Keep reading to check out our favorites. For an entire generation, 1989’s Batman is the film that started it all. Tim Burton’s fully-realized live-action take on the character helped pull ...
Instead, it was just another perfect part of the campy wonder that was Adam West’s Batman, a campiness that was only ramped up even more for the TV show’s film, which features rubber sharks ...
What it's about: Bruce Wayne struggles with his own identity while Two-Face and The Riddler attempt to discover Batman's true identity. What it's about: The Caped Crusaders try to protect Gotham ...
Batman is no stranger to the digital realm. 1990’s Batman: Digital Justice was one of the world’s first computer-generated ...
In the best possible way, the narrative and worldbuilding of Batman is relatively simple. By the time we reach the end of the film, we’re comfortable enough with this take on Gotham City that ...
Please verify your email address. Your browser does not support the video tag. Once upon a time, DC's Batman seemed to get a new game every other year. The Dark ...
Close-up of American actor Michael Keaton (in costume as the titular character) in the film 'Batman' ... [+] (directed by Tim Burton), 1989. (Photo by Murray Close/Moviepix/Getty Images ...
not from the Golden Age Batman era. You look at the fashions in Gotham City as well, there’s a Gotham City architecture that does not look like 1989 does anywhere else. People are wearing fedora ...
The Batman was a welcome reset for DC’s flagship superhero. After Ben Affleck’s turn never truly established itself in Zack Snyder’s divisive spectacles, this younger refresh from director ...