"This video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc."
holy batcopyright! we've been defeated again!
Yes, but none of them that I've ever visited actually look like the poster. Sure, the streets are convoluted, but are there any densely spaced, skyscraper megalopolises? I mean, even Tokyo doesn't look like this (and a more confusing place, I've never seen.)Napoleon wrote:You don't need imagine anymore! Come to Europe where every Town and City has been cobbled together over the course of a few centuries.
Unfortunately Tim Burton set the bar too high with his vision of Gotham city..Very cartoonish and unrealistic but that was the whole point after all..Jean-Luc Garbo wrote:I don't know about Boston or Europe (great joke btw), but it looks like LA to me. I miss the Gotham of the animated series.
Probably not, but count me among those who think Nolan's contribution is far greater than Burton's.LionelHutz wrote:Unfortunately Tim Burton set the bar too high with his vision of Gotham city..Very cartoonish and unrealistic but that was the whole point after all..Jean-Luc Garbo wrote:I don't know about Boston or Europe (great joke btw), but it looks like LA to me. I miss the Gotham of the animated series.
Am I the only one not excited about this film ?
Fair enough,I know it's a cliche but Burton's film really was all "style over substance".jbeall wrote:Probably not, but count me among those who think Nolan's contribution is far greater than Burton's.LionelHutz wrote:Am I the only one not excited about this film ?
I'm curious, but I wouldn't say very excited. I understand that Burton had the freedom to really push the design of his film, but does Nolan really have to just embrace the banal as a counterpoint? My god, the new foreign poster is Batman standing in what looks like an office in a building. Why don't we just have him sitting in a swivel chair while on a concerned conference call with the Joker for the next one?LionelHutz wrote:Am I the only one not excited about this film ?
I'm just having fun when it's my turn to take a random shot at you.Antoine Doinel wrote:I anxiously await your dissertion on all that is wrong with the trailer.
I see your point..Unfortunately I can't help but find the appearance of larger than life heroes and villains absurd in such a realistic context.Antoine Doinel wrote: For me, I'm glad Nolan is playing it completely straight in terms of Gotham, treating it as a real, actual, living and breathing city rather than Burton's nearly fairy tale take (which certainly worked within its context). However, I think Nolan's vision makes the appearance of these larger than life heroes and villains that much more absurd and menacing. In Burton's world, someone like the Joker practically fits in, where in Nolan's vision his appearance is all the more discomforting because it doesn't seem possible a person like that could be a product of that environment.
I think he tries too hard most of the time. I'm sorry, but it's friggin' ridiculous that (referencing IMAX footage here)LionelHutz wrote:Begins take itself far too seriously and while Nolan's choice to make everything rationale (I could see they tried a bit too hard with the batmobile though)