Your Version of B89

Started by BatmAngelus, Fri, 9 Aug 2013, 17:58

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I thought I'd open up the floodgates and do a thread for each Batman movie.  After Doc's "Fix the film" thread in the TDK Rises forum, I thought it was only fair to do something similar for every live action film- Burton, Schumacher, and Nolan. 

So here it goes: If you had final rewrite on the movie (or even wanted to fix minor things), what would you have done differently?  As with Doc's thread, you have to stick with the general framework of the film.
That awkward moment when you remember the only Batman who's never killed is George Clooney...

There is very, very little I'd change in this one, mainly a subtle costume change for the Joker so the fans wouldn't moan about him being "fat". I'd make the coat more of a zoot suit coat and give the vest pointed edges.

I'd probably amp up the action scenes just a smidge, but I'm overall happy with  these scenes already.
Why is there always someone who bring eggs and tomatoes to a speech?

I'd have maybe wanted more of Batman's martial arts prowess. The whole point of this stuff in my opinion is to nitpick a little bit but as cool as Batman's face off with the sword master was, it was pretty brief. The siege of the belfry already had a martial artist (or acrobat anyway) attack Batman and he went down pretty easily. I might've liked more of a pitched battle between him and Batman.

Minor things:

  • Fix all the continuity errors and goofs, like Batman lowering his mic down but then see him having his hand up when Batmobile arrives.
  • I'd give at least a short fight scene between Batman, the Joker and his goons during the museum scene.
  • I'd have Batman fight Bob the Goon included in the film!  8) And have a few more fight scenes in the bell-tower scenes.
  • ;D As funny as it was watching Batman failing to kill the Joker at point blank range with his Batwing, I'd redo it in a way where Joker would look like he is cowardly hiding back inside the cake, but then pops out with his gun and then shoot down the Batwing before Batman can react.
  • I'd have that cancelled idea of Mayor Borg reacting in shock when he unveils the statue to commemorate Gotham's 200th Anniversary, only to look at the Joker's statue instead.

Major thing:
After the Joker is killed, it's suddenly cut to the end without Batman's reaction to the aftermath. Batman got his revenge over the man who killed is parents, but we don't get to see him anymore after saving himself and Vicki. I'd have a scene where Batman feels relieved, albeit still feeling hollow, that the Joker is gone, but now he insists it's upon his duty to keep the streets safe - and then it cuts off to the public announcement and unveiling of the Batsignal at the end. What we've got in the original movie instead feels incomplete unfortunately. It might have to do with the Writer's Strike at the time and an urge to wrap up production as soon as possible.

I still like '89 out of all the Batman films the most, but I still can't refrain myself from honest criticism.
QuoteJonathan Nolan: He [Batman] has this one rule, as the Joker says in The Dark Knight. But he does wind up breaking it. Does he break it in the third film?

Christopher Nolan: He breaks it in...

Jonathan Nolan: ...the first two.

Source: http://books.google.com.au/books?id=uwV8rddtKRgC&pg=PR8&dq=But+he+does+wind+up+breaking+it.&hl=en&sa=X&ei

Sat, 10 Aug 2013, 06:34 #4 Last Edit: Sat, 10 Aug 2013, 06:36 by DocLathropBrown
The only way I could think to improve the movie is to incorporate some of Craig Gardner's novelization's embellishments: adding the subplot of the Joker throwing fake money to the crowd at the end (that has his face), bringing back in the sunset action scene where Batman rescues the Mayor from the Joker, making it more clear that Vicki deduced Batman's identity and previously-establishing the final battle's thugs and also playing up Batman's Batwing-crash injuries more.

But truth be told, so much of what makes the novelization so grand is getting inside the character's heads... and you can't really do that on film without giving out Nolanistic dialogue.

There are few films I can call perfect as-is, but BATMAN is one of them.
"There's just as much room for the television series and the comic books as there is for my movie. Why wouldn't there be?" - Tim Burton

I would make Harvey Dent a more proeminent character as I said in another thread. That's really all I'd like to change.

The hard thing about this particular topic is we're all thinking of sequels in the back of our minds whereas that thought didnt cross Burton's mind at the time; the concern was solely making a profitable film on what seemed like a huge risk at the time; the last 2 comic book films were colossal flops (howard the duck and superman 4) and there was negative backlash over Keaton from the start.

If we're talking the mindset of a single film, the only beef I have is the batwing getting taken down by a single bullet. I'd have had the Joker use a more powerful weapon such as a bazooka to do it or have batman land it himself.

The fake money idea is kind of cool, I havent thought about it but I probably like that better as it does seem odd the Joker would give away real money before poisoning the city.

If I do get to redo it with the knowledge a sequel is coming, I'd have improved the Harvey Dent character. Give him a slightly bigger role here, have him take the Shreck role in the second film before becoming a villain in the third.

Quote from: riddler on Sat, 10 Aug  2013, 06:52
The hard thing about this particular topic is we're all thinking of sequels in the back of our minds whereas that thought didnt cross Burton's mind at the time; the concern was solely making a profitable film on what seemed like a huge risk at the time; the last 2 comic book films were colossal flops (howard the duck and superman 4) and there was negative backlash over Keaton from the start.

If we're talking the mindset of a single film, the only beef I have is the batwing getting taken down by a single bullet. I'd have had the Joker use a more powerful weapon such as a bazooka to do it or have batman land it himself.

The fake money idea is kind of cool, I havent thought about it but I probably like that better as it does seem odd the Joker would give away real money before poisoning the city.

If I do get to redo it with the knowledge a sequel is coming, I'd have improved the Harvey Dent character. Give him a slightly bigger role here, have him take the Shreck role in the second film before becoming a villain in the third.
I still rate 'Batman '89' as my favourite Batman movie however, in many ways its success is as much a happy accident in which various partly commercially-driven, partly artistic-driven, were pulling in various directions to produce something that ended up feeling relatively fresh and spontaneous, in arguable contrast to the Nolan films which seem more contrived and predictable precisely because they are the work of a small handful of artists working in the same direction.  From the Prince songs that were foisted upon Burton to Jacks Nicholson and Palace competing to see who can chew up the most scenery this is a great film because of various incidental moments which add together to make up an exceedingly satisfying whole and the changes I might have made at the time (such as casting a more dashing, classically handsome and imposing actor as Batman/Bruce Wayne and not giving Joker a back-story or making him the murderer of Bruce's parents) would almost definitely have resulted in a less enjoyable, less memorable movie.

However, one thing I do have to pick up on Riddler is your comment about Harvey Dent.  As portrayed in the first film, Dent is clearly an idealist, albeit a harried and ultimately ineffectual one.  Neither this version nor the classical comic-book version of Dent, as a fundamentally decent, crusading man who nonetheless harbours a dark-side he desperately tries to suppress, would fit easily with the Max Shreck character's modus operandi.  Shreck is a cool, calculating character, an icy, unfeeling sociopath rather than a repressed, ready-to-boil psychopath, who is all about social-climbing and making money.  Shreck is almost defined by his lack of emotions as much as Dent/Two-Face is defined by his inability to control his emotions.  It's also men like Shreck that DA Dent has dedicated his entire career to putting away.  I really don't see how one could attach the whole power-plant story to Dent, far less the relatively amiable, even heroic Dent we saw in 'Batman '89'.
Johnny Gobs got ripped and took a walk off a roof, alright? No big loss.

Quote from: johnnygobbs on Sat, 10 Aug  2013, 07:10
Quote from: riddler on Sat, 10 Aug  2013, 06:52
The hard thing about this particular topic is we're all thinking of sequels in the back of our minds whereas that thought didnt cross Burton's mind at the time; the concern was solely making a profitable film on what seemed like a huge risk at the time; the last 2 comic book films were colossal flops (howard the duck and superman 4) and there was negative backlash over Keaton from the start.

If we're talking the mindset of a single film, the only beef I have is the batwing getting taken down by a single bullet. I'd have had the Joker use a more powerful weapon such as a bazooka to do it or have batman land it himself.

The fake money idea is kind of cool, I havent thought about it but I probably like that better as it does seem odd the Joker would give away real money before poisoning the city.

If I do get to redo it with the knowledge a sequel is coming, I'd have improved the Harvey Dent character. Give him a slightly bigger role here, have him take the Shreck role in the second film before becoming a villain in the third.
I still rate 'Batman '89' as my favourite Batman movie however, in many ways its success is as much a happy accident in which various partly commercially-driven, partly artistic-driven, were pulling in various directions to produce something that ended up feeling relatively fresh and spontaneous, in arguable contrast to the Nolan films which seem more contrived and predictable precisely because they are the work of a small handful of artists working in the same direction.  From the Prince songs that were foisted upon Burton to Jacks Nicholson and Palace competing to see who can chew up the most scenery this is a great film because of various incidental moments which add together to make up an exceedingly satisfying whole and the changes I might have made at the time (such as casting a more dashing, classically handsome and imposing actor as Batman/Bruce Wayne and not giving Joker a back-story or making him the murderer of Bruce's parents) would almost definitely have resulted in a less enjoyable, less memorable movie.

However, one thing I do have to pick up on Riddler is your comment about Harvey Dent.  As portrayed in the first film, Dent is clearly an idealist, albeit a harried and ultimately ineffectual one.  Neither this version nor the classical comic-book version of Dent, as a fundamentally decent, crusading man who nonetheless harbours a dark-side he desperately tries to suppress, would fit easily with the Max Shreck character's modus operandi.  Shreck is a cool, calculating character, an icy, unfeeling sociopath rather than a repressed, ready-to-boil psychopath, who is all about social-climbing and making money.  Shreck is almost defined by his lack of emotions as much as Dent/Two-Face is defined by his inability to control his emotions.  It's also men like Shreck that DA Dent has dedicated his entire career to putting away.  I really don't see how one could attach the whole power-plant story to Dent, far less the relatively amiable, even heroic Dent we saw in 'Batman '89'.

Actually Dent does show signs of dual personalities in the comics. Mostly he is a white knight but does possess a subtle dark side that he generally supresses. Once he gets scared, he gives it and lets the other side take over. An easy lead in for the second film would be to have him replaced as the D.A. Perhaps have an upstart beat him in an election or a scandal outside of his control happen (for instance one of his assistants come out corrupt). This could explain him backing the penguin for mayor; have Dent's image tarred to Gotham and force him to back the Penguin as a candidate.

Quote from: riddler on Sat, 10 Aug  2013, 07:47
Actually Dent does show signs of dual personalities in the comics. Mostly he is a white knight but does possess a subtle dark side that he generally supresses. Once he gets scared, he gives it and lets the other side take over. An easy lead in for the second film would be to have him replaced as the D.A. Perhaps have an upstart beat him in an election or a scandal outside of his control happen (for instance one of his assistants come out corrupt). This could explain him backing the penguin for mayor; have Dent's image tarred to Gotham and force him to back the Penguin as a candidate.
I never argued with Dent displaying dual personalities in the comic-books.  On the contrary.  But that dark side as far as I'm aware has nothing to do with building power-plants that suck energy out of Gotham, which would be a pretty contrived way for a politician to get his revenge against Gotham and makes more sense as the machinations of a wealthy businessman addicted to building upon his fortune ala Shreck.

Anyway, isn't Two-Face meant to be a tragic character.  He becomes Two-Face in the pursuit of justice, in the middle of a court case during his take-down of Boss Maroni.  Although he has a (suppressed) dark side he's not a full-blown villain until after his 'accident'.  Handing over Shreck's story to Dent robs him of his fundamental pathos by the time he becomes Two-Face.  I'd rather keep Tommy Lee Jones' ham-fisted portrayal of a Two-Face, blink-and-you'll-miss-it origin and all, than give a pre-transformation Harvey Dent a full-blown evil background that goes completely against everything the character stands for.
Johnny Gobs got ripped and took a walk off a roof, alright? No big loss.