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Post Posted: June 15th 2004 8:24 pm
 
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BATMAN BEGINS TRAILER

http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/

http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/images/batimage2.jpg
http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/images/batimage1.jpg
http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/img/5BAS0030.jpg

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Lucious Fox
http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/img/01.jpg

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Jim Gordon
http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/img/02.jpg

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Alfred
http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/img/03.jpg

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Jedi Master Henri Ducard
http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/img/04.jpg


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Batman Begins article

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images courtesy of:
Superherohype.com
BatmanBegins.com


Post Posted: December 14th 2004 5:25 pm
 
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Teaser Poster: http://batmanbegins.warnerbros.com/images/onesheet.jpg

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Post Posted: December 14th 2004 6:14 pm
 

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Hey i just read the script that was leaked a while back, do a search for 'Batman Begins Script Leaked' if you dont believe i had DLed it like months ago and just now read it, and HOLY CRAP is it good. I think its gonna be the best one yet, though dont quote me on that cause anything can happen to the movie even if the script is great so...


Post Posted: December 15th 2004 10:20 pm
 
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I read a little of the script that he is talking about, and from what little I read it sounds very promising. At the worst, it will be better than B&R. I think Bale got some tips on voicing Batman from Kevin Conroy.


Post Posted: December 16th 2004 9:57 pm
 
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Liam seems to be a good choice for the film. I hope his strong screen presence doesn’t overshadow Bale's performance.

Is there another trailer planned or is this the final one? I want to see more.


several new photos: Batman Photos


Post Posted: January 21st 2005 2:27 pm
 
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Liam Neeson is really Ra's al Ghul. YOU SUMMER ROONED.


Post Posted: January 21st 2005 10:44 pm
 
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Yellow Bat Does Look Cool


Post Posted: January 27th 2005 7:22 am
 
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Scarecrow toy picture from Superherohype.com most likely how he'll look in the movie.


Post Posted: February 6th 2005 8:38 pm
 
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TV Spot from the superbowl is up:

super_tvspot_a.mov


Post Posted: February 6th 2005 10:07 pm
 
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breasts MAN breasts :heavymetal:

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Post Posted: February 6th 2005 10:35 pm
 

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i still say thats the ugliest looking car regardless of the colour it comes in.


Post Posted: February 7th 2005 11:42 pm
 
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looks to validate the leaked script as well. scarecrow lighting batman on fire, train wreck at the end, camoflaged batmobile. should be a really great movie and a great re-start to a franchise! up next, the JOKER!


Post Posted: February 12th 2005 7:57 pm
 

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Definately validates the leaked scripts, made me cream my shorts. Holy Fuck is that a good trailer and only so because it implys a good movie. Fucking SWEET!


Post Posted: March 20th 2005 3:15 am
 
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Sirius Black?


Post Posted: March 25th 2005 1:04 pm
 
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i remember seein True Romance in teh Bronx with a bunch of my other black and hispanic friends.. and we were like "damn who is that new mulatto mutha&^%$ hes a good actor man!" We were all surprised that there was a new yellow skinned actor we didnt know about who wasnt bad at all.. then maybe th third time i watched it i realised it was a white guy .. ive loved gary oldman ever since..

if you want to see him do some great acting in a non villain role.. then go waatch "Romeo is Bleeding" which also has Lena Olin and Juliette Lewis.. awesome movie (with Annabella Sciorra as well)


Post Posted: March 27th 2005 10:39 am
 
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I never knew he played Mason Verger

Interesting :heavymetal:


Post Posted: March 30th 2005 11:58 pm
 
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I cannot wait for this movie to come out. I know an actor that was in it, however he didnt get too much information. I worked on a movie set with Mark Boone Junior, You all might know him as the hotel owner in Memento. He got a part in the movie through Chris Nolan and their work on memento. All that he told me was that he played a character named Flask and its a small role but important to the movie... anyone have any idea on this?

anyways cant wait to see it, I know this will revive the batman movie franchise that was murdered by batman and Robin lol


Post Posted: April 14th 2005 4:26 pm
 
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If that is Katie Holmes in Batman's arms that is poster fucking awesome.

When I was ROTS toy hunting - the 12in Batman and the Batmobile looked pretty fucking cool.

The movie itself however ....


Post Posted: May 10th 2005 4:16 am
 
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from comingsoon.net

Quote:
Writer David Goyer talks about possible sequels and says (spoilers ahead), "The next one would have Batman enlisting the aid of Gordon and Dent in bringing down the Joker... but not killing him, which is a mistake they made in the first one." The article then says that "In the third, the Joker would go on trial, scarring Dent in the process."


This sounds cool, although i'm a bit confused, is this all take place before batman, its what i figured, but im not entirely sure


Post Posted: May 10th 2005 5:11 am
 
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I believe the new Batman Begins and the following sequels is a fresh start of the Batman movie franchise, something that I think was very much needed. The Burton / Schumacher movies will have no continuity effect on these new films.

also, along with the quote from the above post, some new pictures have been released. - darkhorizons.com


Post Posted: May 30th 2005 9:27 pm
 
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BearaceDougie wrote:
from comingsoon.net

This sounds cool, although i'm a bit confused, is this all take place before batman, its what i figured, but im not entirely sure


Quote:
Writer David Goyer talks about possible sequels and says (spoilers ahead), "The next one would have Batman enlisting the aid of Gordon and Dent in bringing down the Joker... but not killing him, which is a mistake they made in the first one." The article then says that "In the third, the Joker would go on trial, scarring Dent in the process."



Can someone PLEASE explain to me why Harvey Dent is black (Billy Dee Williams) in the original batman and white (Tommy Lee Jones) in Batman 3?


Post Posted: May 30th 2005 10:40 pm
 
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They wanted to get a "better-known" actor/actor popular at the time.


Post Posted: June 8th 2005 5:03 pm
 
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Different than before, thats good.

How was the story? Does it need multiple viewings?


Post Posted: June 14th 2005 8:30 am
 

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Ebert's Review is up. Four out of four stars. Looks like we might finally get a good Batman.


Ebert's Review

[spoil]
[align=left]"Batman Begins" at last penetrates to the dark and troubled depths of the Batman legend, creating a superhero who, if not plausible, is at least persuasive as a man driven to dress like a bat and become a vigilante. The movie doesn't simply supply Batman's beginnings in the tradition of a comic book origin story, but explores the tortured path that led Bruce Wayne from a parentless childhood to a friendless adult existence. The movie is not realistic, because how could it be, but it acts as if it is.

Opening in a prison camp in an unnamed nation, "Batman Begins" shows Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) enduring brutal treatment as a prisoner, as part of his research into the nature of evil. He is rescued by the mysterious Henri Ducard (Liam Neeson), who appoints himself Wayne's mentor, teaches him sword-fighting and mind control, and tries to enlist him in his amoral League of Shadows ("We burned London to the ground").

When Wayne refuses to kill someone as a membership requirement, Ducard becomes his enemy; the reclusive millionaire returns to Gotham City determined to fight evil, without realizing quite how much trouble he is in.

The story of why he identifies with bats (childhood trauma) and hates evildoers (he saw his parents killed by a mugger) has been referred to many times in the various incarnations of the Batman legend, including four previous films. This time, it is given weight and depth. Wayne discovers in Gotham that the family Wayne Corp. is run by a venal corporate monster (Rutger Hauer), but that in its depths labors the almost forgotten scientific genius Lucius Fox (Morgan Freeman), who understands Wayne wants to fight crime and offers him the weaponry.

Lucius happens to have on hand a prototype Batmobile, which unlike the streamlined models in the earlier movies, is a big, unlovely juggernaut that looks like a Humvee's wet dream. He also devises a bat-cape with surprising properties.

These preparations, Gotham crime details and the counsel of the faithful servant Alfred (Michael Caine) delay the actual appearance of Batman until the second act of the movie. We don't mind. Unlike the earlier films, which delighted in extravagant special-effects action, "Batman Begins" is shrouded in shadow; instead of high-detail, sharp-edged special effects, we get obscure developments in fog and smoke, reinforced by a superb sound-effects design. And Wayne himself is a slow learner, clumsy at times, taking foolish chances, inventing Batman as he goes along.

This is at last the Batman movie I've been waiting for. The character resonates more deeply with me than the other comic superheroes, perhaps because when I discovered him as a child, he seemed darker and more grown-up than the cheerful Superman. He has secrets. As Alfred muses: "Strange injuries and a nonexistent social life. These things beg the question, what does Bruce Wayne do with his time?"

What he does is create a high profile as a millionaire playboy who gets drunk and causes scenes. This disappoints Rachel Dawes (Katie Holmes), his friend since childhood, who is now an assistant D.A. She and Lt. James Gordon (Gary Oldman), apparently Gotham City's only honest cop, are faced with a local crime syndicate led by Carmine Falcone (Tom Wilkinson). But Falcone's gang is child's play, compared to the deep scheme being hatched by the corrupt psychiatrist Dr. Jonathan Crane (Cillian Murphy), who, in the tradition of Victorian alienists, likes to declare his enemies insane and lock them up.

Crane's secret identity as the Scarecrow fits into a scheme to lace the Gotham water supply with a psychedelic drug. Then a superweapon will be used to vaporize the water, citizens will inhale the drug, and it will drive them crazy, for reasons which the Scarecrow and his confederates explain with more detail than clarity. Meanwhile, flashbacks establish the character's deepest traumas, including his special relationship with bats and his guilt because he thinks he is responsible for his parents' mugging.

I admire, among other things, the way the movie doesn't have the gloss of the earlier films. The Batman costume is an early design. The Bat Cave is an actual cave beneath Wayne Manor. The Batmobile enters and leaves it by leaping across a chasm and through a waterfall. The Bat Signal is crude and out of focus.

The movie was shot on location in Chicago, making good use of the murky depths of lower Wacker Drive and the Board of Trade building (now the Wayne Corp.). Special effects add a spectacular monorail down La Salle Street, which derails in the best scene along those lines since "The Fugitive."

Bale is just right for this emerging version of Batman. It's strange to see him muscular and toned, after his cadaverous appearance in "The Machinist," but he suggests an inward quality that suits the character. Rachel is at first fooled by his facade of playboy irresponsibility, but Lt. Gordon figures out fairly quickly what Batman is doing, and why. Instead of one villain as the headliner, "Batman Begins" has a whole population, including Falcone, the Scarecrow, the Asian League of Shadows leader Ra's Al Ghul (Ken Watanabe) and a surprise bonus pick.

The movie has been directed by Christopher Nolan, still only 35, whose "Memento" (2000) took Sundance by storm and was followed by "Insomnia" (2002), a police procedural with Al Pacino. What Warner Bros. saw in those pictures that inspired them to think of Nolan is hard to say, but the studio guessed correctly, and after an eight-year hiatus, the Batman franchise has finally found its way.

I said this is the Batman movie I've been waiting for; more correctly, this is the movie I did not realize I was waiting for, because I didn't realize that more emphasis on story and character and less emphasis on high-tech action was just what was needed. The movie works dramatically in addition to being an entertainment. There's something to it. [/spoil]

I'm excited.


Post Posted: June 15th 2005 4:01 am
 
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I'll go see it Thursday Night (tomorrow night) I'm still curious on what Scarecrow looks like, i've yet to see a picture yet


Post Posted: June 15th 2005 4:20 pm
 

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Instead of going to one of last night's midnight shows, I caught this at 9:30 this morning, with only about 25 people in the theater. Wish I'd done that for ROTS...but there's always tomorrow.

About half an hour in, I was liking it enough that I wanted to pop the Tim Burton version in when I got home. About an hour and a half in, I was liking it so much more that I really don't care if I ever see that Tim Burton piece of shit again.

That's probably overstating it (but only a little). For all the talk way back when about how the Burton version was influenced by Frank Miller's work in the comics of the time, the truth is that Burton was just giving us a "serious" take on Bob Kane's original work, in which Batman's origins didn't really have all that much bearing on the character. And while it seemed a departure for Burton, who then was known only for Pee-Wee and Beetlejuice, with hindsight it's clear that his movie was as full of his trademarks and crutches as any of his films have been since.

Batman Begins is a different story (literally and figuratively). This thing has visuals taken directly from the Miller/Mazzuchelli Year One comics, along with a depiction of Jim Gordon (though I can't remember if he was ever called that once in the movie) that's miles beyond Pat Hingle's joke character in the Burton/Schumacher series. As a nod to the first "serious" Batman comics of the modern era, written by Denny O'Neil, we get Ra's Al Ghul as the villain -- although whether you can call him that might depend on what side of the political fence you're standing. Unless you believe that art is created in a vacuum (and I don't), it's hard not to see a critique of current American behavior in the movie's constant "justice vs. vengeance" refrain; it's not overt, but with Liam Neeson playing a character who claims to be devoted to wiping out decay and corruption through any means necessary, it's definitely there.

Performances are excellent throughout, and hopefully most, if not all, of this cast will be retained for the sequels. The real star player here, though, is definitely Christopher Nolan. I've seen enough movies built around David Goyer screenplays (Blade: Trinity being his most recent embarassment) to know that Nolan must have wielded a pretty heavy hand in the script. If Warner Bros can't find a way to keep him around, I have no doubt they'll be relaunching this franchise again in another 16 years.

And last but not least, the only prominent nipples in this one are Katie Holmes's. Go see it.


Post Posted: June 16th 2005 8:24 am
 
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damn I miss Clooney's nipples already.

I'm gonna try and catch this on Tuesday night.

The dumb bitch critic I read in todays paper kept babbling on how good this "prequel" movie was and that Lucas could really learn something from it.


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