Batman Returns

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Batman Returns
Directed by Tim Burton
Produced by Tim Burton
Denise Di Novi
Benjamin Melniker
Michael Uslan
Larry J. Franco
Written by Characters:
Bill Finger (Uncredited)
Bob Kane
Screenplay:
Daniel Waters (Story/Script)
Sam Hamm (Story)
Wesley Strick (Script)
Starring Michael Keaton
Danny DeVito
Michelle Pfeiffer
Christopher Walken
Music by Danny Elfman
Cinematography Stefan Czapsky
Editing by Chris Lebenzon
Bob Badami
Distributed by Warner Brothers
Release date(s) Flag of the United States June 19, 1992
Flag of the United Kingdom July 10, 1992
Running time 126 minutes
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
Budget $80,000,000[1]
Gross revenue Domestic:
$162,831,698
Worldwide:
$266,831,698
Preceded by Batman
Followed by Batman Forever
Official website
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Batman Returns is a 1992 fantasy film based on the Batman character created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane. Tim Burton directed the film, which has Michael Keaton reprising the role of Batman, as well as Danny DeVito, Michelle Pfeiffer and Christopher Walken. The film's plot primarily concerns Bruce Wayne/Batman struggling to maintain order in Gotham City after the appearance of the villainous Penguin (DeVito) and the mysterious, equally deadly Catwoman (Pfeiffer).

Burton originally did not want to return for a second installment due to his mixed emotions from the original film. After being impressed with a script by Daniel Waters, he thought otherwise. Wesley Strick would later be brought on for an uncredited rewrite, deleting characterizations of Robin and Harvey Dent. The film was entirely shot at Warner Brothers studios in Burbank, California (the first film was shot at Pinewood Studios in England), with Danny Elfman returning to compose the film score, citing it as a stressful experience, but still overly positive. Batman Returns was both a commercial and critical success, but did spawn controversies (being seen as "too dark" for younger children). Comic book veterans would express mixed thoughts and reviews. The film would also receive nominations at the Academy Awards, MTV Movie Awards and the Razzie Awards.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Around Christmas time in Gotham City, the aristocratic Cobblepots give birth to a baby boy. Due to him being deformed, they lock him in a box, where he shows his first sign of homicidal tendencies when he kills the family cat. They drop their deformed infant baby in the sewers, abandoning him because of his ridiculed look.

Thirty-three years later, it is Christmas time again as the city is being run by Mayor Hamilton Hill, who deals with the ambitious but ruthless business tycoon, Max Shreck. Gotham comes under attack by the "Red Triangle Circus Gang" in a recent ceremony, although the heist is disrupted by the crime-fighting Batman. Shreck's timid secretary, Selina Kyle, is caught in the fray, but is soon saved by Batman, after which she steals a stun gun from one of the gang members. Shreck is kidnapped by the Red Triangles and is brought to their leader, a short, deformed man known as "The Penguin." Penguin blackmails Shreck with incriminating evidence of his more dubious activities, prompting Shreck to agree to help Penguin run for Mayor of Gotham.

Shreck arranges for the Penguin to "rescue" the mayor's infant child from his own gang members. The plan works, and Penguin becomes a hero to all except a suspicious Bruce Wayne (Batman's alter ego). After finding out his original birthname of Oswald Cobblepot, Penguin eventually wins the approval of citizens of Gotham and intends to run for Mayor. Shreck, however, is soon troubled by Selina's discovery of a dark secret behind his new power plant. Shreck tries to murder her by pushing her out of a skyscraper, but Selina miraculously survives the attempt, and is revived on the ground by a group of cats. However, the incident leaves Selina mentally unstable and she develops multiple personality syndrome. Dazed, Selina goes back to her apartment, shakily going through the motions of her old personality. However, upon hearing an answering phone advert from her old employees (the words "Exclusively at Shreck's Department Stores" are the trigger), she goes berserk. She destroys her apartment and then crafts a homemade black vinyl costume disguise, becoming a vigilante figure named "Catwoman." Carrying a whip as her weapon of defense, she detroys Shreck's department store and battles with Batman on a rooftop, losing the second of her nine lives in the process. As a more assertive Selina, she then forms a romantic relationship with Bruce Wayne (each unaware of the other's alter-ego), while as Catwoman she allies herself with Penguin in order to get back at Batman for trying to kill her.

When the subsequent plan is put into action, Batman is framed for kidnapping and murder and finds himself trapped in the Batmobile under Penguin's control. Catwoman and Penguin's alliance falls apart when she rebuffs a sexual advance from him, and Penguin tries to kill Catwoman himself. However, she once again miraculously survives the attempt, counting as her third of nine lives. The Penguin's campaign to oust the current mayor is quickly destroyed when Bruce Wayne plays selected comments he made insulting the people of Gotham while controlling the Batmobile at one of Penguin's speeches. The people of Gotham get angry, forcing Penguin to defend himself with his gun umbrella. The police chase after him, but Penguin flees into the sewers, and reveals his original plan: to kidnap and kill the firstborn sons of Gotham's most prominent families in revenge (comparable to King Herod in the Bible).

Bruce meets Selina at a ball hosted by Shreck, where she reveals to him her intentions to kill Shreck. While dancing, the two subsequently discover the other's secret identity, but before they can leave to discuss this development, Penguin storms the hall and tries to take Max's beloved son, Chip. Max successfully pleads with Penguin to take him instead. Batman attacks Penguin's Red Triangle Circus goons and puts a stop to the kidnappings. Penguin then dispatches an army of rocket-armed Penguins to bomb all of Gotham. Batman manages to jam the birds' control signals and turn them around so that they attack Penguin's base instead, apparently killing the Penguin and what is left of his gang inside.

Batman then discovers that Catwoman intends to kill Shreck inside Penguin's base. Shreck tries to bribe Batman, but Batman simply ignores him, and tries to talk Catwoman out of her planned murder. He promises they could live happily together, but Catwoman refuses to listen, and scratches him on the cheek with her claws. During this argument, Shreck draws a gun he took from a Red Triangle clown and fires it at Batman. Catwoman then starts to approach Shreck, who shoots her four times, knocking off four more lives, leaving Catwoman alive but wounded. Catwoman then exacts her revenge of Shreck by inserting the stolen stun gun into her mouth, activating the spark, and pressing her lips to Shreck's, while also ripping a cable out of Penguin's electrical generator with her free hand, sending the electricity everywhere. A huge explosion follows, and as the smoke clears away, Batman finds the charred corpse of Shreck. However, Selina/Catwoman is nowhere to be found. So preoccupied with finding her, he doesn't notice a gravely injured Penguin emerging from the water, ready to kill him. Ultimately though, he collapses from his wounds and dies, and four large Emperor Penguins emerge from the shadows and pull his body back into the water which becomes his grave.

Some time later, Bruce is driving around the city at night with his butler Alfred, when he thinks he sees Selina's shadow on a wall. Alfred stops the car and Bruce searches for Selina in vain. He does find a stray cat, however, which he takes with him and leaves. The camera then pans up to the top of the city, amidst the sky scrapers. As the Bat-Signal lights up the night sky, we see the back of a dark shadowy figure that looks exactly like the presumed-dead Catwoman.

[edit] Additional scene

A post-credits scene, omitted from most versions, shows Commissioner Gordon and Mayor Hill standing by the lit Bat-Signal, quite a while after they turned it on. Hill begins to wonder whether or not Batman has forgiven them for pursuing him for the Penguin's crimes, but just before they can turn the signal off, Batman appears before them.

[edit] Cast

From left to right: Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman, Michael Keaton as Batman and Danny DeVito as The Penguin
From left to right: Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman, Michael Keaton as Batman and Danny DeVito as The Penguin
  • Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne / Batman: Continuing his quest as Gotham City's sole protector, in his wake he meets Selina Kyle, and clashes with newly anti-heroine Catwoman. His situation becomes complicated due to the arrival of a mysterious "Penguin-like Man" spotted throughout Gotham.
  • Danny DeVito as Oswald Cobblepot / The Penguin: Abandoned at birth due to his hideous appearance by his aristocratic parents, he spends his life living in the sewers of Gotham City. He eventually rises and thickens a plot to take over Gotham as its new Mayor.
  • Michelle Pfeiffer as Selina Kyle / Catwoman: Former quiet and shy secretary for Max Shreck, she transforms into Catwoman after an attempt on her life. From then on, she becomes a romantic interest for Bruce Wayne and a deadly adversary for Batman.
  • Christopher Walken as Max Shreck: A powerful business mogul who serves as the boss of Selina Kyle and unusual ally to the Penguin.
  • Michael Gough as Alfred Pennyworth: Bruce Wayne's faithful butler.
  • Pat Hingle as Commissioner James Gordon: The police commissioner of Gotham City.
  • Michael Murphy as The Mayor: The Mayor of Gotham City, who is being interrupted by the election of Oswald Cobblepot.
  • Vincent Schiavelli as The Organ Grinder: One of Penguin's many strange assistants.
  • Anna Katarina as The Poodle Lady: One of Penguin's many strange assistants.
  • Andrew Bryniarski as Charles "Chip" Shreck: The son of Max Shreck.

Keaton was not signed for a second installment and only returned after a significant raise in his salary.[1] DeVito was the first and only choice for the Penguin, and writer Daniel Waters claimed he wrote the character with DeVito in mind.[2] According to producer Denise Di Novi, every single actress in Hollywood between the ages of 25 and 42 desperately wanted the role of Catwoman.[3] Among them included Raquel Welch, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Lena Olin, Ellen Barkin, Cher, Bridget Fonda and Susan Sarandon.[4] Annette Bening was originally cast in the role after Burton was impressed with her performance in The Grifters. She would eventually drop out during pre-production upon finding out she was pregnant with Warren Beatty's child.[1] Burton felt that Pfeiffer "was the one and only other obvious choice for the role."[5] However, Sean Young, who was originally cast as Vicki Vale in the first film before she became injured, believed the role should have gone to her. She often visited the Warner Brothers offices and studio often dressed up in a homemade costume demanding an audition. She then visited The Joan Rivers Show dressed in the outfit stating that the situation was "unfair Hollywood."[5] Pfeiffer joined the film with a signing fee of $3 million ($2 million more than Bening's original salary), and also taking a percentage of the box office gross,[1] while taking kickboxing lessons.[6]

[edit] Production

"I think I probably got a little carried away. We tried to give The Penguin a foundation and a psychological profile. I liked the fact that some people couldn't decide whether or not Catwoman was bad. She never was bad. When they were bad on the TV series they were never really bad. That's the thing, I never saw any of them as bad, and I never believe it when they say people are bad."
Tim Burton on the villains of Batman Returns[5]

Although a sequel was an obvious move, Tim Burton had not been signed up in advance and after the release of hugely successful Batman (1989), Burton publicly described a second installment as "a most dumbfounded idea."[1] On the first film, Burton quoted, "There's parts I liked, but it was a little boring at times. Often with sequels, they're like the same movie except everything gets jacked up a little. I didn't feel I could do that; I wanted to treat this like it was another Batman movie altogether."[1]

Sam Hamm, who wrote the first film, wrote a first draft that had the Penguin and Catwoman going after hidden treasure.[1] Hamm also originally had Harvey Dent becoming Two-Face in his drafts of the script. Waters claimed he "flirted with it," although it was only to be a very small subplot. Dent was deleted as Burton didn't want the film to have connections with the previous Batman film.[2] Burton briefly spoke of the situation as well, thinking of the idea to be interesting of using Williams as Two-Face for a possible third Batman installment before giving the directing reins to Joel Schumacher.[7]

Hamm's draft was considered disappointing, so Burton brought in Daniel Waters.[1] Burton was impressed with his work on Heathers, and originally brought him in for writing a sequel to Beetlejuice. A year later, however, Burton felt him to be perfect as Hamm's replacement.[2] It was at this time that Warner Brothers decided to give Burton full creative control.[1] Burton was excited with Waters' new pitch that had an evil mogul (Max Shreck, whose name is a reference to the actor of the same name, who portrayed Count Orlok in Nosferatu)[8] backing a bid for the Mayor's office by The Penguin.[1] Waters claimed that Hamm wrote a "old-fashioned, almost like a Hardy Boys action adventure". On Hamm's original characterization of Catwoman, Waters stated that "[he] went back to the comic book and the way comic books in general treat women, like a fetish[y] sexual fantasy."[2] Waters felt that he needed to see the film through her point of view. He reinvented her as a secretary, feeling that she should "start off just at the lowest point in society".[2]

The studio desperately wanted Robin to appear in the film. He was originally supposed to appear in the original film, though Burton and Hamm convinced Warner Brothers otherwise. Waters found writing the character very hard, because "Tim and I personally hate him, he's just the most worthless character in the world, especially with Tim's conception of Batman as the loner of loners."[2] Waters had visioned Robin as the leader of a street gang, though before he was written as an African American, to which he forms a "hard-edged" relationship with Batman.[2] Waters and Burton argued that there were too many characters in the script and then visioned another version of the character. He was then written as an intelligent African-American working in an autoshop garage. He was to supposedly fix the Batmobile after Penguin wrecks it. Waters quoted that the costume was to be "an old-fashioned garage mechanic uniform and it just has an 'R' on it."[2] There was also to be a scene where he drives the Batmobile in the same manner he does in Batman Forever, which Waters feels, "they [the writers of Batman Forever] ripped me off! They didn't even give me free popcorn for that!"[2] Marlon Wayans was cast in the role and was even paid with a contract of two films. He was initially cast in the role for Batman Forever but Wayans later said, "They decided they wanted somebody white," which would turn out to be Chris O'Donnell. Wayans was paid for both films without having to do any acting.[9]

Wesley Strick was solely brought in to come up with a solution with "Penguin's lack of a master plan". The writer claimed he was presented with "the usual boring ideas to do with warming the city, or freezing the city"[10] (the latter ended up in Batman & Robin). Strick pitched an alternative approach, inspired by the Moses parallels of Walter's prologue, in which the infant Oswald Cobblepot is bundled in a basket and thrown in the river where he floats helplessly until he's saved (and subsequently raised) by Gotham's sewer denizens. He came up with Penguin's "master plan" to kill the firstborn sons of Gotham City. Both the studio and Burton were impressed with the idea, though Strick claims the toy manufacturers were worried. Strick went uncredited for his work.[10] Strick also deleted the idea of Schreck turning out to be the Penguin's brother.[8]

Although Warner Brothers had, at great expense, kept Anton Furst's sets of Gotham City in Batman at Pinewood Studios, Burton felt the sequel should have a completely different production design and instead went to the studio's lot in Burbank.[11] He said, "They could have brought somebody else in for the sequel, and had the same sets, and shot in London, but I couldn't do that because I'd have lost interest. I wanted to treat it like it was another movie altogether, there's no point in doing the exact same thing again."[1] Furst, who was the production designer of the first film, was offered to once again take the opportunity, though was forced to decline due to "contractual reasons". Burton hired Bo Welch, whom he previously worked with on Beetlejuice and Edward Scissorhands. Furst committed suicide three months after filming began in September 1991.[11]

Construction began in early 1991 at two of Hollywood's largest sound-stages, Stage 16 at Warner Brothers and Stage 12 at Universal Pictures. Eight other buildings were used on the Warner Brothers lot, and when filming finished at least fifty percent of the studio's outlets were occupied by the filming of Batman Returns. Stage 16 was used primarily for "Gotham Plaza," which was based on New York's Rockefeller Centre. The set was covered with foam and polyester fabric stuffing to simulate snowdrifts. Universal's Stage 12 housed the Penguin's underground lair, an enormous tank filled with half-a-million gallons of water and a simulated ice floe island.[1] To create Penguin's bird army a combination of techniques were utilized including men in suits, computer-generated imagery, robotic creatures and real life penguins.[11]

The sets were also kept frozen to simulate the winter time period of the film and for the pleasure of the penguins at stage 12. Filming was to remain very secretive. Picture ID cards were issued to everyone on set, with a code name, "Dictel" (short, Burton insisted, for "Dictatorial"), being stamped on sensitive documents. Art department personnel were advised to keep their office curtains closed at all times and no visitors were allowed near the sets, with even Kevin Costner being refused. Everyone involved was required to sign a document guaranteeing that they would not specifically hold interviews with news sources. About midway through filming, however, a few test shots of DeVito in costume found their way into an American entertainment magazine. Warner Brothers hired a group of private investigators to track down the source, though the ploy ultimately failed.[1]

Danny Elfman was calm on writing the film score for a sequel, as he "didn't have to prove himself",[12] unlike his work for the first film, where he had to impress producer Jon Peters.[13] Elfman claims he would not have been interested if he were "to basically perform the same notes from the original film",[12] and was excited for the idea that Burton wanted to make a completely different film. Elfman compared scoring the music with a combination of, "a usual action film score, mixed with a clashing of an opera, and finally adding the element of silent film-like feel,"[12] citing the experience as his hardest work he has ever done in his music career. In addition he compared the action sequences to that of "composing a cartoon in the 1940s".[12] Despite the stress and the work level, Elfman also found it fun and exhilarating, claiming he took advantage of the opportunity to write an additional 20 minutes of music compared with Batman and composed two new themes for the Penguin and Catwoman. In total, Elfman wrote 95 minutes of music for the film, which is twice the amount of the usual guideline.[12]

See also: Face to Face (song)

[edit] Reception

Batman Returns opened in the United States on June 19, 1992 and surpassed its predecessor's record for the most successful three-day opening in history, with receipts totaling $47.7 million; it would eventually gross $266 million worldwide, $145 million less than the original. Even though the film was considered by many to be "too dark,"[14] Burton thinks otherwise, feeling that Batman was far darker than Batman Returns. To this day, he favors Batman Returns between the two.[14]

Batman Returns is currently the fourth highest grossing Batman film to date (when not adjusted for inflation) [15] and was also the third highest grossing film of 1992 (behind Aladdin and Home Alone 2: Lost in New York).[16] Based on 42 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes, Batman Returns received an average 81% overall approval rating;[17] the film received a 57% with the seven critics in Rotten Tomatoes' "Cream of the Crop."[18]

Those who supported the film were largely enthusiastic. Phillip Thomas of Empire was highly effecting stating, "Burton continues to capture the essence of the Batman legend and more importantly his audiences imagination."[19] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone supported the main themes that included the story, characters, and visual citing that "Burton uses the summer's most explosively entertaining movie to lead us back into the liberating darkness of dreams."[20] Todd McCarthy of Variety went further, feeling "Where Burton's ideas end and those of his collaborators begin is impossible to know, but result is a seamless, utterly consistent universe full of nasty notions about societal deterioration, greed and other base impulses."[21]

Batman Returns, however, was met with negative feedback as well, due to its controversial elements. Roger Ebert commented that it was "odd and sad, but not exhilarating", feeling that it "didn't spring into the free world."[22] Rita Kempley of the Washington Post stated, "like a hyperactive 11-year-old, the director [Burton] seems both uncomfortable with adult emotions and unable to focus on the overall portrait."[23] Comic book veteran Matt Wagner felt it was strong on atmosphere but felt Burton was more interested in the villains and that he was a terrible action director. He openly stated, "Batman Returns is often credited as being a better film [than Batman] but I fucking hated how it made Batman little more than just another costumed creep, little better than the villains he’s pursuing."[24]

Paul Dini was impressed with the characterization of Bruce Wayne, while other comic book enthusiasts thought otherwise. One criticism was that the script lacked any character development for Batman, and instead focused on the villains. In response to this, writer Daniel Waters claimed he originally had an excessive amount of screen time and dialogue for Michael Keaton, though claimed it was personally Keaton's idea to delete objectionable material. Having Batman killing criminals also caused some controversy among comic book fans; they argued that in the comics Batman refrains from killing, fearing he may himself become a criminal. Waters stated "you can't drop bad guys on a spider-web in front of city hall (when referring to Spider-Man)."[25]

Bruce Timm was impressed with Michelle Pfeiffer's performance[26] while Alex Ross was embarrassed to have liked Christopher Walken in a role that was created specifically for the film.[8] Critics of Tim Burton's work have constantly pointed to what they term his inability to tell a coherent story, and with Batman Returns, he was again accused of sacrificing the narrative for the sake of the visuals, or simply style over substance. In defense Burton stated, "it's just how my brain works."[14]

Batman Returns was nominated for two Academy Awards, although it won neither. It lost "Best Visual Effects" to Death Becomes Her and "Best Makeup" to Bram Stoker's Dracula.[27] Pfeiffer was nominated for "Most Desirable Female" at the MTV Movie Awards, but lost to Sharon Stone in Basic Instinct. Both Keaton and Pfeiffer were nominated for "Best Kiss" but lost out to Marisa Tomei and Christian Slater in Untamed Heart. Danny DeVito would be nominated for "Best Villain" though he ended up losing to Jennifer Jason Leigh in Single White Female.[28] DeVito was once again nominated for "Worst Supporting Actor" in the Razzie Awards before losing to Tom Selleck in Christopher Columbus: The Discovery.[29]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Jeffrey Ressner. "Three Go Mad In Gotham", Empire, August 1992. Retrieved on 2007-11-27. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Judy Sloane. "Daniel Waters on writing", Film Review Special #12, August 1995. Retrieved on 2007-11-29. 
  3. ^ (2005). Shadows Of The Bat: The Cinematic Saga Of The Dark Knight-The Dark Side Of The Night (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  4. ^ "Big-Game Hunting", Entertainment Weekly, 1991-08-09. Retrieved on 2007-11-30. 
  5. ^ a b c Mark Salisbury; Tim Burton (2000). Burton on Burton. Faber and Faber, p.103-4. ISBN 0-57120-507-0. 
  6. ^ "Flashes", Entertainment Weekly, 1992-06-12. Retrieved on 2007-09-14. 
  7. ^ (2005). Batman (1989) Audio Commentary by Director Tim Burton (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  8. ^ a b c (2005). Batman Returns Villains Profile: Max Shreck (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  9. ^ Nathan Rabin. "Wayans World", The A.V. Club, 1998-02-25. Retrieved on 2007-12-01. 
  10. ^ a b David Hughes (March 2004). Tales From Development Hell: Hollywood Film-Making the Hard Way. Titan Books, p.196. ISBN 1-84023-691-4. 
  11. ^ a b c Salisbury, Burton, p.108-110
  12. ^ a b c d e (2005). Inside the Elfman Studios: The Music of Batman Returns (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  13. ^ (2005). Nocturnal Overtures: The Music of Batman (1989) (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  14. ^ a b c Salisbury, Burton, p.113-4
  15. ^ Batman Movies. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2007-11-27.
  16. ^ 1992 DOMESTIC GROSSES. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2007-12-03.
  17. ^ Batman Returns. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2007-11-27.
  18. ^ Batman Returns: Rotten Tomatoes' Cream of the Crop. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2007-12-03.
  19. ^ "Batman Returns", Empire, 2005-10-21. Retrieved on 2007-12-06. 
  20. ^ "Batman Returns: Review", Rolling Stone, 2001-02-07. Retrieved on 2007-12-06. 
  21. ^ Todd McCarthy. Batman Returns Review. Variety. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
  22. ^ Roger Ebert. Batman Returns. RogerEbert.com. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
  23. ^ "'Batman Returns'", Washington Post, 1992-06-19. Retrieved on 2007-12-06. 
  24. ^ Bill "Jett" Ramey. "Interview: Matt Wagner", Batman-on-Film.com, 2006-09-30. Retrieved on 2007-12-06. 
  25. ^ (2005). Batman Returns Heroes Profile: Batman (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  26. ^ (2005). Batman Returns Villains Profile: Catwoman (DVD). Warner Brothers.
  27. ^ 1993 Academy Awards. IMDB. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
  28. ^ 1993 MTV Movie Awards. IMDB. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
  29. ^ 1993 Razzie Awards. IMDB. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.

[edit] External links