Tag: Download Batman Online
Batman Streaming
by jesseemerson1950 on Feb.01, 2010, under Batman
The worldwide success of Christopher Nolan’s “Batman Begins” has prompted Warner Bros. to finally release Tim Burton’s 1989 “Batman” with an extra disc of special features…and this is an event worth cheering about!
Buy,Download, Or Stream Batman! Click Here
A groundbreaking cinematic achievement (and one of the most expensive films ever produced, to that time), “Batman” was a mammoth gamble, and the memoir slack the ten-year struggle to bring it to the hide is interesting! It is a chronicle of visionaries, beginning with Michael Uslan, a young student/Batman fan, who not only convinced his university to include comics in their curriculum, but, fired up by Richard Donner’s “Superman”, knew a Batman film could be unbiased as grand, and took the belief, with Batman creator Bob Kane’s blessing, to Hollywood; of Peter Gruber and Jon Peters, who listened to Uslan, after every studio had passed on it, saw the potential, and decided to gamble; of Sam Hamm, who had a “Batman” script in his head, praying to gain the chance to write it; and, most importantly, of Tim Burton, whose dusky, quirky sensibilities made him THE director to film it, despite only two feature films to his credit.
This worthy legend, with archival footage and unique interviews, is the highlight of disc two, but there is grand, distinguished more! Did you know that Robin was scripted to manufacture an appearance in the first film? That Sean Young, not Kim Basinger, had been cast as Vicki Vale? That the Batmobile, designed by Oscar-winner Anton Furst, could actually do 95 mph (and that Tim Burton drove it, once? ) That the room where disfigured Jack Nicholson received his unsuccessful plastic surgery was actually a studio prop room? Each chapter is a revelation!
Buy,Download, Or Stream Batman! Click Here
Not that there aren’t a few disappointments in the presentation; there is no chapter with deleted scenes (although a few moments are shown that never made it into the finished film…a puny girl, seeing Batman, asks, in all seriousness, “Is it Halloween? “, which causes him to quit, and grin) ; the ‘History’ of Batman, despite a wealth of photos and clips from the comics, serials, and graphic novels, does not offer a single visual from the campy 60s TV series (whether this was a refusal by 20th Century Fox, who produced the series, to permit their exhaust, or an attempt to distance the movie from the “ZAP! BAM! POW!” silliness is not explained) . Also, the brief appearance of mask chronicle Jack Palance, as ‘Boss Grissom’, is largely ignored, other than in Tim Burton’s audio commentary, which is surprising. Detached, many of the cast part their memories (Billy Dee Williams collected expresses disappointment that he didn’t catch to play ‘Two-Face’; Robert Wuhl, regret that after they rewrote his death scene to allow his character to survive, he never appeared in another film in the franchise) .
I guess what I’m saying, is…chuck your musty copy of “Batman”, and replace it with THIS one!
You’ll be jubilant you did!
This film proved to the world that silly book films could be worthy more than action-packed carnage festivals. This film (and the first sequel “Batman Returns”) have so noteworthy more to it than that. “Batman” is a bewitching and very intriguing exploration of the psyche; it peers into the souls of not only the Shadowy Knight, but also those of the people whose lives he changes with his presence. The film is brilliantly acted by its perfectly-chosen cast, which includes Jack Nicholson (the Joker), Michael Keaton (the Batman), Kim Basinger (Vicki Vale), Micheal Gough (Alfred Pennyworth), and Robert Wuhl (Alexander Knox) . Tim Burton makes perfect spend of his unbelievable directorial talents, Anton Furst designs a gothic, lovely Gotham City, and Danny Elfman’s classic musical catch further back perform this a modern, thought-provoking, and very distinguished unusual classic, a masterpiece of film noir and tremendous opera. “Batman Returns shares these astounding qualities, but, sadly, Joel Schumacher’s “Batman Forever” and “Batman and Robin” lose all of that depth and meaning, and become small more than standard mindless action. But, we’ll always have Burton’s shaded vision of a paralyzed and brooding Batman.
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