Who is bosslogic? And who in the comments is saying it's official? (too many to read through)
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Actually, I screwed up the math in my post yesterday. I forgot that this movie is set in 1981, where a "young Bruce Wayne" looks to be 8-10 years old. For some reason I was thinking it was later than that. Either way, if Reeve's Batman does indeed take place in the '90s, and does indeed connect to this movie, Bruce Wayne/Batman could be anywhere from age 17 to 29 depending on what year in the '90s Reeve's movie is hypothetically set. But since we know Reeves' Batman isn't an origin story, given this scenario, it would have to be at some point in the late '90s, when Bruce is a bit older (even though 29 is still pretty damn young). So, the timelines technically line up, and Phoenix's Joker could technically show up in the sequel to Reeves' first Batman movie, as long as they aged Phoenix by 20 years or so.
But my point is, if Joker ISN'T connected to Reeves' Batman (and by all accounts it's not), but Reeves' Batman IS set in the '90s, that seems like a scenario ripe for confusion. Casual audience members would likely be expecting Phoenix's Joker to show up, since the timelines would be so relatively close together. It just seems really weird and random to me that WB would allow a Joker movie set in the '80s, and then a Batman movie set in the '90s, but NOT have them connect. I'm all for these one-offs and separate universes and all that, but even that seems like a stretch so early in this experiment.
It would make WAY more sense if Reeve's Batman is set in present day (or an alternate version of our present day), in a separate universe from Joker, and that's clear from the get-go. Look, maybe Reeve's Batman has some concrete reason it HAS to be set in the '90s. Maybe his detective story only works without cell phones or something. But if not - if his take isn't time period specific - I would imagine WB would be nudging him to set it way after Phoenix's Joker, just so there aren't any misguided expectations. That, and three of the first four "modern" Batman movies were already set in the '90s (Returns, Forever, and Batman & Robin). Even though it would obviously be a completely different timeline/universe, why would WB/Reeves want to revisit that time period again? It just seems so random and arbitrary.
He's an artist that's blown up (over a million followers) and now does movie posters and other work for Marvel, Lionsgate, and other.TCTTS said:
Who is bosslogic? And who in the comments is saying it's official? (too many to read through)
mJoseph Parrish said:
So Batman is gonna sparkle now?...
Hard disagreeTCTTS said:
Based on the casting, though, I still don't buy it. I simply don't see Affleck as an older Pattison. There's not only a massive size difference, but they really don't look all that similar, save for having the same color hair.
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IS ROBERT PATTINSON the new Batman? That's THE question on the geek mind Friday. The answer is complicated.
Depending on who you talk to Pattinson is just the frontrunner on a very very short list. Others will tell you the part is his. Or even that a deal is done.
One insider tells Heat Vision it's still on ongoing process. And that there's a whole vetting system that is underway. While mum on details, that "process" means, in part, screen tests, costume tests, readings, and meetings. But, yes, deep conversations are being had.
Batman is, for Warner Bros., THE most important brand, IP, character, whatever you want to call him, in its portfolio. He is the most popular superhero character in the world, even bigger than anything Marvel has. In fact, Batman has only risen in importance since Christian Bale headlined the Christopher Nolan trilogy in the aughts.
So Warners exec are, of course, being extremely meticulous, perhaps to a fault, in handling what is supposed to be a new trilogy. They don't want a repeat of the Ben Affleck debacle where they had a divisive Batman and saw a potential solo franchise collapse in public.
(And regarding the importance of costume tests, you may recall that how an actor looked in a mask was a key factor for Warners choosingRyan Reynolds over Bradley Cooper when casting Green Lantern... not that the final product seemed to have mattered.)
Matt Reeves is still tweaking his script, which is rumored to have at least two villains, the Penguin being one of them, according to sources (one person is telling us there will be around half-a-dozen villains!). We're hearing of another purrfect character making an appearance in the script as well.
AgfromHOU said:
Collider reporting that Hollywood Reporter is claiming Catwoman and Penguin will be villains in The Batman
https://link.hollywoodreporter.com/view/518d53f9191b2a646dbcdf4da2tef.1ie/de42d27e
http://collider.com/the-batman-villains-penguin-catwoman/?utm_campaign=collidersocial&utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=twitter