Batman Forever Movie Review
Batman Forever Review
"Batman Forever" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Joel SchumacherProducer : Tim Burton,Peter MacGregor-Scott
Screenwiter : Lee Batchler,Janet Scott Batchler,Akiva Goldsman
Starring : Val Kilmer,Jim Carrey,Tommy Lee Jones,Chris O'Donnell,Nicole Kidman,Michael Gough,Pat Hingle,Drew Barrymore,Debi Mazar,Elizabeth Sanders,Rene Auberjonois
Batman's reins have been turned over from director Tim Burton (now producing)
to Joel Schumacher, from lead Michael Keaton to Val Kilmer, and from an old,
baroque Gotham to a heavily stylized, kiddie-pop city.
A lot can be said for the idea that the setting of a picture thoroughly
controls its tone. What we Batman Forever is an attempt to make Gotham more
like Los Angeles, full of neon, black lights, and people sporting primary-color
wigs. Unfortunately, something has been lost in translation.
What we lose is the idea of Batman as The Dark Knight. Instead, he spends a
large bit of celluloid pontificating about the morality of killing people,
telling us like a public service announcement that it won't make things
better. Okay, I buy that, but why is Batman telling me this? Batman is
supposed to be a kick-ass-and-take-names type of guy, not some lousy pacifist.
The message is entirely out of place. Also lost is a real villain...instead,
we get Jim Carrey's over-the-top interpretation of The Riddler, who was always
a wuss on the TV show, and Tommy Lee Jones's Harvey Two-Face, who I don't think
I've even heard of.
On the subject of villains, Carrey plays Carrey -- what more can you say? He's
strangely hilarious, obviously made for the role, but the part isn't written
well enough to carry the picture alone. Jones is downright awful as Two-Face,
mumbling his lines in every scene and trying desperately to live up to the
actors with much better parts who refuse to give him even a little piece of the
show.
At any rate, here's what the new Batman brings to the table. Foremost is Chris
O'Donnell as Bruce Wayne's young ward, Dick Grayson, aka Robin. O'Donnell
saves the film more often than he saves Batman, proving what a generally good
actor he is, even with a bare-bones role. Also good is Nicole Kidman as
Batman's love interest, Dr. Chase Meridian, who ends up psychoanalyzing him out
of his costume. It's too bad the love story isn't written very well, either.
And that's not all that's poorly written. The plot has enough holes to drive
the Batmobile, the Batplane, and the Batboat through. Everything is an homage
to the first two films: the obligatory car chase, workmanlike fight scenes,
people discovering Batman's true identity...yawn. When you see the film, try
to guess what will happen next: you'll be right.
Overall, there's very little originality on the screen...not that you could see
it, thanks to a nonexistent first act, some dismal photography (Stephen
Goldblatt, out of his element), even worse editing (Dennis Virkler, surprising
considering his two Oscar nominations), and some dull, unrealistic digital
effects.
Thank God for the self-deprecating humor in the film, with Batman and Robin
poking fun at their small screen past. If you watched the series at all, the
jokes make the movie worthwhile. Kilmer is good, as usual, as the man behind
the mask, and there are a few good action sequences. If you see the film, try
to ignore the preaching, pinch yourself awake after the first half hour, and
pray that Burton makes a really good movie next to make up for this one.
The new Anthology DVD set includes the first four Batman films: Batman, Batman
Returns, Batman Forever, and Batman & Robin. Each comes in a two-disc pack
(that's eight discs total), with commentary tracks, making-of featurettes,
music videos, and deleted scenes (for Forever and Robin). Extra points for an
impressive box design.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





