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Review


BATMAN RETURNS
Rating


USA. 1992.
Director – Tim Burton, Screenplay – Daniel Waters, Story – Daniel Waters & Sam Hamm, Producers – Tim Burton & Denise Di Novi, Photography – Stefan Czapsky, Music – Danny Elfman, Visual Effects – Boss Film Studios (Supervisor – Michael Fink) & 4-Ward Productions (Supervisors – Elaine Edford & Robert Skotak), Miniature Effects – Stetson Visual Services Inc (Supervisors – Robert Spurlock & Mark Stetson), Special Effects Supervisor – Chuck Gaspar, Makeup Effects – Stan Winston, Production Design – Bo Welch. Production Company – Warner Brothers.
Cast:
Michael Keaton (Batman/Bruce Wayne), Michelle Pfeiffer (The Cat Woman/Selena Kyle), Danny DeVito (The Penguin/Oswald Cobblepot), Christopher Walken (Max Schreck), Michael Gough (Alfred), Michael Murphy (Mayor), Pat Hingle (Commissioner Gordon), Vincent Schiavelli (Organ Grinder)



Plot: As Christmas comes to Gotham City, Batman faces two new villains. Mousy secretary Selena Kyle is pushed out of a window to her death after she finds incriminating information that her boss Max Schreck is planning to defraud the city with his new power plant scheme. Surviving, she rediscovers herself in a double identity as the masked, leather-clad Cat Woman. Unsure which side she is on, Batman finds himself drawn to her. Meanwhile, Oswald Cobblepot, thrown into the sewers as a child by parents that were horrified because he was born with flippers for hands, now emerges a twisted genius known as The Penguin. There he begins a calculated campaign to play upon public sympathy toward his deformity in a bid to become the Mayor of Gotham.



After the massive runaway success of Tim Burton’s dark and beautifully Gothic Batman (1989), Burton was persuaded back to franchise to expand his vision in this sequel. Batman Returns is one of the rare occasions when a sequel succeeds in measuring up to, if not (arguably) surpassing, its predecessor.

With the new characters introduced, Tim Burton delves even deeper into the dark comic-book psychology established in the first film. Cat Woman has always been the most interestingly ambiguous of villains in the Batman canon because she was the most equivocally divided between wrongdoer and sexual attraction. (Indeed, she is the only thing approaching sexuality to ever enter into the strictly bachelor world of Batman and the decidedly suspicious relationship with Robin in the classic DC comics). The film weaves her character into an even more complex meditation upon the first film’s use of psychological masks and alter egos. The psychology may not always ring the most believable – Selena goes from a mousy secretary to an acrobat and a master whip wielder in about two days – but Daniel Waters’ script makes the Batman/Catwoman relationship into a joyously jousting battle/attraction of mutual insecurities (not to mention a goldmine of eminently quotable one-liners). The film culminates in the remarkably haunting epiphany where Batman unmasks himself to her and pleads, “We both have a split down the middle. Come with me,” to which she responds, “I’d like to come and live in the fairy-tale house on the hill, but I couldn’t live with myself.”

Michelle Pfeiffer, often a rather bland and distant actress for all her superstar status, has an absolute ball with the part. She lets all stops out in what threatens to be an amazingly broad performance, but instead delivers something that comes extraordinarily well balanced between jagged psychosis, playful kittenishness and PVC fetishism. Danny De Vito, unrecognisable behind the makeup and padding, has an equal ball with the part of The Penguin, introducing a real venomousness and obscene randiness into the part that the comic-book never had. For De Vito, usually cast as over-the-top villains with rottweiler personalities in films like Ruthless People (1986) and Other People’s Money (1991), this may well be the best thing he has done. Indeed the villains are so much the stars of the show – it takes nearly half the film to set their stories up – that the character of Batman almost gets sidelined.

With the Christmas setting, Batman Returns is almost a Dickensian fantasy – indeed, in this fantasy, people are cast into one or either extreme – the very rich or the down-and-out. The contrast between Batman and Cat Woman becomes an amusing play on class war. She comes with a working class background – the film making amusing and deliberate parallels between he smoothly changing in the Batcave and she fumbling to get into costume in her beat-up VW. Indeed, this version of Cat Woman may be the only comic book character we’ve seen in a film actually sewing their own costume, as opposed to Batman’s question about how he will repair the Batmobile, something that the film pointedly never deigns to answer.

The mood of the film is seamless. The design team creates an absolutely extraordinary fairy-tale metropolis, filled with cathedral-like sewer systems, Gothic mansions, city roofs where crowded black cross-girders stitch together over a navy blue skyline and a zoo filled with statues of black metallic crustaceans, all in a singular colouration of black metal dusted with perpetual white snow. There is another moody and magnificent score where Danny Elfman obtains great mileage out of the darkly thematic use of Christmas carols.

Disappointingly, Tim Burton departed the Batman series following this. This was the last worthwhile entry in the modern Batman series (discounting the excellent 1992-4 animated tv series) before Joel Schumacher inherited the reins with Batman Forever (1995) and the infantile Batman & Robin (1997) and turned the films into a $70 million version of the 1960s tv series. It took more than a decade for the series to recover again with Christopher Nolan’s Batman Begins (2005) and The Dark Knight (2008). For some time after this, a separate Cat Woman film had been mentioned as a project, with various names including Sean Young and Ashley Judd being touted in the role. This eventually appeared as Catwoman (2004) starring Halle Berry and, although Batman creator Bob Kane was credited, this was an entirely different character to Selena Kyle. Cat Woman’s daughter also appeared in Birds of Prey (2002), a live-action tv series featuring the women of Batman, although this only lasted for 13 episodes.

The other Batman films and tv series are:- Batman (1943) and Batman and Robin (1949), two 15-chapter serials from Columbia; the campy tv series Batman (1966-8) starring Adam West and Burt Ward, which produced one film spin-off with Batman (1966); the animated tv series The New Adventures of Batman and Robin (1977); the excellent animated series Batman (1992-4) inspired by the Tim Burton films, which spawned five movie spinoffs – Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993), Batman and Mr Freeze: SubZero (1997), The Batman Superman Movie: World’s Finest (1998), Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman (2003) and Superman/Batman: Public Enemies (2009), as well as Batman: Gotham Knight (2008), a compilation of anime Batman shorts; Batman Beyond/Batman of the Future (1999-2001), the futuristic follow-up series from the same creative team featuring an ageing Bruce Wayne and his young apprentice, which also spun off one animated film Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker (2000); the animated series The Batman (2004– ), which badly revised the basics of the series and was also spun off into a film with The Batman vs. Dracula (2005); and a further animated series Batman: The Brave and the Bold (2008– ), which placed Batman alongside other DC superheroes. Batman also makes appearances in the line-up of superheroes in various other DC-related animated series such as SuperFriends (1973-7), The All New SuperFriends Hour (1977-9) and Justice League/Justice League Unlimited (2001-5), as well as the retro-Justice League film Justice League: The New Frontier (2008) and the subsequent Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths (2010).

Last updated: Saturday, 02 January 2010



 
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