15 Ways To Reboot Batman After The Dark Knight Rises
What shouldš happen after Christopher Nolan walks away…
Hire Ed Brubaker to write it
Pros: Ed Brubaker is the comic-book creator behind Gotham Central , which is essentially The Wire of Bat-books.
Set entirely within the Gotham City Police Department - with Batman only appearing in cameos - Gotham Central fšocused on the impact Batman’s vigilantism would really have on the lives and morale of Gotham’s cops.
It approached the mythos with the same level of intense realism as Nolan’s Batman Begins – only it dišød it two years earlier, launching in February 2003.
Gotham Central also managed to humanise the army of freaks that make up Batman’s rogues gallery, giving it depth that approached Watchmen levels.
It’s an incredible comic – and it achieves the main feat a Batman reboot needs, combining the ultra-realism of Batman Begins & The Dark Knight with thše fantastical elements of a Justice League set-up.
And for anyone worried about putting a comic-writer on screenplay duties, there’s one element of Joss Whedon’s success with The Avengers that’s been over-looked slightly.
Joss wasn’t just a TV writer who successfully šøstepped up to the big screen: he was a comic-book writeą¦r who understood the importance of splash panels.
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The Avengers š¦is arguably the most representative comic-book movie ever made, in that watching it almost perfectly replicates the experience of reading a comic.
That aspect has nothing to do with Whedon’s telly experience, and everything to do with the work he did on titles like Astonishing X-Men . So maybe it’s time to give other comic-boošk writers a chance.
Cons: Gotham Central , despite being one of the most well-reviewed books in Batman comic hisštory, didn’t sell very well. ąµ²The critics loved it, but it didn’t connect with an audience. But then we have a feeling that if it launched now, post-Nolan, it would do slightly better business.
Cast Michael Fassbender as Batman
Pros: You’re a Total Film reader, so you don’t need reminding of how good Fassy is – but it’s still worth putting his general position in Hollywood intą¶£o context.
Fassy’s 35, which would make him 39 in the four years we reckon it’ll take to put together a worthy follow-up to The Dark Knight Rises . It also happens to makš§e him the perfect age to play Batman.
Few actors of his age-ranꦬge have the skill-set to play Bruce and Bats with the layered intensity both characters deserve – well, unless you’re prepared to give Orālando Bloom, Colin Hanks or Danny Dyer a go – Tom Hardy’s the only actor who comes close, but we’re pretty sure he’s already involved with the franchise in a slightly different capacity.
Fassbender’s managed to mix blockbuster work with smaller passion projects, a trick the lasšt bloke to pull on the Baź§t-suit also achieved.
He has leading man looks, but he’s not afraid to indulge in his dark siź¦de. He’s perfect basically.
Cons : Let’s ignore that fact that Fassbender mayź¦ well be off making Bond with Nolan, and the fact he’s so associated with aānother iconic comic-book character, get him signed up now!
Keep the budget down
Pros: Batman Begins’ budget was around $150 million, which is obviously a lot of money to pop down the shops with, but it’s a bargain for a blockbuster of Begins ’ scale.
For comparison, Battleship had a production budget of $209 million, and John Carter had $250 million to play with. And we’re pretty sure that a The Dark Knight š isn’t around the corner for either of them.
For those who think it’s not fair to compare 2005 budgets to 2012 numbers, Peter Jackson’s King Kong cost $207 million, and The Chronicles Of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe cost $180 million to make. Hell, even Troy , Alexander and Van Helsing , all released in 2004, cost more than Batman Begins – at $175 million, $į©į©į©į©į©į©ā¤ā¤ā¤ā¤į©ā¤ā¤ā¤ā¤į©ā¤ā¤ā¤ā¤į©š±į©į©į©155 million, and $160 million apiece.
Of all the films we’ve mentioned, we know which one goes on our Blu-ray player at least oncą²e a month, and it doesn’t star Hugh Jackman (sorry š·Hugh).
But Batman Begins is an odd-fꦔilm-out in another way – it’s the only movie listed without an enormous special effects budget.
By ź¦keeping Batman in the real world, Nolan kept costs down – and that’s something we’d like to see replicateš d in the Batman reboot.
Obviously a Superman cameo will ź¦push the effects budget up slightly, but if it’s an end-credits sequence of the kind we’ve already outlineš¹d, it shouldn’t require a bank robbery to cover the cost.
Which is goāod, as Superman hates bank robberies. It’s literally one of his least favourite things.
Cons: The Dark Knight Rises had $250 million production costs, and Warner Brothers might experience fan pressure to match š§thšat level of investment.
Bring back Robin?
Pros: Of all the essential elements of a Batman reboot we’ve listed, this is by šfar the most contentious.
Comic-book readers haāte Robin so much tꦔhey once paid money to kill him.
And that’s not an eš²xaggeration – in the late-‘80s, DC held a phone vote to decide the fate of Jason Todd’s Robin. Fans dialled one number to save him from death atš the hands of Joker, another to condemn him.
A slim majority voted to kill ošff the character, and true to their word, DC depicted his brutal death.
Robin’s so unpopular that Christian Bale reportedly threatened to quit the Batman films if Nolan introšduced the character to his universe – though the veracity of that quote is still in question (it’sš° never actually been confirmed) it still sums up many fans' feelings on the matter.
But despite the hatred, we’d argue Batman actually needs Robin – not just to help him fighšt crime, but to make him a more rounded character.
And Batman’s creators were aware of the fact that, without Robin to interact with, Batman as a concept has limitations. That would explain why Batman didn’t mšake it to a full year of publication before Robin was introduced.
That’s right, Robin has been a near-constant presence in Bat-hš³istory. Batman spent 11 months without him, and 73 years wšÆith him. And there’s a reason.
We’ve already touched on the fact that Batman’s generally a fairly funny comic-book – that’s because he has Robin to spark off. The comics without the charaš„cter are generally the darkest of the canon.
Which is by no means a bad thing, but if the Batman reboot does wantš to change direction the introduction of Robin, though risky, is a proven route to success.
But theź¦ir relationship is more complicated than straight-man and foil, the best Robins – Dick Grayson, Tim Drake – add consequence, and even substš”ance to their best Bat-books.
Robin is a symbol of oꦰptimism and hope - he operates as a reminder to Batman of what he’s fighting for, and of what he’s lost in the process.
If, and it’s a big if, the Batman reboot makes him likeable, he’ll add a completely new dynamic to the ź¦universe already establiź¦shed by Nolan.
And we get the feeling even Nolan likes him – watch Batman Begins again; if Game Of Thrones ’ Jack Gleeson isn&rš °squo;t meantꩵ as a tribute to Robin, we’ll eat our cape.
There's even a reference to Robin in The Dark Knight Rises; the R held aloft by a crowd-member in the Goš thamš¬ Rogues scene is an exact replica of the Boy Wonder's branding.
Other publications have written the reference off ą± as a prank by an extra, but are you telling us that a director with as much attention to detail as Nolan didn't notice it? It would have taken a half-decent digital effects team ten minutes to get rid of it, and yet it was so clear in the second trailer that it was included in every single trailer breakdown.
Our guess? Tšhe sign was the work of an extra, Nolan saw it, liked it, and left it in.
Still, there's a reason this is the only headline in this feature to come with a question mark - we don't think that Robin deserves automatic inclusion in the Batman reboot, but we do think he'd serve a purpose. But if the creative team can't do him justice, we'd rather he was left out.
Cons: Robin is an insanely difficult character to get right – Batman Forever and Batman & Robin did such a bad job they tarnished the Boy Wonder’s cinematic reputation so completely, it’s hard to imagine how a bšig screen Robin would be achieved.
But then, after Batman & Robin it was harź¦d to imagine another decent Batman film full-stop, and we all know what happened next.
Hire an incredible director
Pros : So, we want a Batman movie that ditches the origin story, incorporates plotlines fromš the ‘00s era, features realistic villains who Batman beats using detective skills, his utilišty belt, and a retooled Batcave, and we want to add a classic supporting character and a few jokes in the process. Oh, and we want a Superman cameo, a role for Robin and as many DC references as we can fit in.
There’s one man that can deliver all of thꦯe above in style. Unfortunately, he’s involved in another superhero franchise you might have heard of.
Yep, it’s Joss Whedon.
Joss clearly cares about the character – he pitched his own post- Batman & Robin / pre- Batman Begins š take, but was sadly dismissed out of hand by ź§a studio suit.
Buffy proved that Whedon can mix wit, fantastical situations in a realistic world and well-realised supporting characters. And if anyone can set up the Justice League universe, it’s the man behind The Avengers .
But if Joss can’t do it, it’š§øll be hard to find a director who can mix humour, realism and action so successfully – we&rsquoš¤”;d say Sam Raimi, but we’d worry he’d pitch Adam West as the perfect Batman.
DC might be tempted to mimick the Marvel teš¦©chnique of handing their biggest franchise to a untried director – but we’d rather theꦯy went for someone proven.
Peter Jackson would be perfect, but we think he’ll probably move onto more personal projects when he’s done with The Hobbit .
We’d deeply love to see Martin Scorsese’s tš °ake on the character – but we’ve šprobably got more chance of directing it ourselves.
Cons : We imagine Joss Whedon is tied up in a very compšlicated Marvel contract (though, to be fair, Ryan Reynolds seems able to leap between Marvel and DC characters on a whim - and you'd expect actors' contracts to have even more fine print) so we think his Wayne Manor window of opportunity has probably closed permanently. That leaves a fairly limited pool to choose from.
Whoever takeš§s it on, they have to be high-profile, and they have to be on the top of their game. The character, and Chris Nolan's legacy, deš serves no less.
Sam Ashurst is a London-based film maker, journalist, and podcast host. He's the director of Frankenstein's Creature, A Little More Flesh + A Little More Flesh 2, and co-hosts the Arrow Podcast. His words have appeared on HuffPost, MSN, The Independent, Yahoo, Cosmopolitan, and many more, as well as of course for us here at GašmesRadar+.