Batman is set to go up against The Penguin in this episode
of Batman. On par with previous batman plots, the villain (Penguin) finds an
accomplice villain, (businessman Schreck). Penguin wants to live on the surface
and find his parents and he believes his ticket to this lifestyle change is
Schreck. So he kidnaps him and blackmails him, the deal is, he won’t tell
Gotham of his plans to wreak havoc on the city if he helps Penguin become an
accepted part of the surface society. And, so, the two devise a plan to get
Penguin elected as Mayor and turn the city into a black hole of crime. We get
to meet Catwoman in this venture as well. She is the quirky secretary of
Schreck, Selina Kyle. As a result of her overhearing his plan to take over
Gotham, he shoves her out the window of their high-rise office building. Alley
cats/kittens rescue her, subsequently causing her to “turn into” a cat-ish,
Catwoman. She makes herself a crazy leather outfit and gloves fully equipped
with super sharp, cat-like claws. There’s some romance between Selina Kyle (Catwoman)
and Bruce Wayne (Batman), obviously. Batman seems genuinely interested, after-all
he does portray a lonely and depressed character in this movie, but Catwoman seems
to just be toying with him. Ultimately, her goal is to turn the city against
Batman, which she doesn’t know is the Bruce Wayne she has an attraction toward,
and she becomes “alliances” with Schreck and Penguin: Not for long though, because
Penguin wants her for more than an alliance and she isn’t having it, so she
soon becomes an enemy to him. But not before the two successfully begin the
demise of Batman’s heroic reputation as we know it. As a press conference held
by the Penguin as an effort to hammer in the last nails in his reputation’s
coffin, Bruce Wayne and Alfred play a recording of the Penguin where he
proclaims his anti-gotham stance. Penguin reveals his actual goal as seeking revenge
on his parents, which he believes can be achieved by killing the wealthiest
families first born sons. The movie ends with the usual action packed back and
forth fight between good and evil, a quick involuntary recount by your brain of
how many lives Catwoman has actually lost, a penguin funeral, a stray cat adoption?, and a happy-ish ending,
until next time of course.
Burton immediately sets the dark depressing tone of the
movie. A couple has a “baby” who doesn’t quite “fit in” so they hurl him into
the icy river as if he were last week’s garbage. It was interesting to see a
typical Tim Burton design sort of mesh with a typical Batman plot, except I don’t
feel like it was a “typical” batman plot, ok mostly, but not completely. This
film is artistically very pleasing to look at, I use the term “pleasing”
loosely and just to describe the talented and brilliant mind behind it, but it
is very dark, gloomy and depressing, far from emotionally pleasing. But, this
is the mood that Burton knows is required in order to cohesively pull together
each of the characters’ underlying stories that are being portrayed. A penguin
boy neglected and left for dead by his very own parents, a man who has it all yet
is still so greedy and full of destruction, a lonely, mousy and super awkward
woman just trying to find her place, even Batman is very depressed, reclusive
and confused, exuding the opposite of happy heroic characteristics one would
expect out of a Super Hero, who mind you, was lucky enough to be “chosen” to do
good for his city and have super abilities and endless access to stellar
gadgets and cars. This movie is battling shame, acceptance, revenge, cruelty
and an onslaught of other negative emotions and these are made clear by Burton.
There were subtle Burton-esque pieces of humor thrown in, like when Catwoman is
thrown from a building (again) and lands in a kitty litter truck, but all in
all a pretty depressing film. I just, personally, would like to have a consistent
feel good super hero who knows his place in the world as both a humanoid and a
hero and can appreciate and differentiate between them both. Again,
aesthetically beyond pleasing, but in my mind, the story could have used some
oomph. Burton does a stellar job getting his vision across to viewers but I am
wondering if maybe a slightly tweaked plot or character tune-up would have made
for a much cleaner “Burton Batman”. Though, I can’t complain a lick about the sound,
lighting, camera shots, set and costume design etc because it is evident that this
film’s entire crew consists of professionals who have mastered their art and
who know how to produce a technically sound film.