“Have you ever danced
with the devil in the pale moonlight?”
This month marks the 25th anniversary of Tim
Burton’s BATMAN.
Prior to 1989, people who lived outside of a comic book shop
had very little exposure to the superhero known as the Dark Knight; a troubled,
eccentric millionaire who dressed up as a bat every night and fought crime on
his own. Most of the world’s exposure to the character had been the successful
1960’s TV show which was high on color, camp, and humor while aiming towards
the kiddies. Tim Burton’s BATMAN changed all that. Drawing inspiration from the
comic runs by Alan Moore and Frank Miller, Burton and his screenwriters went
for a dark and gothic tone, while making the focus of the film two troubled
individuals who served as an antithesis for each other; Batman and The Joker.
The early goings were not without controversy. The hiring of
Tim Burton as director drew laughs from the cinema world, and the casting of
Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne/Batman drew even more. After all, Burton was
known for his quirky and colorful style from his prior works such as PEE-WEE’S
BIG ADVENTURE (1985) and BEETLEJUICE (1988). In fact, Burton’s BATMAN would not
receive the green light to proceed until after the financial success of BEETLEJUICE…which
starred Michael Keaton. Keaton at the time had a reputation as a comedic actor
from his work in MR. MOM (1983) and NIGHT SHIFT (1982). Keaton would win the
role over Mel Gibson, Kevin Costner, Charlie Sheen, Pierce Brosnan, Tom
Selleck, and Bill Murray. After the announcement, 50,000 protest letters were
sent to the Warner Bros. offices.
But by the time the Bat Signal went up, it would be Keaton
and Burton who would be laughing last. BATMAN would be the second-highest
grossing film that year, second only to the third INDIANA JONES film. It was
the first film to earn $100 million in its first ten days of release. The
success didn’t just belong to Burton and Keaton. Jack Nicholson turned in a
marvelous, if not campy performance as The Joker, and the supporting cast which
included Kim Basinger, Robert Wuhl, Billy Dee Williams, Michael Gough, and Jack
Palance were all in top form. Nicholson would earn a Golden Globe nomination,
and the Art Direction would win an Oscar. Danny Elfman contributed a memorable
score. BATMAN would inspire the successful animated series, and paved the way
for DC Comic’s long-running DC Animated
Universe.
*
As a teen-bat, this Blogger had never been the biggest fan
of Tim Burton’s BATMAN. Characters have little to do, the plot is paper-thin,
and the Joker’s plan to rule Gotham was ridiculous and never made sense even
then. The film has so many goddamn dance numbers it may as well be a musical,
and the one-note, one-dimensional storytelling approach would get lambasted in
a new film today. But…there is still
a lot to admire in Tim Burton’s BATMAN. The film looks and sounds great, the
cast is outstanding, and it certainly looks like it belongs in a comic book
universe. But the long-lasting legacy of BATMAN is that to the wide-world, it
put the colorful 1960’s TV version far away in the Batmobile’s rear-view mirror…and
more importantly, it put the Dark back in the Knight.
“I’m Batman!”
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