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- <text id=89TT1616>
- <title>
- June 19, 1989: The Caped Crusader Flies Again
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 19, 1989 Revolt Against Communism
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 60
- The Caped Crusader Flies Again
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Big, dark and flamboyant, the movie Batman aims to bring Gotham
- City's favorite cave dweller to majestic life
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss Reported by Elaine Dutka/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> It was 1939, and Vincent Sullivan, editor of Detective
- Comics, had a terrific idea. So what if it was someone else's?
- The year before, a muscle-bound man from Krypton had landed in
- the pages of rival Action Comics and become an instant icon of
- pop culture. Sullivan may not have owned Superman, but he could
- clone it. He called in cartoonist Bob Kane, then 18, and asked
- for a similar "super-duper" character. Kane went home, tossed
- the movies The Mark of Zorro and The Bat Whispers into an
- imaginary blender with Leonardo da Vinci's flying machine, and
- dreamed up Batman. The whole process took a few days.
- </p>
- <p> Now Batman is 50. Who cares? Well, all the fans who grew up
- with the character in comics and in the popular mid-'60s TV
- series. And the younger generation, still devouring Batman
- comics in a new, hipper format. And, next week, moviegoers
- attending the opening of Batman, with Michael Keaton as Bruce
- Wayne (alias the Caped Crusader) and Jack Nicholson as his
- nemesis the Joker. In a season when the other big-budget films
- are sequels, Batman should seem familiar yet fresh. At least
- Warner Bros., with $35 million riding on the film, hopes so.
- </p>
- <p> Batman surely has consumer anticipation -- in Hollywoodese,
- "wanna-see." Last fall Fleet Street sent out helicopters to get
- photos from the film's closed London set. In the U.S. last
- winter, fans reportedly paid $6 to get into theaters where the
- 90-sec. trailer was being shown, then left before the main
- feature. The market is already clogged with Batman products --
- including miniature Batmobiles, Batwings, sunshades, earrings,
- cloisonne pins, backpacks and boxer shorts -- as part of a huge
- merchandising campaign.
- </p>
- <p> The film behind the hullabaloo has been a decade in
- gestation, beginning in 1979 when producers Peter Guber and Jon
- Peters obtained the movie rights. What took so long? At first
- the project was greeted with tremendous skepticism. "I'd say I
- was doing a Batman film, and people would laugh," recalls
- Peters. "They saw him as a guy in tights, and unlike Superman,
- he didn't fly." Finding a suitable script proved an additional
- problem. Early drafts followed Batman from the childhood trauma
- of seeing his parents gunned down by vicious Jack Napier. "You
- had to wade through 20 years," says Sam Hamm, one of the three
- writers who worked on the film, "just to get to the first shot
- of the guy in the costume that we've all come to see." His
- solution: Bruce Wayne is already Batman, but Jack Napier is not
- yet the Joker.
- </p>
- <p> In Hamm's scenario, Batman interrupts a Napier heist and
- allows the crook to fall into a vat of toxic waste. Jack emerges
- as the Joker and leads a crime wave, concocting a formula to be
- injected into cosmetics that twists the victim's face into the
- Joker's awful leer. Soon Gotham is a city of the grinning dead,
- and only Batman can revive it, with the help of Vicki Vale (Kim
- Basinger), frontline photojournalist and all-time fabulous babe.
- </p>
- <p> Hamm's script lured director Tim Burton to the project.
- Burton, 30, had only two features to his credit: Pee-Wee's Big
- Adventure and Beetlejuice, both revealing an outlandishly
- precise design sense and an eccentric comic touch that audiences
- loved. "Warner's was a complete, total freak-out," Peters
- recalls, "scared to death shooting a $30 million film with a
- third-time director whose first two films cost about a dollar
- and a half. But they were very supportive." Burton's background
- as a Disney animator helped him with the special effects, says
- Peters. "As an artist, he storyboarded every frame."
- </p>
- <p> Burton was stirred by the challenge: "I got into the
- operatic quality of the story -- big, wild and strong. I wanted
- it psychological but flamboyant. An action comedy with a
- dramatic twist. Funny but not jokey." To make a fantasy film
- grounded in emotional reality, he would create a city that had
- never been but had to be: believable unreality. Says designer
- Anton Furst: "We imagined what New York might have become
- without a planning commission. A city run by crime, with a riot
- of architectural styles. An essay in ugliness. As Tim says, `It
- looks like hell erupted through the pavement and kept on going.'
- "
- </p>
- <p> More hell would erupt when Keaton was announced as Bruce
- Wayne. Fresh from his frenetic triumph in Beetlejuice but no
- one's idea of a superhunk, Keaton fit Peters' demands for a
- "comedian who had an insane streak -- funny, charming, with that
- all-important dark side." At first Kane was apprehensive, "but
- then Michael put on the mask and uniform, and he had that
- swagger, that air. Suddenly he was six foot four." Batmaniacs
- remained to be convinced. Fearful that Keaton and Burton might
- make a derisive parody, they inundated Warner's with petitions.
- Keaton says he was astonished that the "DC fundamentalists"
- could take the casting of Batman so seriously. "After all, it's
- only a movie. I am a little nervous, though, about the scene
- where I fantasize making love to Mary Magdalene."
- </p>
- <p> Basinger, who sees Batman as a modern Phantom of the Opera
- -- "two men in black and a woman in white who shows them the
- light" -- signed on as Vicki, replacing the injured actress Sean
- Young. As for the Joker, everyone agreed it should be Nicholson.
- At the outset, Kane had sent the studio a photo of him in The
- Shining, coloring it in with green hair and white skin. The star
- was also attracted: "Metaphysically, the Joker was dipped in
- chemicals and lost his mind -- not unlike the rest of society.
- He has had his identity melted into his brain. He flows with the
- corrosion, so to speak." The character's extravagant evil
- appealed to Nicholson: "I always try to see how far I can go,
- and I've never hit my head on top. Most actors are afraid to go
- as dark as they might, but I always say, `Let's really get
- black.' " The Los Angeles Lakers' most famous fan even liked the
- story. "Like basketball, it occurs at night."
- </p>
- <p> As in all megaprojects, the Batman people were just happy
- to have survived. "Tim is a pale guy," his friend Keaton says.
- "Put him in England and add the demands of the shoot, and he
- becomes transparent." But Burton soldiered on, and now offers
- a cautious commendation of his own work: ``Given the scale, the
- number of people involved and how quickly we did it, it still
- has a personality, which big movies often lose. It doesn't feel
- like a cardboard clone."
- </p>
- <p> That is the hope of all involved, that the character who
- began as a Superman clone will have inspired a daring new work.
- And if this summer's audiences agree, who knows? Moviegoers of
- the future may refer to this film as Batman I. </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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