Tag: Batman

  • There’s More Batman Than Superman in ‘Dawn of Justice,’ Zack Snyder Says

    batman v supermanWith all the hubbub surrounding the casting of Ben Affleck in next spring’s “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,” it should come as no surprise that Batfleck will be a prominent part of the flick — and according to director Zack Snyder, he’s going to have more screen time than Henry Cavill‘s Superman.

    Snyder confirmed that fact in an interview with The Daily Beast, in which he explained that it was necessary to feature more of the Caped Crusader in order to establish his new character in the context of the burgeoning “Justice League” empire.

    ” … [I]t’s a different Batman than the Batman that was in the Chris Nolan movies, so we have a little bit more explaining to do—and you just had a whole Superman movie,” Snyder told the site. ” … [Y]ou need to understand where Batman is with everything. And that’s more toward the beginning, but it evens back out as it goes on.”

    Still, that doesn’t mean that “Dawn of Justice” is entirely Batman’s show, and the titular twosome will indeed have plenty of time to play off of one another throughout the flick, the director said.

    “They’re actually opposite sides of the same coin,” Synder told The Daily Beast. “It’s interesting because Batman’s a man and Superman’s a god, if you think about it in those terms. So their relationship is very contentious. What Superman sees as Batman’s limits, Batman sees as Superman trying to control him, acting like an absolute dictator. … Their conflict is based on each others’ understanding of the other’s weakness.”

    Like the previous trailer, that premise sounds pretty dark, but if anyone can play with that theme, it’s Snyder. We’ll see how it all shakes out when “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” hits theaters on March 25, 2016.

    [via: The Daily Beast]

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  • Original Batgirl, Yvonne Craig, Dead at 78

    Yvonne Craig“Batman” series, died this week after a two-year battle with breast cancer at the age of 78.

    If you trace the line of butt-kicking women in movies and TV all the way back, you’ll find Craig right there at the beginning. She originated the role of Batgirl in the third and final season of “Batman” in 1967, ka-powing bad guys next to Adam West and Burt Ward. As a trained dancer, she even did her own stunts.

    Before her acting career, Craig danced with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. She segued into acting, and appeared in television and movies — including two with Elvis Presley, “It Happened at the World’s Fair” and “Kissin’ Cousins.” Along with her turn as Batgirl, Craig memorably danced as a green-skinned slave girl for Captain Kirk on “Star Trek.”

    Craig leaves behind her husband, Kenneth Aldrich, and sister, Meridel Carson.

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  • 18 Comic Book Movie Casting Picks That Fans Surprisingly Didn’t Hate

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    Marvel and DC fans are very vocal. If they don’t like something, they take it to a very Stage-5 nerd rage place. Especially when it comes to casting their favorite heroes and villains.

    But sometimes, the fans rejoice and nod approvingly from their race car bunk beds at the Hollywood stars appearing in their favorite comic books-turned-movies — like Paul Rudd in “Ant-Man.”

    From “Iron Man” to “The Dark Knight,” here are 18 casting choices that earned fandom’s approval.

  • These Are the 10 Most Toxic Superheroes of 2015: Click If You Dare

    It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s … Cybercrime! Maybe computer hacking isn’t the most exciting supervillain power, but it is quite damaging. The folks at Intel Security just released their 2015 list of “Most Toxic Superheroes” — timed for San Diego Comic-Con, when more people are searching online about superhero movies/shows/characters.

    As Intel noted:

    Research conducted by Intel Security revealed the top superheroes most likely to be targeted by cybercriminals where these searches can result in sites containing viruses, malware and other inappropriate content.”

    The top 10 superheroes most likely to affect online users this year are:

    1. Aquaman — 20.00%
    2. Iron Fist — 19.69%
    3. Wolverine — 19.58.%
    4. Wonder Woman — 19.38%
    5. Doctor Strange — 19.17%
    6. Daredevil — 18.96%
    7. Tie: The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man — 18.85%
    8. Catwoman — 18.65%
    9. Green Lantern — 18.44%
    10. Batman — 18.33%

    This is apparently Aquaman’s return to the #1 spot, where he first landed in 2013. He doesn’t get the superhero spotlight that often so … in a way, this is good for his ego. Congrats, man.


    FYI, the percentage indicates chance of landing on a website that has tested positive for online threats such as spyware, adware, spam, phishing, viruses or other malware. Be careful out there!

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  • SDCC: Ben Affleck in Talks to Direct, Star and Co-Write Solo ‘Batman’ Movie

    Just as Comic-Con begins, so does a new era for The Dark Knight.

    Batman v Superman” star Ben Affleck is reportedly in talks to cowrite a “Batman” standalone film with DC Comics’ chief creative officer Geoff Johns, according to Deadline.

    Affleck will also star as Batman and possibly direct, with the latter rumored to be a condition of his deal to don the cowl in “BvS” when he first signed on to that film in 2013.

    Deadline also reports that Affleck and Johns, a popular DC Comics scribe, are already at work on a script that the team may finish by end of summer — before Affleck goes off in November to direct the 2016 crime thriller “Live By Night,” based on the novel by Dennis Lehane.

    Affleck’s second appearance as the Caped Crusader won’t start shooting until after “Night” is finished, which means we won’t see a solo Batman film until at least 2018 or 2019. Deadline broke the story two days before Affleck and his “BvS” costars arrive for Warner Bros.’ epic Hall H presentation at Comic-Con Saturday.

    Before becoming DC’s CCO, Johns was responsible for writing such popular and successful comics runs as “Green Lantern” and “Justice League.” This will mark Johns’ first feature writing credit.

    “Batman v Superman” hits theaters March 25, 2016.
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  • Superheroes Face Off in New ‘Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice’ Photos

    Entertainment WeeklyWith Comic-Con about to kick off next week, Entertainment Weekly has “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” on their cover — and revealed six new photos from next year’s highly anticipated superhero movie.

    We get our first glimpse at Gal Gadot as Diana Prince, meeting Ben Affleck’s Bruce Wayne, as well as an intriguing image of Jesse Eisenberg’s Lex Luthor — with hair!

    The most tantalizing photo features the two titular superheroes, of course, as they face off against one another.
    Batman v Superman
    “I like to think that Man of Steel was the perspective of the world from Clark, Kal-El, looking at the world and trying to exist with in it,” Cavill tells EW. “‘Batman v Superman’ is definitely more mankind’s perspective of Superman.”

    Check out the rest of the pics:
    Batman v SupermanBatman v SupermanBatman v SupermanBatman v SupermanBatman v Superman
    Here’s the official synopsis of the movie:

    Fearing the actions of a god-like superhero 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. And with Batman and Superman at war with one another, a new threat quickly arises, putting mankind in greater danger than it’s ever known before.

    “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” will be a part of Warner Bros.’ big Hall H Comic Con panel, and we’re hoping some more footage emerges from there.

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  • Will Ben Affleck Direct a Standalone Batman Movie?

    Opening Night Gala Presentation And World Premiere Of "Gone Girl" -Arrivals - 52nd New York Film FestivalWarner Bros. may have found an Oscar-winning director to helm a “Batman” movie — and it’s the same guy wearing the cape!

    The latest rumor from Latino Review claims that Ben Affleck won’t just play Batman, he’ll also direct himself in a standalone movie titled “The Batman” slated for November 2018. The actor will make his debut as the character in “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” next March, then reprise the role in a cameo in “Suicide Squad” in August 2016. He’s also set to be a big part of “Justice League: Part One” in November 2017.

    But with “Justice League: Part Two” scheduled for 2019, that does leave room for a potential “Batman” standalone movie. When Affleck was cast as the iconic caped crusader, everyone speculated that Warner Bros. wanted him to direct — possibly one of the “Justice League” films.

    Also making this rumor even more viable is the fact that the studio hired “Argo” writer Chris Terrio to pen both “Justice League” movies. He could be brought on board to write “The Batman.”

    As with all rumors, take this one with a heaping tablespoon of salt. But

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  • Watch Batman Ride on Top of the Joker’s Car in ‘Suicide Squad’ Leaked Footage

    BatmanApparently, The Joker’s taking Batman for a ride in “Suicide Squad.”

    Earlier this week, footage from the set of the DC Comics supervillains movie showed the Batmobile chasing the Jokermobile down the streets of Toronto. Now, there’s even more video — this time showing Batman himself, crouching down on the roof of the Joker’s flame-red car.


    Of course, that’s probably not Ben Affleck in the Batsuit for this scene — it’s likely a stunt double. But the video seems to triple-confirm that Affleck’s Batman will make an appearance in “Suicide Squad.” The rumors first started when the actor was spotted on the Toronto set dressed more like Bruce Wayne. It makes sense that Batman would pop up in the latter movie, which heavily features Jared Leto’s The Joker. Wherever The Joker goes, so goes Batman.

    Affleck will first play the Caped Crusader in “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” next March. “Suicide Squad” is set for release in August 2016.

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  • ‘Suicide Squad’ Footage Reveals Batmobile Chasing the Joker

    Suicide SquadWhere there’s a Joker, there’s gotta be a Batman, right?

    Fans have been speculating that Ben Affleck’s Batman might show up in the upcoming movie “Suicide Squad” — the actor has been spotted on the Toronto set — but now there’s footage to back up the rumors.

    Video of a car chase scene shot in the streets reveals the Batmobile in pursuit of the Joker (Jared Leto) and Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie).

    Batmobile!! #batman #suicidesquad #joker #darkknight #toronto #batmobile

    A video posted by ERNstagram (@ernievicente) on

    Action! #Batmobile #SuicideSquad #Toronto #DC

    A video posted by Terence Yip (@terenceyip) on


    Of course, there’s no official confirmation of Batman’s involvement in the movie, but it makes sense. “Suicide Squad” is the next DC Universe movie after “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.” Perhaps Affleck will pop up in a brief cameo. It could also be a set-up for a standalone Batman movie down the line.

    “Suicide Squad” is directed by David Fury and also stars Will Smith as Deadshot, Jai Courtney as Captain Boomerang, Jay Hernandez as El Diablo, Cara Delevingne as Enchantress, and Joel Kinnaman as Rick Flag. The movie opens in 2016.

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  • 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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