Briefly: Whaaaaaat.

Sony’s E3 presentation was full of surprises, and one of the biggest (and most exciting) moments of the night was the reveal of Batman: Arkham VR.

The marketing for Rocksteady’s Arkham series has been telling you that you can ‘Be The Bat’ for what feels like forever now, and now Arkham VR is about as close as any of us will ever get (lucky for you, you even get to keep your parents).

We don’t know much about the title at this point (aside from the fact that it’s coming to Playstation VR this October), but Rocksteady notes that you’ll “Experience Gotham City through the eyes of the World’s Greatest Detective in an all new Arkham mystery.

Think like Batman. Utilise his legendary gadgets in Virtual Reality to unravel a plot that threatens the lives of Batman’s closest allies.”

Yeah, we’re in.

Take a look at the trailer below, and be sure to let us know if you’ll be picking this one up!

Just in time for the Age of Ultron, Nerdist News reporter Dan Casey comes to Geekscape to talk about his brand new book “100 Things Avengers Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die”! While he’s here we talk Avengers, the Joker’s new image and continue to heap praise on Daredevil! We also talk about the troubling news out of Konami regarding Silent Hills and we give an update on DC’s big crossover event ‘Convergence’! Is it everything it’s hyped up to be?

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Last night, movie super-scooper “El Mayimbe” of Latino-Review dropped his biggest nerd nuclear bomb of the year so far, revealing in a video message on his website that Warner Brother’s Justice League movie, which last we heard was once again in limbo, is indeed anything but. He revealed that Warner Brothers has hired Christopher Nolan to produce a Justice League film, with Zack Snyder probably directing and, most likely, David Goyer writing the script. In other words, the exact same creative team behind this summer’s Man of Steel.

 

Perhaps the biggest news in all this is that Warner Brothers wants Christian Bale to resume the mantle of Batman, which means instead of JL introducing the world to a whole new Batman, as was said to be the original plan, the movie would play off the continuity of Nolan’s previous Batman movies. This is all a bit of a shocker, as Nolan has insisted these last few years that his Batman saga is a stand alone story, unrelated to any larger DC cinematic universe. In fact, he has denied involvement with any Justice League movie project in the past. And while this was all probably true when he said it, nothing can change one’s mind quite like having a Brinks truck full of millions of dollars in cash brought to your house, as Warner Brothers surely did to get him on board in some capacity, and help save Justice League from potential disaster.

 

Justice

 

The inclusion of Nolan and potentially Bale just made the budget of this movie skyrocket into the stratosphere; these guys are not going to come cheap. But Warners must realize they stand to gain so much more by including them, it is worth the price. Right now, Disney has not only Marvel and Star Wars, but two of the biggest names with geek cred attached to them in the form of Joss Whedon and JJ Abrams.

 

To have Justice League even come close to competing with them, they know they have to pull out all the stops, and that means bringing in Nolan and Bale, and throwing lots of $$$ at them to get them to play along. While geeks everywhere are likely doing a happy dance at this news, I’m here to weigh the pros and cons to a Christopher Nolan produced Justice League. While this is surely good news…that doesn’t mean there won’t be any potential downsides to it.

If these new rumors turn out to be true, then these two guys have a lot of reasons to be $miling.
If these new rumors turn out to be true, then these two guys have a lot of reasons to be $miling.

 

The Pros

 

The positives of a Christopher Nolan produced Justice League are obvious; for starters, he is easily the greatest genre filmmaker to come out of the past decade, hands down. Having a talent like Nolan overseeing  Justice League  in a “godfather” capacity means that you’ll have someone with excellent taste who knows crap when they see it, and won’t tolerate something half-assed and low quality. It doesn’t meant the movie is going to be automatically good, but it does mean it will have integrity and not just be seen by the general population as a knock-off of The Avengers (and yes, I know the Justice League came before the Avengers in the comics–the average moviegoer does not know that.) His name alone attached to this project adds a level of quality and prestige (no pun intended.)

 

Up until now, the only name creatively attached to Justice League was a writer from the television show Castle. This excited exactly no one. Warner Brothers knows they need a name with both geek cred and mainstream cred to compete with Abrams and Whedon over at Disney. And for them, those names are Nolan and Snyder. And by making the Justice League movie an extension of the multi-billion dollar Dark Knight franchise, this instantly makes the film an event for not just geeks, but for moviegoers all over the world. It is the safe choice and the smart choice.

 

christopher-nolan-talks-bane-74582-00-470-75

 

The Cons

 

Yes, believe it or not, there may be cons to a Nolan produced Justice League. My biggest, and really only, concern is that Christopher Nolan just doesn’t really like super-heroes all that much. He has stated as much in interviews in the past. Sure, in many many ways, his Dark Knight trilogy is closer to the comic book incarnations than anything yet put to film about Batman (except maybe the Bruce Timm/Paul Dini animated series from the 90s.) However, Nolan also has a serious penchant for “de-comic booking” almost every aspect of Batman’s world as to appear more “real.” For the most part, that worked like gangbusters on Batman.

 

The jury is still out on whether or not it worked for Superman, but so far, the early buzz is very, very good. But there is simply no way to de-comic book a concept like the Justice League. Aside from Batman and Superman, you have a guy with what amounts to being a magic ring, an immortal Amazon, and a guy who can run at the speed of light. Much like the Avengers, the JL is pure comic book tropes in all their multi-colored glory. I seriously hope we don’t get a ‘realistic” explanation, Inception style, for how the Flash’s power works, or how Green Lanterns ring functions, or any of that. It just isn’t needed.

 

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Hopefully, Nolan allows writer David Goyer (who I’m just going to assume is going to be writing this) to take the reins of the story here; he’s a fanboy writer who is steeped in comics lore, and even co-wrote a lengthy run on Justice Society of America with Geoff Johns in the early 2000’s. The best thing Nolan can do is stay out of the way of Goyer as he comes up with the story mechanics, because Goyer understands the dynamics of a big, cosmic super-team stuff in a way Nolan probably never will. Goyer’s weakness is his dialogue, but then that’s where Christopher Nolan’s brother Jonah usually steps in and helps out.

 

Whatever ends up happening, we don’t need a grim, realistic take on the Justice League. In my opinion, the two very best incarnations of the team are Grant Morrisson’s run on the comic from 1996-2000, and the Bruce Timm produced animated series. Both were colorful, wild, and filled with big ideas, but were not campy or cheesy. That is where their inspiration should come from. If Synder does indeed direct (which would be likely) based on his past movies he is certainly not afraid of the more comic-booky aspects of the League.

 

While not as overtly talented as Christopher Nolan, both Snyder and Goyer have the comic book sensibilities that Nolan lacks.
While not as overtly talented as Christopher Nolan, both Snyder and Goyer have the comic book sensibilities that Nolan lacks.

 

Ultimately, this is a very minor “con”–especially since Nolan won’t be directing the movie and will have less need to force his own aesthetics onto the final product. In the case of a Justice League movie, having Nolan involved will ultimately mean much more pros than cons in the end.

 

So What Can We Expect?

 

Assuming this is all true of course, we know next to nothing about what a Nolan/Snyder Justice League movie would look like, but it is likely that Warner is starting from scratch with the story and script. Which probably means no Darkseid as the villain, as he was reported to be in Will Beall’s now tossed-out script. One thing I do expect to stay is the idea of a “five members only” League, especially now with Nolan involved. Aquaman and Martian Manhunter are just a  wee bit too fanciful for Nolan’s aesthetic, and even if he isn’t directing, I’d imagine his first suggestion would be to keep the cast trimmed down and get rid of those two characters. But DC’s “Big Five” of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Flash and Green Lantern are sure to be included. They are the core of the League, and to be fair, the core of the entire DC Universe.

 

Since 1940, in one way or another, DC Comics has been publishing these five heroes continuously in some form; only Flash and Green Lantern were considered popular enough to have their own comic books alongside Supes, Bats and Wonder Woman in the 40’s, and although they went away in 1952, they were revived in new forms just a few short years later and have been published continuously ever since. No other DC super hero characters can claim such long uninterrupted runs, which is why these five characters are the backbone of the DCU, and are certain to be included in a JL movie. Anything or anyone else is gravy. But bank on those five being on the team, no matter how much Chris Nolan may hate the idea of magic green rings.

 

Another question is whether a movie like Justice League come together in time for summer 2015 at this point. While it seems unlikey, remember Joss Whedon was not officially announced to direct the Avengers until Comic-Con 2010, two years before that movie came out. And that turned out just fine. So it isn’t impossible, especially if this is something that they have been working on in secret for some time.

 

These five heroes have been, in one form or another, the core of the DCU for 70 years. Expect all five to be in a Justice League film.
These five heroes have been, in one form or another, the core of the DCU for 70 years. Expect all five to be in a Justice League film.

 

So What About The  Future Of The Batman Franchise?

 

Up until now, the party line has been that Justice League was set to introduce us to an all new incarnation of Batman, who would then be spun-off into a whole new Batman movie series. If Bale returns instead, his role will probably be strictly limited to appearing in Justice League movies, and his asking price for that alone will probably break the bank. So forget fourth, fifth and sixth solo Batman installments with Bale starring in them. So does that mean no Batman movies while a JL movie series is happening? A movie series that could possibly go on for a decade?

 

There is an obvious solution to this–you make the new Batman film franchise based on 90’s animated series Batman Beyond. This way, you can have a younger Bruce Wayne appear in the JL, and an old Bruce (with another actor–maybe Clint Eastwood, whenever he’s not busy talking to chairs) appear in Batman Beyond training a new protege in the future.  Warner Brothers probably saw the lukewarm reaction fans had to Sony rebooting Spider-Man so quickly, and fearing a similar reaction to having “Batman Begins… Again!” so soon probably made them re-think their strategy. A Batman Beyond movie series is the “have your cake and eat it too” solution, as it would keep the two franchises from conflicting with each other.

 

A Batman Beyond movie would keep the Batman film franchise alive, all while combing the best elements of Batman, Iron Man and Spider-Man.
A Batman Beyond movie would keep the Batman film franchise alive, all while combing the best elements of Batman, Iron Man and Spider-Man.

 

Of course, this is all still rumor at this point, but “El Mayimbe” has quite the track record when it comes to these scoops (and if turns out to be false, expect Latino-Reviews credibility to plummet just as fast as it went up.) If it is true though, then Justice League just possibly went from being an industry and fanboy joke to being a real contender.

Somewhere, Ryan Reynolds is waiting for Christopher Nolan's phone call. He will call...right?!
Somewhere, Ryan Reynolds is waiting for Christopher Nolan’s phone call. He will call…right?!

 

Cryptozoic Entertainment has quite the gameography under their belt. The company has developed games based on properties from World of Warcraft to The Walking Dead, and all the way to Penny Arcade. They’ve just announced a new title that ought to excite game-players and comic fans alike!

Batman: Arkham City Escape is an upcoming Deck-Building title for two players. One participant will play as Bats, while the other plays as Arkhams City’s villains (who, based on the game’s title, would all like to escape the area).

As Arkham City Escape is a deck building game, replayability should be high as each game will be unique! Here are some of the highlights, straight from Cryptozoic themselves:

-In Batman™: Arkham City Escape, two players engage in a game of wits and strategy that pits Batman against his greatest foes as they try to escape Arkham City!

-One player takes on the role of Batman, and the other player is in command of Batman’s Rogues Gallery! No two games play out the same, as the villain player uses a random assortment of villains each time.

-Each of the Arkham City inmates has exclusive special abilities to use as they take hostages and try to escape the clutches of the Dark Knight.

-Utility Belt cards give Batman access to a variety of special gadgets to use as he works towards stopping the Arkham City escapees and saving his allies!

I’m a pretty big board game player myself, and as I haven’t really had a chance to try a deck building game (and since I’m partial to things based on characters that I like) Arkham City Escape seems as though it may be a great title to start with!

Batman: Arkham City Escape will be available in February 2013. The company has released a preview of a few cards from the game, so check them out below!

The Golden Globes will air on January 13th, 2013. Just two days later, the Academy will announce their nominations: The Dark Knight Rises was very good, but is it good enough to change the way these awards groups typically receive comic book movies?

Warner Bros. has just released two Golden Globes ‘For Your Consideration’ posters for The Dark Knight Rises. They look fairly standard for awards posters, smothered in praise and the mass amount of awards the film would like to be considered for. They look pretty neat in any case, so check them out below!

What did you think of The Dark Knight Rises? If any, which of these awards do you think it deserves?

Source: Stark Industries

This is a very, very cool special edition.

EW has just revealed a ‘Broken Cowl’ edition of the Blu-Ray for The Dark Knight Rises. The limited edition combo-pack (as well as standard Blu-Ray, Digital, and DVD editions) will hit shelves on December 4th.

The combo pack includes a Blu-Ray, DVD, and Digital Copy of the film, in some of the coolest packaging I’ve seen in quite a while.

Check out the photos below, and let us know which edition you’ll be adding to your collection!

A fan of the Dark Knight movies? Do you think The Dark Knight Rises is actually a bad movie? Regardless you will LOVE these minimalism posters for all the villains!

I’ll admit, I got these from an IMGUR album, but some digging and I was able to track down the artist. So PLEASE make sure to check out David Ryan Anderson’s page. His other work is just as cool as these!

Total Recall… totally recalled! Does Len Wiseman’s remake of the Paul Verhoeven movie and adaptation of the Phillip K. Dick short story live up to either? And just when will the Batman films get their next reboot? Maybe the answer lies in the upcoming JLA movie! Want a Batcave to watch movies in? It’s only 2 million dollars! Marvel Now gives us hints on some of their upcoming books, unleashing my love for all things Mike Allred! Paul Dini has not been asked back to write the next Batman game for Rocksteady Studios! Doctor Who’s Chris Eccleston has been cast as Malekith in Thor 2! And that’s about it!

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Ever wonder where Heath Ledger took his inspiration for his role as The Joker in The Dark Knight? It’s been said that Ledger based his chaotic disheveled look on that of Sid Vicious as well as incorporating Malcolm McDowell’s mannerisms from A Clockwork Orange. But what about the very distinct voice Ledger created for The Joker? Well, take a look at this  Tom Waits interview from 1979 and see if it reminds you of anyone…

 

Source: Afternooncrash

Nolan gave a heartfelt adieu to the characters and events that have inhabited his Gotham in a foreword for The Art And Making Of The Dark Knight Trilogy. Thanks to a member of the SuperHeroHype forums we have it to share with you.

Alfred. Gordon. Lucius. Bruce . . . Wayne. Names that have come to mean so much to me. Today, I’m three weeks from saying a final good-bye to these characters and their world. It’s my son’s ninth birthday. He was born as the Tumbler was being glued together in my garage from random parts of model kits. Much time, many changes. A shift from sets where some gunplay or a helicopter were extraordinary events to working days where crowds of extras, building demolitions, or mayhem thousands of feet in the air have become familiar.

People ask if we’d always planned a trilogy. This is like being asked whether you had planned on growing up, getting married, having kids. The answer is complicated. When David and I first started cracking open Bruce’s story, we flirted with what might come after, then backed away, not wanting to look too deep into the future. I didn’t want to know everything that Bruce couldn’t; I wanted to live it with him. I told David and Jonah to put everything they knew into each film as we made it. The entire cast and crew put all they had into the first film. Nothing held back. Nothing saved for next time. They built an entire city. Then Christian and Michael and Gary and Morgan and Liam and Cillian started living in it. Christian bit off a big chunk of Bruce Wayne’s life and made it utterly compelling. He took us into a pop icon’s mind and never let us notice for an instant the fanciful nature of Bruce’s methods.

I never thought we’d do a second — how many good sequels are there? Why roll those dice? But once I knew where it would take Bruce, and when I started to see glimpses of the antagonist, it became essential. We re-assembled the team and went back to Gotham. It had changed in three years. Bigger. More real. More modern. And a new force of chaos was coming to the fore. The ultimate scary clown, as brought to terrifying life by Heath. We’d held nothing back, but there were things we hadn’t been able to do the first time out — a Batsuit with a flexible neck, shooting on Imax. And things we’d chickened out on — destroying the Batmobile, burning up the villain’s blood money to show a complete disregard for conventional motivation. We took the supposed security of a sequel as license to throw caution to the wind and headed for the darkest corners of Gotham.

I never thought we’d do a third — are there any great second sequels? But I kept wondering about the end of Bruce’s journey, and once David and I discovered it, I had to see it for myself. We had come back to what we had barely dared whisper about in those first days in my garage. We had been making a trilogy. I called everyone back together for another tour of Gotham. Four years later, it was still there. It even seemed a little cleaner, a little more polished. Wayne Manor had been rebuilt. Familiar faces were back — a little older, a little wiser . . . but not all was as it seemed.

Gotham was rotting away at its foundations. A new evil bubbling up from beneath. Bruce had thought Batman was not needed anymore, but Bruce was wrong, just as I had been wrong. The Batman had to come back. I suppose he always will.

Michael, Morgan, Gary, Cillian, Liam, Heath, Christian . . . Bale. Names that have come to mean so much to me. My time in Gotham, looking after one of the greatest and most enduring figures in pop culture, has been the most challenging and rewarding experience a filmmaker could hope for. I will miss the Batman. I like to think that he’ll miss me, but he’s never been particularly sentimental.

It’s been said numerous times but whoever has to follow up after Nolan really has his work cut out for him. There are few directors that I have seen with the level of passion that Nolan has for his work. While I and many others are sad we will never get a Nolan directed Bat-flick I eagerly await what he has coming next.

So Christopher Nolan has finished his Batman saga with this past weekend’s release of  The Dark Knight Rises, accomplishing what is arguably the best and most satisfying super hero movie trilogy ever. Whatever one might think of TDKR, there can be little argument that it is by far a more fitting capper to the Batman saga that X-Men: The Last Stand or Spider-Man 3 were for those respective series. Nolan’s Batman went out with his dignity intact, and leaving audiences everywhere still hungry for more Batman adventures.

So the question is, what now? Batman is easily Warner Brother’s most valuable film property, and they aren’t going to just let it sit there forever when there is money waiting to be made. On the same token, Christopher Nolan’s trilogy has been so well received both commercially and critically that just jumping into a reboot now or anytime soon would make the somewhat lukewarm reception to The Amazing Spider-Man look like nothing in comparison. So my first instinct would be to not reboot it for the big screen at all, but for the small screen instead.

Option #1- Batman on Cable Television

After Nolan’s trilogy, I truly feel sorry for any filmmaker attempting to bring the Batman to life on the big screen and hope to compete with what he has accomplished. Which is why, If I were Warner Brothers, right now I’d be looking at other mediums to set my Gotham stories in. I really feel that now (or relatively soon) is the time for Batman to return to television screens. But not as a low budget CW Smallville type deal, but as a sophisticated adult skewing show on cable, preferably HBO (DC Comics owners Time/Warner also own HBO. Convenient.) Get a show runner with some clout and some geek cred, and this could rival shows like Game of Thrones and True Blood in popularity if done right. I wouldn’t even have to have Batman in the title of the show, I would simply call it Gotham.

There are a lot of reasons why to me, this is the ideal plan; first off, any movie reboot going forward right now (or within the next several years) is going to have the shadow of Nolan, Bale, and especially Heath Ledger’s Joker hanging over them. But television is another medium, and the comparisons won’t be as brutal, nor will the scrutiny be as high on any actors taking over these roles for TV. And with a show that potentially lasts years, you can really explore some of the best storyline is the Bat’s history. Can you imagine The Long Halloween spread out over a season? Or Hush? Or the recent Court of Owls saga? Television can tell these stories in ways that movies can’t.

Cable television also opens up so many doors for long form storytelling in ways the movies couldn’t especially in regards to Batman’s amazing cast of supporting players, almost all of whom were kept absent from the movie trilogy. Nolan and company were wise to keep the focus on Bruce Wayne and his journey in the Dark Knight trilogy, and keep the sidekicks out. But Batman has absoulutely the best cast of supporting heroes in the entire pantheon of super hero comics, bar none. Nightwing, Batgirl, Robin (be it Dick,Tim, Damian or even Jason) and now Batwoman are all great characters, great enough to have their own ongoing monthly comics. It is time they got their due.

An ensemble show set in Batman’s Gotham could have years and years of storytelling potential. Bruce Wayne’s adoption of Dick Grayson, his subsequent training as Robin, his transformation into adult hero Nightwing, Jason Todd’s recruitment as Dick’s replacement, and his death at the hands of the Joker (and subsequent revival) Tim Drake’s emergence as Robin and maybe even Damian Wayne, assuming the show gets that far, are all ripe for exploitation on television. Then there are the women; Barbara Gordon is easily one of the best female heroes in comics. Her character journey is something that would be fascinating to watch over several seasons, from brilliant police commisioner’s daughter to Batgirl to her crippling at the hands of the Joker and transformation into Oracle, all could make for riveting television if handled correctly by the right showrunner. And Batwoman may be a more recent addition to the Bat family, but Kate Kane has become a fascinating and integral part of the Gotham world. Shows on HBO thrive on amazing ensemble casts, and Batman’s world comes with an awesome built in ensemble, and none of them have had their chance to shine in live action yet.

And then of course, there are the villains. There are still a ton of Batman villains who have never been properly brought to life in live action, characters like Harley Quinn, Hugo Strange, and the Black Mask. And there are even others that are the more sci-fi/magic based characters like Croc, Mr.Freeze and Man Bat, who I would do simply to differentiate myself from the hard core “real world” aesthetic of Nolan’s films. I wouldn’t stray too far into territory that was too comic booky (so no JLA guest stars) but maybe a tone similar to the Arkham Asylum/Arkham City games…a little grittier than the animated shows and the comics, but still far more fantastical than the Nolan films.

The designs for the video games Arkham Asylum and Arkham City are the perfect template for a television reboot of Batman, a happy medium between the Nolan films and the comic books.

Option #2- Batman Beyond: The Movie

All right, so say Warner Brothers doesn’t want Batman on television, and just wants to keep the movie franchise going and those box office dollars rolling in. The smart thing to do in this instance is wait a decade (or more) and start from scratch again after a good long time. But if they are going to insist on doing a movie in the next few years come Hell or high water, my suggestion is “look to the future”…and do Batman Beyond as a live action movie.

Batman Beyond works as a continuation of the Nolan-verse AND serves as an effective reboot as well in pretty much every way. SPOILERS for The Dark Knight Rises from here on out; if you have not seen it yet you have been warned. Imagine a Bladerunner-esque Gotham City, some 40-50 years after The Dark Knight Rises. Bruce Wayne, having faked his death in TDKR, is now an old man of almost 90, who has changed his identity and become the caretaker and sole inhabitant of the now state owned Wayne Manor. He lives alone there, under an assumed name, waiting to die in the house he grew up in….when a teenager named Terry McGinnis stumbles onto the Batcave after his father’s murder at the hands of the Jokerz biker gang. (which is all essentially the pilot of the Batman Beyond show) Young Terry uses a new high tech Batman suit with crotchety old man Wayne as his mentor, which can be either Christian Bale in old age make up, or just an actual old actor. I honestly couldn’t help but think of “Old Man Wayne” from Batman Beyond when I saw Christian Bale using the cane in TDKR, so I wouldn’t mind if it were him. I can almost hear the pitch meeting now; “It’s Batman meets Spider-Man meets Iron Man!” There might not be an easier sell than Batman Beyond to a studio exec than this.

Some 3D rendering from an artist named Ritorian, giving a good idea what a live action Batman Beyond might look like.

If Warner Brothers are going to insist on a Batman movie continuation this soon after Nolan’s trilogy, this would be the ideal way to go. If you get the right director with vision, this could be a really cool and visually interesting way to continue the Batman franchise in the next few years and still be so very different as to not be instantly compared to the Nolan movies. Also, if they do this….they should really get Daft Punk to do the score. Seriously, listen to the TRON:Legacy score and imagine it as the score for a live action Batman Beyond movie instead. It totally fits.

Option #3- Batman in the Justice League 

We all know that if Man of Steel succeeds, Warner Brothers is looking to make that “Phase One” of their eventual climb to a Justice League movie, which reports say they want out as soon as 2015. If the JLA movie happens, there is pretty much no way that Batman won’t be a part of it. Also, there is equally no way that this version of Batman will be the same one as Christopher Nolan’s Batman, who clearly lived in a world without aliens or magic or any of that stuff. Any Batman that they use in a JLA movie would be an effective reboot of the character, but one that won’t be under as much scrutiny or scorn from the fanboys and the press than if Warner Brothers did “Batman Begins…Again!” in 2015.

Batman would be front and center of any potential Justice League movie to come along in the next few years.

Maybe having Batman in the Justice League is a good way of having your cake and eating it too; you keep the character of Batman on the big screen, keep selling Bat-merch to kids and geeks alike, and it won’t be as insulting as rebooting Batman’s own franchise so soon after Nolan’s films. Also, a JL Batman wouldn’t neccesarily conflict with a TV Batman if that were to actually happen; no noubt the characterizations and visual look given to Batman would be different enough as to not conflict with one another. Remember, Superman Returns was released in the heyday of Smallville’s run on tv. No one’s head exploded at the idea of two different versions of the same character in two different mediums. The moviegoers who are smart enough can figure out that it is two separate continuities, and the moviegoers who are dumb don’t care about stuff like continuity, the just wanna see explosions and people in costumes hit each other.

So there you have it…my ideas for what should happen next for the Dark Knight Detective on the big (and small) screen.  I see this article as an open letter to Warner Brothers, so please feel free to steal my ideas boys, I don’t mind. Just whatever you do, don’t undo all the good will the franchise has earned under Christopher Nolan. And don’t think of calling in anyone with the last name Schumacher.

Here it is! The most intensive breakdown and discussion of ‘The Dark Knight Rises’! Massively opinionated Batman expert Ian Kerner joins me in a heated debate on why ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ is a massively flawed masterpiece! Is it a satisfying conclusion to Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy? Does it improve on what came before? What does it mean to the future of the DC film universe? What worked amazingly well and what really, really didn’t? It’s all here so strap yourselves in for the full Geekscape ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ Breakdown!

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On this, the day of the release of The Dark Knight Rises, the final chapter in Christopher Nolan’s epic Batman film trilogy, let’s take a unique look back at all seven films in the Batman saga, and how each one reflects a decade in the comic book life of the Caped Crusader they are based on. For reasons that remain a mystery, It seems the Dark Knight’s growth as a character is always the same, regardless of the medium he is portrayed in.

For reasons that had to be a major coincidence, each of the seven Batman films released since 1989 has ended up reflecting a particular decade in the life of the comic book version of the character. There is almost no chance this could have been planned in any way; over the past twenty five years since these movies have started production, a host of different writers, directors and studio heads have been in charge as each Batman film was being made. Even Michael Uslan, producer of every Batman movie since ’89 (and the only consistent thing between all the films) has pointed out in interviews how this ended up being the case, although it was not his or anyone behind the scene’s intention, just strange happenstance.  It just so happened that Batman’s “phases” in the movie world (for lack of a better term) matched up almost perfectly with his phases in the comics, although with some some notable cracks in my theory, which I will happily point out. So let’s begin the Bat history lesson, shall we?

Batman (1989) = The Batman of Detective Comics in 1939

Tim Burton’s original 1989 Batman movie came out on the 50th anniversary of the character, and in so many ways reflects that original Batman (or should I say The Bat-Man?) of 1939 more than any other media incarnation to date. Burton’s Bruce Wayne doesn’t hide the fact that’s he’s Batman very well in this movie, constantly becoming distracted or losing his cool in public, and the Bruce of those very early comics didn’t really either. In those earliest Batman stories, Bruce also had a serious relationship, a now forgotten girlfriend named Julie Madison. Much of those early Batman stories delt with Bruce trying to maintain a relationship with the lovely (and relatively normal and dull) socialite Julie, just as Burton’s movie had the love story of Bruce Wayne and Vicki Vale at it’s center. By 1941 or so, Julie was a footnote in Batman lore, just as Vicki would be by the next movie in the series. Good riddance, as both characters were as interesting as dry toast. The Art Deco look of Burton’s first film is also very 30’s inspired, another nod to the comic book character’s first year out.

Most importantly, the Batman of ’39 had very little problem using lethal force, and even carried a gun. While Burton’s Batman is never seen packing heat, he does have guns on the Batmobile and lets a whole bunch of the Joker’s henchmen die, and pretty much flat out kills the Joker himself,  something the comic book character would never have done from say, 1940 onwards.

Nitpicking: So Here Is Where My Theory Has Some Cracks

Batman might be wearing all black in Burton’s movie, more closely resembling the darker color palette of his original look form the comics, but he’s still got the little yellow oval around the Bat symbol on his costume, something that didn’t appear in the comics until the mid 60’s. Also the character of Vicki Vale was predominantly a 1950’s character, created in an attempt to give Batman a Lois Lane type girlfriend, and wasn’t around at all in the 30’s.  It should be pointed out though, Vicki bore very little resemblance to her comic book counterpart aside from the name and being a photographer. And if I’m gonna nit-pick here, then neither the Joker nor the Batmobile were around until at least a year later in the comics either.

Batman Returns (1992) = Batman Comics of the 1940’s

Tim Burton’s Batman Returns got both darker and sillier all at the same time. Truth is, the 1940’s Batman comics were also darker and siller than the “year one” Batman that appeared in Detective Comics in 1939. More and more grotesque and outrageous villains were introduced, like The Joker, Penguin, Catwoman, Two-Face, Scarecrow and the Riddler, often teaming up together to bring down the Bat. (the first Joker/Penguin team up happened in the 40’s, starting a Batman tradition, one reflected in Batman Returns) Catwoman’s original origin story had her being a stewardess who falls out of an airplane, loses her memory and becomes a “bad girl”; the movie version of Selina Kyle is a secretary who falls out a building and wakes up in a similar state. Still, all silliness aside, there was still an air of gothic, almost classic Universal horror movie weirdness to those Batman stories of the 40’s, something that would totally be gone by the early in the  next decade.

Nitpicking: So Here Is Where My Theory Has Some Cracks

By far, the biggest component to Batman’s success in the 40’s was the addition of his sidekick Robin to the books, and Batman Returns had no Robin character to speak of (although it was almost Marlon Wayans. Yes, I’m serious) Other than this one rather big omission, Batman Returns plays very much like a Batman comic from the 40’s, somehow both dark and kid friendly at the same time, which has long been Tim Burton’s gift as a filmmaker.

Batman Forever (1995) = Batman Comics of the 1950’s

Even though Batman Returns was a hit, it made a lot less money than Burton’s first Batman movie, and parents groups at the time freaked out at the darkness and sexuality in what was supposed to be a “family movie.” Parents even protested the addition of Batman Returns toys in McDonalds happy meals meant for children. This made parent company Warner Brothers freak out big time, and Tim Burton was let go from his gig at the helm of the Batman series. They hired Joel Schumacher to direct Batman Forever, and he brought a day glo neon color palette to the proceedings that was as garish and un-Batman as anything found in the very worst issues of the 1950’s. The mandate from Warner Brothers was that the Batman series become lighter, more colorful and family friendly.

This totally reflects the attitudes parents had towards the comic books back in the 1950’s, due to the paranoia instilled by the anti comic book rantings of Dr. Frederic Wertham in his book Seduction of the Innocent. As a reaction to freaked out parents, DC was forced to lighten the mood significantly to their Batman comics, or cancel them outright. Everything became more colorful, and Batman lost almost all of his cool villains and saw them replaced by aliens and mad scientists with death rays with names like Dr. Double X. Any cool edginess Batman had once had was thrown out the window. Ironically, one of the chief complaints made by Frederic Wertham is his book was that Batman and Robin were a gay lover’s fantasy come to life, two men living in a fabulous mansion together in sin with no women to be found. By casting 25 year old Chris O’ Donnell as Robin, and having him shack up with a Batman who was only ten years his senior (and looked even younger) in the form of Val Kilmer, the entire Batman and Robin relationship took a far less father/son vibe and just became all the more gayer, 50’s paranoia inadvertently brought to big screen reality. And nipples on the Bat suit? Probably didn’t help.

Also, Nicole Kidman’s character of Chase Meridian looks and acts far more like Batman’s 1950’s love interest Vicki Vale, who in the comics was a sexy red head who was obsessed with uncovering Batman’s secret identity, much like Kidman’s character was in the movie. Kim Basinger’s Vicki was really just Vicki in name only, and was far more like the generic women Bruce Wayne dated in the early comics.

Nitpicking: So Here Is Where My Theory Has Some Cracks

Even though Jim Carrey’s Riddler is behaving more like one of the mad scientist characters in any given 1950’s comic book, what with his mind controlling device (or whatever the fuck that was) the actual character of the Riddler never appeared once in any 1950’s Batman comic. Similarly, Two-Face only appeared in one Batman comic of the early 50’s before being banished along with the rest of the Batman rogues for being “too scary” for children. Other than this though, Batman Forever is just about as bad and overly “kiddy” as any issue of Batman or Detective from the 1950’s. It really is that hard to sit through.

Batman & Robin (1997) = Batman of the 60’s, (And The Television Series)

Somehow, despite no one I know actually liking the movie, Batman Forever made more money than Batman Returns, although only slightly. This must have made Warners confident in the decision to go even more lighter and sillier in tone than the previous movie for Batman & Robin. Whether it was intentional or not, the tone of the movie was direct reflection on that of the comics of the 1960’s, and more specifically, the campy tone of the Batman television show. Both Arnold and Uma Thurman’s turns as Mr.Freeze and Poison Ivy were so arch and over the top as to make it seem like they were on the set of the old tv show. Even the addition of Batgirl (even if she wasn’t the Barbara Gordon character from the comics or television series) felt like they were trying to evoke the old show.

Nitpicking: So Here Is Where My Theory Has Some Cracks

There is one key difference that keeps the original Batman show and Batman & Robin from being the exact same hot mess; the original show was deliberately campy and tongue in cheek, an outright parody, and a brilliant one at that. But Batman and Robin wanted to lift the aesthetics and tone of the old classic show and remain an actual action/adventure movie with real peril and stakes that the audience could invest in. They failed miserably, as you simply can’t have it both ways, and audiences reacted. Batman & Robin flopped, burying the series for eight long years. And when Warner Brothers decided to resurrect the franchise, they took a cue from DC comics in the wake of the cancellation of the old tv show: Back to Basics.

Batman Begins (2005) = Batman comics of the 1970’s

After the television series was cancelled, sales on the Batman comics dropped like a stone. The campy approach worked for awhile on the books while the show was on the air, and sales soared for a bit, but by 1970 the tone of the show had done what seemed like irreparable damage to the character of Batman. So writer Denny O’Neil and artist Neal Adams decided to take drastic measures, and do a total 180 on the comic book character and return him to his darker, 1939 roots. Robin was sent off to college and became an infrequent guest star, and Batman became more of a globe trotting James Bond like character. And those early 70’s comics added one major new villain to the Batman rogues gallery in the form of immortal mastermind Ra’s al Ghul.

Much like the comic series, the Batman movie series was left in dire straits after Batman & Robin tanked. Warner Brothers decided to reboot the franchise and go back to basics, and Christopher Nolan’s Batman Begins was as much a reaction to the colorful excess of Batman & Robin as the stories of O’Neill and Adams were a reaction to the television series. Chris Nolan even used 70’s creation Ra’s al Ghul as his main villain, and Begins had a lot of the globe trotting aspect that was key to Batman’s 1970’s adventures. And once again, Robin was given the boot.

Nitpicking: So Here Is Where My Theory Has Some Cracks

While Batman Begins uses a lot of the tropes and characters from the 1970’s run of Batman comics, Christopher Nolan was just as heavily inspired by Frank Miller’s 1980’s classic Batman: Year One, if not more so. Also, the opening sequence, with a young Bruce Wayne falling into the cave and being scared by the bats was lifted from a sequence from 1986’s The Dark Knight Returns. In fact, the Nolan Trilogy really lifts from almost every era of Batman since 1970 or so, just some movies have more overt influences than others.

The Dark Knight (2008) = 1980’s Batman

Alan Moore’s The Killing Joke is seen as the definitive Joker tale; It’s a story that’s really all about how the Joker sees the world, and he presents his origin for the first time in these pages. Although, as he says in the story, he’s not sure if his memories are correct, and if he’s going to have a past of any sort, he would prefer it to be “multiple choice”. This is much like Heath Ledger’s Joker gives various different versions of his own origin in the movie. The Killing Joke version of Joker also spends the story trying to drive a good man insane, in this case James Gordon, by crippling and raping his daughter and making him witness it, trying to prove that all a good man needs to lose his mind is “one bad day”. He doesn’t break Gordon in The Dark Knight, but he does do it to Harvey Dent, and unlike The Killing Joke with Gordon, in the movie version he succeeds.

Nitpicking: So Here Is Where My Theory Has Cracks

With Dark Knight, things start to get trickier comparing it to any one decade of Batman comics, and I can readily admit this. TDK is very similar to some 80’s classics like Killing Joke, but also owes just as much a debt to stories from the 70’s, and even the 90’s and 2000’s. I couldn’t help but think, as Batman was gliding over Hong Kong, of those old globetrotting Denny O’Neill/Neal Adams stories of the 70’s. Also in the 70’s, Bruce Wayne was living away from Wayne Manor for the very first time, in a swanky playboy’s penthouse, which is also reflected in the movie as well.

Another huge influence on TDK is 90’s classic The Long Halloween. The “A Plot” in Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale’s 1997 graphic novel is about the serial killer Holiday, who kills someone once a month on that month’s most prominant Holiday. But the “B Plot” is about how the the freaks begin to take over from the Mafia in Gotham, a theme thut runs heavy in the Dark Knight. The other major element in The Long Halloween is how the trinity of Lt. Gordon, Batman and Harvey Dent form to try to save Gotham, and the eventual transformation of Dent into Two Face. I’d say this one might have been a more prominent influence on The Dark Knight than maybe even The Killing Joke does.

Even aspects of comics as recent as 2005’s The OMAC Project were reflected in TDK; a very recent addition to the Batman mythos is Batman’s creation of OMAC, and orbiting satellite system created to watch and observe *cough*spy*cough* on every metahuman on the planet. Although not quite as Sci -fi as what was used in the movie, he creates a similar invasive monitoring system on the people of Gotham in the Dark Knight, much to the disgust of Wayne CEO Lucius Fox. In many ways, the succesful combination of so many elements from over thirty years of Batman comics helps makes The Dark Knight the ultimate Batman movie.

The Dark Knight Rises (2012) = The 90’s Comics

Ok, so I haven’t seen TDKR yet, but lets just say I know enough, based on trailers and reviews, to know that the 90’s comic books were a huge influence on this particular Batman story. First off, the inclusion of Bane as the main antagonist speaks volumes, as Bane wasn’t created until 1993. In fact, Bane is one of the only Batman villains to reach iconic status that was created during this decade, mostly due to his breaking Batman’s back in 1993’s Knightfall saga, a storyline sure to be referred to in TDKR. Another 90’s story seemingly reflected (at least based on the trailers) is No Man’s Land, a story from the late 90’s where all the bridges to Gotham are destroyed, and the city becomes cut off from the rest of the United States and ultimately run by criminals.

Nitpicking: So Here Is Where My Theory Has Some Cracks

The main premise of The Dark Knight Rises has Bruce Wayne living in seclusion for the eight years after retiring Batman and taking the fall for Harvey Dent’s murder. This reflects were we find Bruce Wayne in the start of Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns, where he has been living in seclusion for ten years after retiring the Batman persona. Also, Anne Hathaway’s version of Selina Kyle seems very influenced by Miller’s take on the character in Batman: Year One. Even Holly, Selina’s sidekick from Year One, makes an appearance in the TDKR , played by Juno Temple. I should also note that Catwoman’s look in the movie seems very inspired by Julie Newmar in the 60’s television show, maybe the only place in Nolan’s entire trilogy that acknowledges the campy old show. It is a reference I doubt any fanboy will mind though.

So what’s next for the Batman movies? Start at 1939 all over again for a reboot? Go to the future for Batman Beyond maybe? It’ll be interesting to see where the future takes us for Batman in cinema, but one thing is for sure, he’ll be on the big screen again in some form or another. It is only a matter of time.

The Dark Knight Rises hits theaters tomorrow at midnight and I thought I would take a look at Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. There is no doubt that this trilogy will go down as one of the greatest movie trilogies of all time. A main factor in this being the common theme that Christopher Nolan has always set as the heart of the stories. Rather than focusing on Batman as the superhero he focused on the man who was Batman and the symbol he created. Something that film makers that had come before failed to truly capture. As stated in Batman Begins:

People need dramatic examples to shake them out of apathy and I can’t do that as Bruce Wayne. As a man, I’m flesh and blood. I can be ignored, I can be destroyed. But as a symbol — as a symbol I can be incorruptible, I can be everlasting. – Bruce Wayne (Batman Begins)

Ever since Batman Begins hit screens movies have began taking a more realistic approach to their characters thus making them more relatable. By making a story more believable you can lose yourself in it. Batman Begins took a risk by actually being the first Batman film to be actually about Batman. The film was not about the villains who took a back seat to the exploration of Bruce Wayne’s psyche. But what really made this movie had to be the casting. Christian Bale is by far the best Bruce Wayne to date and with a supporting cast that was flawless and made this first piece to the story truly memorable and a movie that improves over time rather than one that deteriorates. We were introduced to a new Gotham unlike the ones we had seen in the past and a Bruce Wayne unlike the ones we had seen in the past. This character was real. That was the difference here. One of the most memorable scenes in being a great ending scene that would lead into one of the greatest sequels ever made.

“Well, because he thought it was good sport. Because some men aren’t looking for anything logical, like money. They can’t be bought, bullied, reasoned, or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.” – Alfred Pennyworth (The Dark Knight)

A line from The Dark Knight that to this day is still one of the most memorable. This movie truly set the bar for comic book films if not films in general. A movie that received criticism from the masses of the internet for its casting of Heath Ledger as Batman’s greatest villain of all time…The Joker. I remember clearly reading on an internet board the numerous randoms who referred to this move as “the worst casting decision ever made” and jokes about this actors role from Brokeback Mountain that even referred to this sequel as being “Broke-Bat Mountain”. And this once again proves just how wrong we all can be. If we thought the casting in Batman Begins was brilliant we hadn’t seen anything yet.

Nolan had made his masterpiece with The Dark Knight. It was dark, intelligent, incredibly exciting and cinematically rich, while remaining utterly true to the soul of its source material. The actors were at their finest here and truly gripping performances sucked us in to a movie that will go down as one of the greatest films ever made in my opinion. Not just because it is a comic book movie but because it is a fantastic film. The bitter-sweet tragedy here is that this was Heath Ledgers finest performance but sadly his last. If any actor deserved to win the Oscar for “Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role” in 2009 it was Heath Ledger. However the movie otherwise was snubbed at the Oscars and is now why they have expanded how many movies are nominated from five to ten. The midnight screening that I attended received a standing ovation for a film that honestly deserved it but at the same time left fans sad that we would never see Heath Ledger’s portrayal of The Joker grace the screen again.

So now we approach the grand finale to the Dark Knight Trilogy. Tomorrow at midnight The Dark Knight Rises hits theaters and is already receiving praise from many. Once again some have been skeptical to casting but if history has taught us anything it is that we should have faith in Christopher Nolan here because he has not let us down before.

“If anything, it’s a tremendous responsibility and opportunity to sort of follow in the footsteps of somebody who was so brilliant. So I’m just grateful to be part of the family, actually, the Batman, Chris Nolan family. And that I got brought in to be the villain in this film.” – Tom Hardy on Heath Ledger

The Joker may be Batman’s arch-nemesis but Bane is one of the greatest enemies he has ever faced. Known best as the man who “broke the bat” we are truly in store for a completely different type of animal here. Bane is not only one of Batman’s greatest enemies physically but mentally. Tom Hardy has had his performance referred to as “powerful” and that “his simple presence intimidates anyone”. Do not compare his performance to Heath but instead remember that he is playing a completely different character and a new threat that we have not seen before. Many who have already seen the film have called this Christian Bale’s finest performance of the three and a fantastic end to the story that Nolan has set out to tell. While The Dark Knight may be a tough act to follow I have complete faith myself that we will be getting the film that we all need and deserve. There has been much talk that this could be the first comic book movie to win an Oscar and it seems quite possible that it can. Have we seen all that Nolan and company have to give?

Not everything. Not yet. – Batman (The Dark Knight Rises)

A look back at the trilogy:

 

Revisit the entire journey up until ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ with this new trailer. The trailer reminds us that there really isn’t anything out there quite like Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Saga.

The saga ends with ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ in theaters July 20th.

There’s a big rumor floating around the water cooler right now. Apparently an inside source has revealed that there will be “easter eggs” in ‘Man Of Steel’ that hint at a shared DC Universe. However these references will not be big so don’t get your hopes up on cameos or anything of that sort. The source stated that the character Warner Bros. wanted to hint at one character the most. But sorry Bat-fans it definitely wasn’t Bruce Wayne aka Batman. The character they spoke about was Wonder Woman.

While this has not been officially announced it would make sense with the recent news of a Justice League movie hitting our screens. There is also word that we may be seeing this film hitting the screens in 2015.

While they would idealy like to have Nolan involved it seems highly unlikely. He’s been asked in numerous interviews and seemed quite uninterested. With Nolan moving on to other projects, Warner Bros. must move on and Robinov would like to do it soon. But don’t get your hopes up here for any kind of news at Comic-Con. It doesn’t look like it will be that soon.

“My hope is that over the next month or so,” he said, “we’ll be ready to lay out the plan for the next DC movies.”

Update: I can confirm from a source that they did go back and add things into Man Of Steel. But they could not reveal what specifically.

Source: LA Times

We showed you DC’s teaser a week ago where Scott Snyder talked about what was coming up. Now we have your first look at The Joker’s return in ‘Batman #13’.

• The Joker returns in “DEATH OF THE FAMILY”!
• He crippled Batgirl. He killed Robin. What will The Joker do now that he’s returned to Gotham City?
• What must Batman do to protect his secret identity and that of those who fight alongside him?

BATMAN #13
Written by Scott Snyder
Backup story written by Scott Snyder and James Tynion IV
Art by Greg Capullco & Jonathan Glapion
Backup story art by Andy Clarke
Cover by Greg Capullo

Are you a fan of Hot Toys figures? Craving more SDCC exclusives? Well it looks like they’ve got another one to add to your shelves to finish up your ‘The Dark Knight’ set.

Hot Toys is proud to present the Lt. Jim Gordon Collectible Figure (S.W.A.T. Suit Version) from The Dark Knight movie as the 2012 Toy Fairs Exclusive item. The movie-accurate collectible is specially crafted based on the image of Gary Oldman as Lt. Jim Gordon in S.W.A.T. suit in the movie, highlighting the newly developed head sculpt, detailed costume, weapons and accessories.

Batman fans can now collect the figure of this iconic character to complete their ideal The Dark Knight collection!

No price has been released yet but expect that soon.

 

Looks like DC is shaking up another creative team. Starting with the zero issue of the series Ann Nocenti (‘Green Arrow’) will take over writing duties on ‘Catwoman’.

This fall, industry veteran and acclaimed writer Ann Nocenti (GREEN ARROW) will be taking over writing duties on CATWOMAN. Beginning her run with September’s issue #0, Nocenti will bring an exciting and unique twist to Gotham City’s most notorious femme fatale.

I don’t read the series myself but from what I have read…fans are not too thrilled about this news. We also have a cover for issue #13 which is drawn by Andy Clarke. There is also a rumor around that he will be replacing Guillem March but nothing has been confirmed as far as that goes. Side note: could that be The Joker’s face in the background and a possible tie-in to Snyder’s upcoming story?

Source: DC

Due to his appearances in both ‘Batman Begins’ and ‘The Dark Knight’ people have been speculating and wondering if we would once again see Cillian Murphy return in the final chapter ‘The Dark Knight Rises’. The actor that played Dr. Jonathan Crane/Scarecrow has kind of dodged the question and never really given a straight forward answer when asked recently. Now a new press-release for the ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ European Premiere has made its way online and seems to point to the fact that he does appear in it.

According to the release, the cast attending the premiere include:

Christian Bale, Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway, Liam Neeson, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marion Cotillard, Cillian Murphy, Morgan Freeman and Michael Caine.

Now it’s time to lose your mind to figure out how he’s going to fit in. Could it be a cameo? A flashback? Is he involved with Bane? Is there a post credits scene of him, Batman and Bane eating some form of Mediterranean food? Guess you’ll just have to wait until July 20th.

Source: Hayuguys

Check out these preview pages from Geoff Johns and Gary Frank’s upcoming graphic novel Batman: Earth One. Much like J. Michael Straczynski and Shane Davis’ Superman: Earth One, it re-imagines the Dark Knight’s origin for a new age.

“Gary and I are tackling BATMAN from the beginning, before he knows what he’s doing and with a very different ultimate goal in mind,” said Johns. “He’s never left Gotham. And our Gotham and the people in it are very gray. Our heroes unlikely. Our villains hidden. Our story is only beginning with volume one.”

“It’s essentially the first piece of the jigsaw,” said Frank. “He’s not the Batman people know, but he might be one day. He’s certainly not yet a superhero. The fun is to watch him piece the persona together drawing on his experiences and the influences of those around him and, at this stage, the idea of becoming a ‘superhero’ hasn’t even entered his head.”

Batman: Earth One is available for pre-order on Amazon, and hits shelves on July 10th.

The stunning conclusion to “THE COURT OF OWLS” epic! All is revealed in “THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF WAYNE.”

Check out this variant by artist Andy Clarke.

Source: DC Comics

The most recent trailer and TV spots have been a tad mellow…

But this one was definitely exciting. Some awesome bits of new footage too.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=wj9Z5Qvn_gQ