King Of Hell Posted August 2, 2006 Share Posted August 2, 2006 i dunno..batman fighting ninjas was better in my mind than batman watching a guy in a purple tux dancing to a bad prince song. as much as i like jack nicholson as the joker, that shit was retarded. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Skilla54 Posted August 2, 2006 Share Posted August 2, 2006 movies are crap these days. 80s - early 90s movies all day. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest spectr Posted August 2, 2006 Share Posted August 2, 2006 ok i will rewatch the first batman sometime soon and see if it holds up to the test of time, i know its been about 5 years or so since ive seen it Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gunm Posted August 2, 2006 Share Posted August 2, 2006 no the first batman was the only good batman movie. everything else has been garbage granted batman begins was the second best but come shit really wasnt all that. weak plot, weak acting, weak batman, sorry to say it but it was weak.. but hey at least it wasnt batman and robin weak i will give it that. Batman Begins was great. You know nothing- Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gunm Posted August 2, 2006 Share Posted August 2, 2006 the only comic i still read is posion elves i think they should make that into a movie' date=' maybe make a darkness movie to.[/quote'] Seeing as how you hated batman begins, this statement isn;t all too shocking Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fermentor666 Posted August 2, 2006 Share Posted August 2, 2006 You take that back. Nah!! Dude was straight playin', he was a player! Look at that player. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weapon X Posted August 2, 2006 Author Share Posted August 2, 2006 the only comic i still read is posion elves i think they should make that into a movie' date=' maybe make a darkness movie to.[/quote'] Darkness video game is coming out for PS3 and 360. The trailer is up at gamevideos.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fermentor666 Posted August 2, 2006 Share Posted August 2, 2006 That's right, I read about that in last months EGM. It looks awesome. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shaolinmasta Posted August 3, 2006 Share Posted August 3, 2006 Batman Begins is overated, I like The 1st Batman and Batman Returns the rest were fairly shit. Tim Burton is the shit. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fermentor666 Posted August 3, 2006 Share Posted August 3, 2006 IMO, Tim Burton is over-rated. Beetlejuice, yes, Batman, sort of, Big Fish, yes. That's about it. The guy said in response to a comment that Kevin Smith made: "I don't read comics". Then wtf is he doing making Batman? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Evangelion>Ogre Posted August 3, 2006 Share Posted August 3, 2006 i can wait for ghost rider movie to come out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TIFWlnrV6d0 NO. And the Tim Burton Batman flicks were ok, just a little too fantasy-based...They got to the point where it was too cartoonish about where that Prince song starts in the first one.Bat-Dance like whuuuut. Nolan's version was pretty decent, even if it did take forever to get going.. this one shouldn't be too bad, provided he doesn't do something stupid like try to include Robin. I'm hoping for a Harley Quinn appearance, though... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fermentor666 Posted August 3, 2006 Share Posted August 3, 2006 I doubt they'll have Harley Quinn in any of the films, since she was originally from the animated series. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Evangelion>Ogre Posted August 3, 2006 Share Posted August 3, 2006 But she was dopeness..they should make an exception. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weapon X Posted August 3, 2006 Author Share Posted August 3, 2006 I like Harley Quinn. She, to me, is one of the better Batman's villains. She went from cartoon to comics, so she could be in the movie. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weapon X Posted August 26, 2006 Author Share Posted August 26, 2006 From Darkworlds NEWS: Nolan talks DARK KNIGHT On his BETTER THAN FUDGE blog, writer Josh Horowitz has posted an excerpt from his upcoming MEAN MAGAZINE interview with BATMAN BEGINS director Christopher Nolan, concerning the sequel: Horowitz: Batman Begins dealt with a range of themes from revenge to how we confront fear. What themes will you be exploring in The Dark Knight? Nolan: I suppose in loose terms I can say it’s about things having to get worse before they get better. Horowitz: It’s that note the first film ends on of escalation? Nolan: Very much. Horowitz: Is there anything to be inferred from the name you’ve chosen for this film, The Dark Knight? Nolan: Ultimately yes. [Laughs] But I’ll leave that for people to infer. Horowitz: This is the cryptic portion of our chat. Nolan: Yeah. [Laughs] The title has been chosen very specifically. It’s quite important to the film. Horowitz: I take it [the Joker] will be less Cesar Romero and Jack Nicholson than the Joker we saw portrayed in a comic like The Killing Joke? Nolan: Yes. I would certainly point to The Killing Joke but I also would point very much to the first two appearances of the Joker in the comic. If you look at where the Joker comes from there’s a very clear direction that fits what we’re doing very well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weapon X Posted August 26, 2006 Author Share Posted August 26, 2006 AND THIS IS A POST BY A DUDE WHO KNOWS HIS COMICS ON ANOTHER BOARD I LIKE TO VISIT: The Joker first appeared in BATMAN #1 (1940), courtesy of writer Bill Finger and artists Bob Kane and Jerry Robinson. Credit for the actual creation of the character has long been a bone of contention between Kane and Robinson. Robinson has claimed the inspiration came from a pack of playing cards, while Kane claimed to have come up with the character on his own. As for Finger, his contribution to the character can’t be denied. Finger, who was known for keeping a truly enormous reference file, rejected Kane’s initial sketch for the new villain as too clown-like, and provided the artists with photo stills from the 1928 film THE MAN WHO LAUGHS, which starred Conrad Veidt as an English nobleman who has had an unsettling smile permanently carved into his face. The makeup worn by Veidt was most creepy, and a clear inspiration for the Joker’s appearance. Note particularly the bags under the eyes, the creased brow and distinctive high hairline. In the Joker’s first appearance, he’s not quite the wacky loon he would become in later appearances; however, he’s murderous as ever. Making his presence known via a radio announcement, the Joker declares his intention to kill millionaire Henry Claridge that very night at midnight and steal his famed Claridge Diamond. Despite the battalion of police guarding the millionaire, at the stroke of midnight Claridge drops to the floor, dead, with his facial muscles pulling back into a hideous smile. Furthermore, the police find that the diamond is already gone, having been replaced by a glass phony, accompanied by a playing card bearing the Joker’s likeness. As it turns out, the Joker had committed the crime the night before, injecting Claridge with a version of his Joker venom that takes 24 hours to take effect. The Joker strikes again later that week, with a radio promise to steal the Ronkers Ruby and murder its owner. This time, the Joker, hiding inside an ornamental suit of armor, kills with a poison dart gun bearing his deadly Joker venom. The Batman first encounters the Joker while attempting to stop the murder of Gotham gangster Brute Nelson, who had been badmouthing Gotham’s newest criminal. Joker proves to be a physical match for Batman, and the Joker manages to escape, and goes on to make his next radio threat, this time to Judge Drake, who had once sent him to prison. While the Judge seems safe, under the personal protection of Gotham’s Chief of Police, things are not always what they seem. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weapon X Posted August 28, 2006 Author Share Posted August 28, 2006 Bump because I'm excited at the prospects of Joker being done very properly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weapon X Posted September 10, 2006 Author Share Posted September 10, 2006 The Toronto International Film Festival is going on right now. I'm copying this out of the Toronto Star interview with Ledger. Q How about playing the Joker in The Dark Knight? I have to admit, I would never have thought of you for the role. A I wouldn't have thought of me, either. But it's obviously not going to be what Jack Nicholson did. It's going to be more nuanced and dark and more along the lines of a Clockwork Orange kind of feel. Which is, I think, what the comic book was after: less about his laugh and more about his eyes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weapon X Posted September 29, 2006 Author Share Posted September 29, 2006 UPERHEROHYPE Chris Nolan on The Dark Knight Source: Melissa Greenwood August 30, 2006 ComingSoon.net sat in on an edit bay session with director Chris Nolan for The Prestige (lots more on that next week!) and the helmer talked a bit about both his blockbuster hit Batman Begins and its upcoming sequel, The Dark Knight. Nolan said he was very surprised by Batman Begins' success, "for the simple reason that I felt we had really poured our hearts out in making a good film and that on our own terms we had succeeded. I never really expected to satisfy critics and Batman fans and regular audiences equally. I mean I thought maybe we'd get two points on the drawing board if you like, but the fact that all three seemed to respond well, that was a big surprise to me. I mean it felt like you were going to lose one aspect or someone… I think we were very fortunate in that regard, it's very gratifying." Talking about the follow-up, in which Heath Ledger will play The Joker opposite Christian Bale, he mentioned that they're changing things up. "I think what people responded to well about 'Batman Begins' is how different it was from their expectations so I think we would be foolish to not recognize that and to [try to replicate that now predictable blueprint]. I think we'll be doing something very different for the sequel. I certainly wouldn't have any interest in trying to repeat experience or the formula we've made, because particularly being the origin story, it's a very unique thing, a very singular experience. My interest would sort of be to move on from that and to do something quite different." The Dark Knight is coming in June of 2008. The Prestige, starring Hugh Jackman, Bale, Michael Caine, Scarlett Johansson, Rebecca Hall, Andy Serkis, Piper Perabo and David Bowie, opens October 20. AND Caine Starts Filming The Dark Knight in March Source: Michael Caine September 25, 2006 Michael Caine says on his official website that he will reprise the role of Alfred Pennyworth in The Dark Knight starting in March: In January I start shooting a remake of "Sleuth" with Jude Law directed by Kenneth Branagh with a very different screen play from the original by Harold Pinter. After that in March I reprise my Butler roll in the second "Batman" again directed by Christopher Noland starring Christian Bale. This one is "The Joker" and the Joker is Heath Ledger. Great casting. Visit the link above for more of his post. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
26SidedCube Posted September 29, 2006 Share Posted September 29, 2006 A darker Joker, eh? I might be with it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ENO ELPMIS Posted September 29, 2006 Share Posted September 29, 2006 they should do like the frank miller comic that would be the best batman period Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Issac Brock Posted September 29, 2006 Share Posted September 29, 2006 Did you see the end of batman begins? Obviously the next enemy is joker.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fermentor666 Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 ^^ REALY MAN NO WAI WE DIDNT FIGUR TAHT OUT YET!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
26SidedCube Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Obvious Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 batman & robin and batman forever were the worst movies in the series. they chose new directors and producers for those two. only good ones were batman, batman returns, and batman begins. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
El Mamerro Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 Well, thanks for clearing that up. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weapon X Posted October 3, 2006 Author Share Posted October 3, 2006 I'm hoping he got banned for impersonating a comicbook movie buff. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Reuben Kinkaid Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 I really can't see Heath Ledger playing the Joker. I think it's the make-up... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest R@ndomH3ro Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 LOTS of make up Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Theo Huxtable. Posted October 3, 2006 Share Posted October 3, 2006 the only problem with batman begins is that about 3/4 of the movie was about how batman originated and got his start and 1/4 was actual batman fighting and being in action. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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