Tag: batman

  • June 23 1989: Batmania was born

    June 23 1989: Batmania was born

    If you look back in the history books, June 23, 1989 wasn’t particularly Earth-shattering. Politically, the world didn’t tilt off its axis. No massive global shift. No historic peace deal. No grand disaster. But… maybe there was something. Something quieter. Something louder. Something bigger than anyone could’ve realized in the moment.

    Batman was released in theaters.

    This post is a bit self-serving, I’ll admit. It’s nostalgic and maybe even overly sentimental. But I hope some of you reading this remember it too. And if you do—if you lived through that summer—I’d love to hear what it meant to you.

    Because for me that summer was magic.

    Let me start with a little personal backstory. I was 8 years old when my mom’s friend Janet brought me a few packs of Topps trading cards.

    You remember the kind—with the cardboard-flavored gum that could break your teeth. But inside these packs were strange characters. A white-faced, clown-like man. A figure with giant horns and black armor. I didn’t know what I was looking at. (PS I still have all of the full sets of them today)

    I had been raised on He-Man and the Masters of the Universe. Superheroes weren’t quite in my bloodstream yet but those cards sparked something. And eventually, I saw the name.

    BATMAN.

    Now remember, this was before social media. Before YouTube trailers. Before spoilers and breakdowns and frame-by-frame analysis videos. We had to wait until we saw the trailer on TV. And when we finally did? We were hooked enough to know we needed to be in that movie theater.

    There was something electric about the anticipation. The air-conditioned mall theater. The smell of popcorn and the stickiness of the floor under your sneakers. The massive drinks from the concession stand. That hush when the lights dimmed. And then it began…

    BATMAN took over the nation. More so here than other countries since places like Great Britain, as documented in this August 1989 article, didn’t let anyone under 11 see the movie due to the ‘extreme violence,’ even with a parent accompanying them:


    I honestly can’t tell you how many times I saw Batman that summer. Twice? Three times? More? I’ve probably watched it over a 200 times since. And when I got the VHS that Christmas, I wore it out by the time the following summer rolled around. The video game was also heavily used.. I blew on that Nintendo cartridge with power and prowess..

    But Batman wasn’t just a movie—it was a movement.

    There was Batman everything. T-shirts. Toys. Posters. Ads. Happy Meals. Prince’s album. Commercials. Crossovers. Batman on cereal boxes. Batman on cups. Batman in every corner of pop culture. Halloween that year? A sea of purple and painted Joker faces. Every kid was trying to out-Joker the other.

    It changed movies and the way that movies portrayed superheroes.

    Tim Burton’s Batman introduced an entire generation to a version of Gotham that was dark, gritty, and real. That grimy city looked like 1980s New York. The mayor even felt like a caricature of Ed Koch. There were layers—politics, corruption, empathy for villains. And a hero who operated in the shadows because the system couldn’t be trusted.

    It was a massive departure from the 1960s Batman TV show, which at that time was mostly remembered for its camp and color. Cesar Romero’s mustache under white clown makeup and shark repellent in the utility belt. Burton’s Batman brought the character home to his darker origins.

    Funny enough, the success of the movie brought renewed interest in that old show, and the Family Channel began airing reruns. So, for a kid like me, 1989 didn’t just give me the new Batman—it introduced me to all the past ones too. Campy, creepy, heroic, and weird—it was all part of the package.

    And maybe no movie since then has captured that same feeling.

    There was one little issue, Adam West, the campy Batdude, told the Associated Press in the summer of 1989 that Tim Burton’s version was “too violent” …Of course that was before he even saw the film:


    We talk about Jaws reshaping the movie industry—and that’s true. But Batman did too. It redefined superhero films and gave comics a new life. Michael Keaton and Jack Nicholson, to this day, are described as their characters from the film.

    And here we are, in 2025, still talking about it. Fans are still dissecting every new Batman movie and debating if Robert Pattinson can pull it off again. (We’ll skip over the Ben Affleck years for everyone’s sanity.)

    If you were between 5 and 15 in the summer of 1989, you know exactly what I’m talking about. You remember that feeling and rush of excitement. It was pretty special.. And if you close your eyes and think about that summer, maybe you can feel a little of it still buzzing in the air.

    So here’s to Batman. June 23, 1989. A day that didn’t change the world—but it definitely changed mine.

    And maybe yours too.

  • THE BATMAN 2 waits

    THE BATMAN 2 waits

    News broke today that The Batman Part 2 has officially been delayed, with its release date now set for October 1, 2027. Fans of the franchise have expressed disappointment at the lengthy gap between the first installment and its sequel, which will span over five years.

    The delay has sparked speculation about the reasons behind it. Some theories point to scheduling conflicts or creative adjustments, while others suggest production challenges. Regardless, the extended wait will undoubtedly be felt by audiences eagerly anticipating Robert Pattinson’s return as the Dark Knight.

    For now, fans will have to exercise patience, as a new Batman won’t be gracing the big screen for at least two more years.

    Not sure If Batman has patience in the utility belt, but if so, hopefully, he will let fans borrow that.

    James Gunn on The Batman 2 delay: “The only reason for the delay is there isn’t a full script… Matt is committed to making the best film he possibly can, and no one can accurately guess exactly how long a script will take to write.”

  • Box office rampage: Barbie beats Batman!

    Box office rampage: Barbie beats Batman!

    On Tuesday, the box office sensation notched another major milestone when passing up Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight to become the biggest Warner Bros. movie ever in North America, not adjusted for inflation.

    Barbie’s Tuesday box was $6.1 million, for a domestic total of $537.4 million. In 2008, The Dark Knight topped out at $536 million.

    Inspired by Mattel’s famous doll, Barbie jumped the $1.2 billion mark at the worldwide box office on Tuesday, where it is the second-biggest Warners’ release in history behind the final Harry Potter film, which grossed $1.34 billion globally, not adjusted for inflation. ..

    Developing..

  • Some more news on the Batgirl cancellation

    Some more news on the Batgirl cancellation

    Variety reports that Warner Bros. Pictures Group chiefs Michael De Luca and Pam Abdy are hoping to mend fences with the film’s star Leslie Grace (“In the Heights”).

    As a result, they are reportedly “entertaining the possibility of having her continue to play Batgirl in a future DC film (or, at least, star in another Warner Bros. production).”

    The news comes in a new DC article in the trade, which next goes on to say “Joker: Folie à Deux” is the only in the works DC film at Warners to officially have a green light at present. It will also boast a budget of $150 million, well over double that of its predecessor. 

    Partly it’s the cost of the film’s complicated musical sequences, mostly its pay jumps with Joaquin Phoenix and director Todd Phillips both reportedly landing $20 million paydays each while Lady Gaga is getting $10 million.

    Perhaps the worrying part is what a Joker musical movie looks like.

    The nagging annoyance of this Batgirl cancellation is that we don’t get to see the cameo from Michael Keaton as Batman..

  • Another BAT blast from the past

    Another BAT blast from the past

    We have been having some fun as of late finding some old gems related to BATMAN .. as THE Batman romps the box office in 2022..

    This one comes from tabloids in 1994 when Michael Keaton hung up his bat tights..

    Friends lamented it was because all the villains got the best lines.
    The story reported that Val Kilmer was coming next..
    And we all know how perfectly awful that went..

  • The movie that never happened! ‘Batman Returns’ Writer Talks About the Unmade ‘Catwoman’ Spinoff Movie Starring Michelle Pfeiffer in Bloody Disgusting exclusive interview

    The movie that never happened! ‘Batman Returns’ Writer Talks About the Unmade ‘Catwoman’ Spinoff Movie Starring Michelle Pfeiffer in Bloody Disgusting exclusive interview

    A Catwoman movie with Michelle Pfeiffer would have been pretty amazing.. as we close in on the 30th anniversary of Batman Returns, Bloody Disgusting talked to Daniel Waters, the screenwriter of Heathers and Batman Returns

    image

    Well, maybe not everyone, as Waters admits a moment later. “I remember getting a hard time from comic book fans. ‘But you don’t understand, she’s a cat-burglar.’ Like, I don’t care. I made my break early that ‘This is not gonna be your daddy’s Catwoman. This is not gonna be the comics’ Catwoman.’ Tim Burton and I, we played in the field long before the internet, long before comic book tribunals told you what a comic book movie had to be. [laughs] I served at the pleasure of Tim Burton. We were making a Tim Burton fairytale movie. Oh, that happened to have Batman and Catwoman and the Penguin in it. So we had no rules.”

    Nevertheless, the box office and fan reaction saw to it that the duo would not be at the helm of the next Batman film. “I think it’s like a divorce,” Waters says. “They divorced Tim Burton and gave him Catwoman in the settlement. They didn’t want us near the Batman franchise. ‘Get away from the Batman, get away.’ But they said, ‘A Catwoman movie? Everyone loved Catwoman! Everyone loved what you did with Catwoman. Michelle Pfeiffer’s game, so go off and make a Catwoman movie. If something happens out of that, great. If it doesn’t, it doesn’t.’

    “Which, to me, seemed like a lot of fun. I mean, I think the project was a little doomed from the start, because I think Tim Burton and I had different visions of what a Catwoman movie should be. And I don’t know if he was really game for the whole enterprise to begin with, but Dan Waters [was like], ‘Oh my God, I get to make a Batman movie without Batman! This is a dream come true.’

    x x x

    In the mean time, here is a fun nostalgia view of what at least one child thought of BATMAN RETURNS in 1992, stating it was very violent, and being shellshocked by Catwoman playing TIC TAC TOE on a man’s face..

    I guess he would have gone to see the spinoff..

  • Bat mania in 1966

    Bat mania in 1966

    This is the cover of LIFE magazine on March 11, 1966

    Only 35 cents for the issue..

    We did find it on eBay right now for $30

  • WHO’S THAT JOKER?

    WHO’S THAT JOKER?

    As we gear up for the 3 hour slightly horrific THE BATMAN movie coming out in just a few weeks, we were sent this image by someone who also is a Batman fan: It is a series of images of the JOKER from the 1940s original to the modern day 2021..

    We are hardpressed to say that any JOKER since 2003 has been as cool as ALL of the Jokers prior to that time frame.. Especially amazing, of course, is the Mark Hammil voiced Joker from the 1993 animated show..

    But the BEST of all, in our opinion, is that lifeless original 1940 clown prince of crime.. haphazardly glazed over eyes.. vacant smile.. Lifeless corpse like face.

    THE BATMAN will feature the Riddler in a true crime-esque script.. That should be cool.

    But that JOKER just remains the constant perfect villain in all of comic history.

  • 3 hour tour BATMAN film ‘almost a horror’

    3 hour tour BATMAN film ‘almost a horror’

    Robert Pattison’s THE BATMAN’s run time is just shy of 3 hours–DC going full on Marvel in its onslaught for the film..

    Meanwhile, director Matt Reeves defined it as “almost a horror movie.”

    MORE.. the description seems to underline the movie’s version of the Riddler. The role was apparently inspired by the real Zodiac Killer.

    In an interview for MovieMaker Magazine, Reeves discussed the tone of his take on the Dark Knight, revealing how he wanted to explore the detective side of Batman.

    “This idea of a place that is corrupt, and you try to swim against the tide in order to fight against it and make a difference, is quintessential Batman. And at the center of those noir stories is almost always the detective, right? And that’s why he is the world’s greatest detective. And so this story is, in addition to being almost a horror movie, and a thriller, and an action movie, at its core, it’s also very much a detective story.”

    And more..

    “The premise of the movie is that the Riddler is kind of molded in an almost Zodiac Killer sort of mode, and is killing very prominent figures in Gotham, and they are the pillars of society. These are supposedly legitimate figures. It begins with the mayor, and then it escalates from there. And in the wake of the murders, he reveals the ways in which these people were not everything they said they were, and you start to realize there’s some kind of association. And so just like Woodward and Bernstein, you’ve got Gordon and Batman trying to follow the clues to try and make sense of this thing in a classic kind-of-detective story way.”

  • The Batman stays safe at PG-13

    The Batman stays safe at PG-13

    Per FilmRatings.com, The Batman has earned a PG-13 rating for “strong violent and disturbing content, drug content, strong language, and some suggestive material.”

    Warner Bros. wanted the $100 million film to be seen by as large of an audience as possible so an R-rating was out of the question.

    Some fans were hoping for an ultra dark R rating… instead the studio stayed safe for teenage crowds ..