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#37 | |
Knowhutimean, Vern?
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Andy
Location: In a little town somewhere in the USA
Posts: 10,237
Trading: (4)
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I agree with you that I like Nolan's version of the darker, humorless Batman. However I disagree that Keaton, Kilmer, Clooney, or even Adam West did not capture Batman's true essence. Nolan's films capture Batman's essence that is in the comic books from now all the way back to about 1989(ish). Bob Kane originally created Batman to be a dark character that was somewhat gray (neither fully good or bad) but was a hero nonetheless. Frank Miller revived this with The Dark Knight Returns and Batman: Year one, and Batman again became a dark figure from then on. However, there have been numerous incarnations of the Batman throughout the years. I think Adam West captured Batman's essence very well during his time. He was portraying the Dick Sprang and others version of Batman from the 40s and 50s, which was very cartoonish. Then in the 70s and 80s, Batman was a whole different character (Jim Aparo, Neal Adams, Dennis O'Neal versions). He wasn't cartoonish during this era, yet he wasn't a completely dark character either. Although Batman and Robin was probably the dumbest Batman movie of all time, I thought Clooney and Shumacher did an awesome job of melding the dark Batman with the cartoonish Batman. Something unique. Needless to say, I think the Christopher Nolan films have been the best portrayal of Batman so far, but Batman has been re-vamped so many times that there is no one true Batman character (even if I do like the modern version of Batman the most).
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