Quote from: The Laughing Fish on Tue, 30 Sep 2014, 10:19
I had a thought that occurred to me right now. If Batman '89 was the first live-action adaptation for the main character to speak in two distinctive voices as Bruce Wayne and his alter ego, then how Burton and Keaton never seem to get any credit for it? Granted, Kevin Conroy went one better in BTAS by speaking by acting as charming as Bruce Wayne and brooding as Batman. But still...
Short answer? People just seem to flat-out resent both B'89 & Returns, & therefore talk down (or just completely deny) their redeeming qualities & contributions to onscreen (& offscreen, for that matter) comic lore.
[Short answer cont.]
I've noticed that, generally, when the films are derided (as they so often are), whether it's a vitriolic youtube comment or a protracted, nitpicky essay on some guy's no-traffic blog, people have little-to-no legitimate criticism for the films (at least for B'89).
They're penned mostly by guys who seem to have this rather deep-rooted dislike for either Burton or Nicholson (each has his own group of dedicated detractors, I've found), or guys who simply resent Keaton's Wayne for being skinny & bushy-haired. They seem to try to mask it by adopting this sort of passive-aggressive demeanor in their 'critiques', & then mostly repeat stuff they read on someone else's blog or youtube comment (seriously, it's like they just cut & paste - "Jack just played Jack Nicholson in makeup", "Batman doesn't kill", "There's no story/the story is too simple", "Joker shouldn't be responsible for the death of Batman's parents", etc.)
In other words, stuff that's either simply untrue, or which they personally dislike, but which made for a stronger story arc, character dynamic or film overall.
Sorry for going off the trail a little bit there.