he died when I was five, and you became my father,” I’m deeply touched by that, and there’s sincerity. A guy comes up and says, “Well, I became a judge and a crime fighter first because of you, I think to myself, “Well, hell, I don’t deserve that. I was just some pretend crime fighter.”

    But there is something lovely about that. The show and all of its silliness and fun, and the satirical tongue-in-cheek elements, it still, in some manner, influenced or helped people in a good way.
    You’ve gotten to do something that a lot of actors don’t get to do, which is have these relationships with your co-stars like Burt and Julie over long periods of time, and get to really, in a sense, grow old together. Tell me about that experience, because until recently very few actors get to have that kind of lengthy interaction -– you guys and the actors on “Star Trek” had this, and that was about it.

    To address the first part of your question, Burt, for example, and I have very different lifestyles. I live mostly in Idaho on a big spread, and we have, like, 18 elk in the backyard. And then I have to get up and travel to wherever I work. So my life experiences are quite different from theirs. But when we get together, that chemistry, the relationship, immediately comes back.

    You got to drive the Batmobile. Tell me about that vehicle, the iconic nature of it, and being the guy behind the wheel. I mean, that’s another sort of singular honor that you’ve had over your career.

    It was fun from moment to moment. I was scaring the hell out of people with it, especially Burt Ward, who had white knuckles — but that car, I recently raced in the Batmobile, the new tank-like Batmobile, in a show called “Jay Leno’s Garage.” So we raced, and guess who won? The f***ing old Batmobile.

    It wasn’t easy to drive because it had problems with balance and tracking and brakes and so on. I’ll tell you, it was funky and colorful, and the kids -– everybody seems to have loved that Batmobile. So do I.

    Is there a big takeaway from the whole experience? Something that really you’ll never forget from when it was happening, and also the way you’re feeling about it has evolved over time.

    Well, the only feeling I really have almost every day is I’m the luckiest actor in the world. How many of us, maybe [William] Shatner, [Clint] Eastwood, a few, get a chance to become an icon of a kind, and do something that has life, longevity, and makes people happy? Hey, I guess they’re calling me “The Bright Knight.” I like to make people happy. Enough violence. Enough explosions, you know?

    “Some days you can’t get rid of a bomb!”

    Yes, that’s right. But I did!

  • ‘Family Guy’ Creator Seth MacFarlane: Adam West Is ‘Irreplaceable’ 

    Everyone knows “Family Guy”? West voiced the mayor of Quahog, Rhode Island on a recurring basis since Season 2. The actor died June 9 at age 88, leaving fans everywhere in mourning, and Seth MacFarlane‘s show without its mayor.

    MacFarlane, who voices many of the Fox show’s characters himself, addressed the loss of West in a beautiful tribute:

    “Irreplaceable” is right, but should fans take that literally for “Family Guy,” that no new mayor will be coming to Quahog when Season 16 premieres? A TV series is small potatoes compared to the loss of human life, but the show must go on.

    Of course, West was best known as Batman, and a few of the actors who played Batman honored their predecessor:

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  • Adam West, TV’s Batman, Dead at 88

    No Merchandising. Editorial Use Only. No Book Cover Usage.Mandatory Credit: Photo by Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock (1546961a)Batman ,  Adam West,  Burt WardFilm and TelevisionBatman” — died Friday night in Los Angeles. He was 88. A rep said that he died after a short battle with leukemia.

    “Our dad always saw himself as The Bright Knight, and aspired to make a positive impact on his fans’ lives. He was and always will be our hero,” his family said in a statement.

    With its “Wham! Pow!” onscreen exclamations, flamboyant villains and cheeky tone, “Batman” became a surprise hit with its premiere on ABC in 1966, a virtual symbol of ’60s kitsch. Yet West’s portrayal of the superhero and his alter ego, Bruce Wayne, ultimately made it hard for him to get other roles, and while he continued to work throughout his career, options remained limited because of his association with the character.

    West also chafed against the darker versions of Bob Kane’s hero that emerged in more recent years, beginning with the Michael Keaton-starring, Tim Burton-directed adaptations that began in 1989, and followed by Christopher Nolan’s enormously successful Dark Knight trilogy.

    In February 2016, CBS sitcom “The Big Bang Theory,” which had hosted a number of geek favorites over the years, celebrated its 200th episode — and marked the 50th anniversary of “Batman” — with an appearance by West.

    West made his feature debut in 1959’s “The Young Philadelphians,” starring Paul Newman.

    Various supporting roles in movies and TV followed – including a part in the Three Stooges movie “The Outlaws Is Coming.”
    The origins of the “Batman” series are actually quite complex, but the project eventually landed at 20th Century Fox, which handed it to producer William Dozier, who devised the show’s camp comedy sensibility.

    Both West and Lyle Waggoner were considered for the part of Batman before West was cast, playing alongside Burt Ward as his sidekick Robin.

    In a PBS special that touched on the show, Ward noted that West’s slow, portentous delivery was occasionally designed to eat up screen time, thus cutting into his co-star’s dialogue.

    With actors like Cesar Romero (Joker) and Burgess Meredith (Penguin) comprising Batman’s rogue’s gallery of villains, the show became an almost instant success, urging viewers to tune in for the next episode at the “Same Bat-time.” The series spawned a movie — pitting the Dynamic Duo against a team-up of villains — before being canceled after three seasons due, primarily, to its high production costs.

    The show came to be viewed with some contempt in comicbook circles, especially after the darker vision of Batman became dominant in the ’70s and ’80s.

    West found serious film work scarce following the series, though he remained in demand for personal appearances as the character and voice work, including a recurring stint on “Family Guy” and animated versions of Batman. Other roles ranged from “The Happy Hooker” and “Hooper” to the Michael Tolkin-directed movies “The Rapture” and “The New Age.”

    West wrote two books, one, titled “Back to the Batcave” and published in the mid-1990s, in which he said that he was “angry and disappointed” not to have been offered the chance to reprise the role in the Burton movies, despite being 60 at the time. The attendant publicity seemed to put West back on the cultural radar, at least as a source of nostalgia.

    Born William West Anderson in 1928 in Walla Walla, Wash., the actor later adopted his stage name, and began his career in earnest when he moved to Hawaii in the 1950s to star in a local children’s program.

    He is survived by his wife Marcelle, six children, five grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

  • Original Batman Adam West Wants to Cameo in Ben Affleck’s ‘The Batman’

    2016 New York Comic Con - Day 1We still don’t know too much about “The Batman,” Ben Affleck’s upcoming standalone flick in the burgeoning DC film universe. But one former Caped Crusader has a genius idea for a cameo that could give Marvel’s constant Stan Lee appearances a run for their money.

    In an the campy ’60s series and movies — admitted that he has no desire to reprise the character that made him famous. But that doesn’t mean that he wouldn’t want to participate in the DC film slate in some other form.

    West suggested a way he could cameo — in “The Batman” or another movie featuring Affleck’s version of the hero — that would certainly fit in with DC director/producer Zack Synder’s penchant for dream sequences (which figured heavily in this year’s “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice”). Here’s how he explained his ethereal idea to ComicBook.com:

    ” … [I]t would be wonderful to play Bruce Wayne’s father coming back. You know he was murdered, but coming back one dark and stormy lightning-riven night through a library window. Bruce Wayne is there thinking, ‘I’ll never solve this. This is the most difficult thing in my life.’ In comes old dad, like a bat, almost.”

    Batman’s parents’ death is one of the driving forces for the character in just about every single adaptation of the classic DC tale, so focusing so heavily on Thomas Wayne would be a natural progression for this new slate of films. And as West points out, a cameo from the original Batman would certainly “blow their minds out in the audience.” We’re definitely on board. Give him a call, Batfleck.

    “The Batman” begins production early next year. It’s tentatively due in theaters sometime in 2018.

    [via: ComicBook.com]

    Photo credit: Getty Images

  • Batman Facts: 25 Things You (Probably) Don’t Know About the Dark Knight

    batman factsHappy Batman Day, everyone! Around the world, May 1st may mark a spring holiday, but here, it marks the first appearance of the Dark Knight, in Detective Comics No. 27, in 1939.

    For the past 76 years, the Caped Crusader has been fighting Gotham City evildoers in comic books, movies, TV shows, and pretty much anywhere else you can shine a Bat-signal. Throughout the years, Bruce Wayne’s alter ego has gone through many incarnations, not just in actors (from Adam West to Michael Keaton to Christian Bale to Ben Affleck, among the many), but also in character, from haunted avenger to squeaky-clean do-gooder to campy clown to kinky prowler to world-weary fighter. He’s due for yet another change this week, with the releases of DC’s Batman No. 40 — in which Bruce Wayne and the Joker finally kill each other (or do they?) and a special issue of DC’s Divergence, where an undisclosed character takes up Bruce Wayne’s mantle and becomes a new Batman in a heavily armored, RoboCop-like getup.

    As familiar as we’ve all become with Batman over the years, there’s still plenty you may not know about the character. (Indeed, DC and Warner Bros. are banking on it, hoping the mystery will draw you to see Affleck in next year’s “Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice.”) Here, then, are 25 things you didn’t know about your favorite masked vigilante.

    1. Bruce Wayne is named after Scottish hero Robert the Bruce and American Revolutionary hero Mad Anthony Wayne (who turns out to be an ancestor of Batman’s, according to the comics).

    2. The initial Batman stories were especially violent. Batman had no compunction about carrying a gun or killing his foes. Only later did Batman develop a code in which he refused to do either of those things, lest he sink to the level of the man who killed his parents.

    3. Robin didn’t show up until issue No 38. The young sidekick was the alter ego of Dick Grayson, part of a family of circus acrobats whose parents died in a high-wire accident. (It turned out that they’d been killed by mobsters who were shaking down the circus owner for protection money.) Naturally, Bruce Wayne identified with Dick’s plight and adopted him as his ward.

    4. There have been several Robins since, including Jason Todd, Tim Drake, Stephanie Brown, and Damian Wayne (Bruce Wayne’s son by Talia al Ghul).

    5. Batman’s first screen appearance was in a 1943 serial called “The Batman.” It starred Lewis Wilson as Batman and Douglas Croft as Robin. Made at the height of World War II, the shorts featured as their villain a Japanese spy named Dr. Daka, played in yellowface by J. Carroll Naish. The series wasn’t very good, though it did introduce the concept of the Batcave. It also introduced a thin version of Alfred the Butler, who was then drawn skinnier in the comics.

    6. Another serial a few years later, 1949’s “Batman and Robin,” starring Robert Lowery and Johnny Duncan, was better. It had the Dynamic Duo facing off against a black-hooded mastermind called The Wizard.

    7. Were Batman and Robin gay? That was the insinuation of Dr. Fredric Wertham, whose 1954 book “Seduction of the innocent” became a best-seller with its claim that comic books were contributing to a nationwide epidemic of juvenile delinquency. He denounced comics for their grim tone and sensationalist violence, and he singled out Batman comics in particular for centering on a rich playboy who wore tights and went out swinging at night with his teenage ward. The book led to Congressional hearings, which in turn led to the creation of the Comics Code Authority, the industry’s self-censorship operation. To earn the CCA seal and be sold in stores, comic books had to tone down the violence and sexuality, and heroes became more overtly positive role models. DC characters like Superman and Batman became virtual boy scouts. With more sordid underworld and occult tales off-limits, Batman and Robin soon found themselves entangling with space aliens and other bizarre, sci-fi monsters.

    8. The 1966-68 “Batman” TV series starring Adam West as Bruce Wayne and Burt Ward as Dick Grayson brought some of the kink back, but strictly as camp, so arch that it went over the heads of the children who were the show’s target audience.(Watch the reruns now, as a grown-up — IFC has been running them every weekend — and you’ll guffaw at how much they got away with.) Hardcore Bat-fans hated the campy silliness, but the show did revive the DC comic’s flagging sales.

    9. In one series of Batman comics, Bruce Wayne married Catwoman. Their daughter Helena Wayne grew up to be the Huntress.

    10. Frank Miller is generally credited with restoring Batman to his old gritty self with “The Dark Knight Returns,” a four-issue series published in1986, where an aged Batman comes out of retirement, joined by a new Robin, to clean up the streets of a Gotham run amok.

    11. Tim Burton‘s 1989 “Batman” became the first modern comic book blockbuster, cited for its dark tone borrowed from Miller. Before the film’s release, fans were skeptical that Michael Keaton, the comic actor from Burton’s “Beetlejuice,” would make a credible Batman, but he proved more than capable of playing a Bruce Wayne still tormented by childhood trauma.

    12. Among those actors Warner Bros. considered for the lead role were Kevin Costner, Mel Gibson, Bill Murray, Tom Selleck, Charlie Sheen, and Pierce Brosnan, who turned down the role because he couldn’t take seriously the idea of playing a hero in tights.

    13. Jack Nicholson played the Joker in that film, but he received top billing over Keaton’s Caped Crusader. He also was smart enough to demand a percentage of the merchandising, resulting in a payday for the film that was worth between $60 and $90 million.

    14. Bob Kane, the artist who (with writer Bill Finger) created Batman in 1939, was supposed to have a cameo 50 years later in Burton’s film, but while he served as a consultant on that film (and the next three), he was too ill to appear in the film. But the fanciful sketch of the winged vigilante that reporter Knox (Robert Wuhl) is shown comes from Kane’s pen and bears his signature.

    15. Burton and Keaton reteamed for a successful sequel, 1992’s “Batman Returns,” but after that, Burton begged off the series, claiming he’d had a nervous breakdown making the second film, Keaton was game to return, but Warner Bros. deemed his demands unreasonable and replaced him with Val Kilmer for 1995’s “Batman Forever.”

    16. Robin didn’t appear in either of the Burton-Keaton movies, but the character appeared in early scripts for both movies. Kiefer Sutherland was considered for the first film, and Marlon Wayans was up for the part in the second.

    17. After Joel Schumacher directed “Batman Forever,” he broke Hollywood protocol and openly blasted Kilmer for being difficult on the set. “What’s the worst that could happen to me?” Schumacher said of his undiplomatic candor. “That I’ll never work with Val Kilmer again?”

    18. Indeed, Schumacher’s next Bat-film was “Batman and Robin,” starring George Clooney as Bruce Wayne. The film was widely derided by Bat-fans for its campiness (that rubber-nippled Bat-suit!), killed off the film franchise for nearly a decade, and was named the worst film of all time by readers of Britain’s Empire magazine. Schumacher said the studio pressured him to make the movie frothier than the previous installments. “Adults think kids are too scared of Batman, so we had to make it more kid-friendly, make it funnier, make it lighter,” he said in a 2003 interview with The A.V. Club. Still, he accepted the blame for the final product. “I take full responsibility. It’s all me. I know I disappointed some people, but it’s a Batman movie. We’re at war. Let’s get over it.”

    19. Before Warners finally hired Christopher Nolan to direct what became the “Dark Knight” trilogy with Christian Bale, several other Batman movie projects died in development. Darren Aronofsky was to direct a “Batman: Year One” adaptation, based on the late-’80s DC title that covered Bruce Wayne’s earliest days as a crimefighter. But he dropped out to make “The Fountain.” And Wolfgang Petersen was going to do “Batman vs. Superman,” but he dropped out to make “Troy.” And then Warners decided to shelve the superhero duel in favor of a lighter Superman story — which also went through several iterations before becoming the 2006 movie “Superman Returns,” with Brandon Routh.

    20. The Tim Drake character, one of the later Robins in the comics, was the apparent inspiration for John Blake, the character played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt in “The Dark Knight Rises.”

    21. In the comics, Batman has an online alias. It’s JonDoe297.

    22. He also has a favorite food: Mulligatawny soup.

    23. The actor who has logged more time as Batman than anyone else is Batman: The Animated Series” in 1992. Over the past 23 years, he’s been Batman in eight TV series, one animated feature film, two TV movies, 10 home video movies, and 10 video games.

    24. Batman plays a central role in no fewer than seven current DC titles.

    25. In recent years, the owners of the original Bat-copter from the Adam West series have been taking the half-century-old chopper around to state fairs and such, selling rides.
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  • This Retro Recut of the ‘Batman v Superman’ Trailer Is Campy Fun

    Batman v Superman, retro trailer
    Like most big trailers before it, the new “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” teaser has gotten a retro makeover, trading in special effects for practical ones and shiny new suits for the campy-looking classics.

    The clip, courtesy of YouTuber Bobby Burns, features images of iconic actors Christopher Reeve and Adam West playing their own versions of Superman and Batman from their movies and TV show, respectively. We see Reeve flying around the globe gloomily as whispers from the original trailer wonder if this alien is really a savior, or the devil in disguise.

    While Batfleck then enters the picture in the actual trailer, we meet West’s version instead, running around with Robin and sliding down a firepole before he growls out to the Man of Steel, “Do you bleed? You will.”

    It’s a bit jarring to see the sometimes silly, more simplistic iterations of the characters (and their less-impressive special effects) superimposed over the “Batman v Superman” trailer’s dark, ominous dialogue and score, though it’s worth it for the re-worked logo, which features the old emblems of the superheroes from Reeve and West’s heydays. Check it out below.

    [via: YouTube]

    Photo credit: YouTube

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