Director: Tim Burton
Cast: Michael Keaton, Jack Nicholson, Kim Basinger, Jack
Palance, Billy Dee Williams, Michael Gough
Well, as I write this review, I’m right in the middle of Summer
2016 and I’ve decided to focus my attention as a movie buff on mind blowing
Summer Blockbusters. You know, big budget, loud movies released in Summer time.
Inevitably, my mind went to Tim Burton’s Batman (1989), one of the biggest
Summer Blockbusters ever; period. Now every time I think about Tim Burton’s two
Bat films, Batman (1989) and Batman Returns (1992) I go into this mental
struggle as to which one is the better of the two. I ultimately end up using
the argument that parents use to refer to their children “I love them both for
different reasons”. A lot of kids growing up nowadays don’t realize the kind of
phenomenon that the release of Burton’s Batman (1989) meant to the world. I
mean this movie quite literally took over the world! “Bat fever” took over the
nation, the bat insignia was on everything from t-shirts to sneakers and Prince’s
monster hit “Batdance” played nonstop over the airwaves! There was video games,
comic books, costumes, anything and everything based on the movie. I mean, I
remember people getting hair cuts that resembled the bat insignia! It was
crazy, but of course, it all came as a result of Tim Burton’s fantastic movie,
which I must say still retains that sense of spectacle even by today’s
standards.
At the center of this film’s success is director Tim Burton. Having directed two back to back box office winners: Pee Wee’s Big Adventure (1985) and Beetlejuice (1986) he was chosen to direct the new Batman film; which had been under development at Warner. Two comedies like Pee Wee’s Big Adventure and Bettlejuice don’t exactly scream “dark gothic comic book film!”, but we need to remember that Burton was gothic and dark from the very beginning when he was making short films like Vincent (1982) and Frankenweenie (1984). So in many ways, he was the perfect choice for taking on the rigors of directing a film that takes place in the ultra gothic Gotham City. Actually, Burton embraced that Gothic element of the comic books better than any director before or after him. Nobody has gone as gothic as he did, which is what sets his bat films apart from all others. Yet, on hindsight, and considering what the producers wanted to achieve with this movie, I think they chose him precisely because of the comedy. You see, the producers of this here film wanted to make a Bat film that was closer in tone to the television show, so I’m thinking that when they hired Burton, they thought they’d get this guy who’d make a campy film, a la the television show. What they got instead was the soon to be master of goth.
Having Burton as a director actually saved the film from campiness hell because producers were always pushing for the campy sense of humor from the television show because they thought that’s what people remembered about Batman, they thought that this is what people would want and would expect from a Batman movie. Yet for his take on Batman, Burton went for the darkness seen in Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns, a graphic novel that has gone on to influence almost every single Batman film to date. Hell, we even see images from Miller’s seminal graphic novel in Zack Snyder’s Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016)! With his graphic novel, Miller stepped away from the campy vibe of the show and what DC had done with the character up to then to present us with a dark, aged, pissed off Batman. Burton latched on to that rather than the campiness and audiences loved it. Gotham City streets looked shadowy and dangerous, not colorful.
But producers didn’t give up on the campy television show
vibe. The finally found a director who gave them exactly what they wanted with Joel
Schumacher, who made the franchise killing Batman Forever (1995) and Batman
& Robin (1997). The death of that first run of Bat films proved that Burton
had made the right choice in stepping way from the campiness. Without Burton’s
creative force behind the films, they became exactly what the producers wanted:
silly children’s films. We have to remember producers are more interested in
marketing capabilities of a film, the deals, the toys, the cartoon shows, the
action figures, which is probably why a lot of companies where upset at Burton’s
film, they felt it was too adult to create merchandising for kids; though most
companies later gave in due to the films gargantuan success.
After the films
success, it was Bat everything! And it’s true, when we look at Burton’s Bat films,
there’s something very adult about these movies, the themes, the dialog. In
Batman, Bruce Wayne and Vicky Vale have sex, Jack Napier was screwing Grissom’s
girl, there’s tons of double entendre, more so on Batman Returns (1992) .Yes my
friends, this Batman film was a strange bird, though it seemed tailor made for
kids, Burton gave it an adult twist. Sure Batman has its origins in comic
books, which for the longest time were associated as something strictly for
children, but to everyone’s surprise Burton’s film was dark, “adult” and
sexual. What makes it a strange bird is that it didn’t lose that fun comic book
vibe either. We still had the bat mobile, the bat jet and the utility belts! Usually
films that defy their target audience end up as huge failures (The Monster
Squad for example), but Batman walked that fine line and came out winning in
the end.
Actually, many comic
book fans were enraged with this film, starting with the choice to cast Michael
Keaton as Batman. I have to admit, like most, at first I agreed. How the hell
was Beetlejuice going to play Batman? The two didn’t go together in my mind.
But then I saw the film and boom, Keaton is Batman, there was no doubt about it.
Now, most people agree that Keaton’s take is the best. I screened both of these
films (I screen movies at a local dive bar) and to my surprise, a lot of people
came to see both of them. At a certain point in the night one guy said “that’s
the real Batman!” We can’t forget Danny Elfman’s amazing music, which is just harrowing.
It honestly is a huge part of this films success. We can’t leave out the art
direction which is so gothic, so grimy! By the way, the art direction won the
film an academy award! Who would’ve thought it right? A comic book movie
winning an Oscar!