Masterofoneinchpunch wrote:The one thing I will say is that the first Batman is still one of my favorite films. I know that anytime something new comes out, the ceremoniously dissing of older films is normal (I had several huge arguments when Batman Forever came out, so many stated that this was the best Batman, well no one argued that when the next one came out
; I did not like the direction it took, away from the gothic and darker undertones), but several scenes (especially from the previous film) reference material from the first two (Burton ones). I believe the 1989 version is certainly important (that and the first Superman are probably the most important comic book movies to come out; proving that there is an audience, that you could cover dark material and especially with Batman, use more of a superhero anti-hero.)
I agree with you in principle about the dissing of older films, though I'm in the group that dissed the second, third and fourth films not long after I saw them. They just weren't my cup of tea even then, so the new movies had nothing to do with it. You're still right though, for some people, something new automatically trumps any earlier versions of the same thing. From a generational standpoint, I can see it. To a fifteen-year-old today, Burton's BATMAN is an
old movie, the product of another, simpler (:lol:) era. Certainly the technology exists today to give these characters a reality we pretty much
thought they were receiving the first time around, so who knows what a BATMAN reboot in 2028 will look like!
Burton's BATMAN is indeed an important movie. I'd say SUPERMAN was even more important as it truly opened the doors in an era when superheros were all but unthinkable on the big screen. By 1989, a lot had changed in terms of audiences being convinced by those kinds of characters. I certainly don't hate any of the original four BATMAN movies, and they're all marvels of technology and production design of the day, but they're just not my bag, I guess. These new movies are much more how I envisioned the character making the transition, so in that sense, they satisfy. I still wish they'd inject a bit of the Neal Adams-era Batman from the comic into this franchise. The tone can stay as dark as they want, but Batman could at least be something more than a grunty brawler with an limitless bank account. Give him a real mystery to solve, that might be cool.
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On an somewhat unrelated note--though it's still a rummage of sorts--I spent several hours last night scoring some killer vintage Japanese movie posters from ebay. I swear, the Japanese seller, pops up every few months with a phenomenal collection of gems, must have been a projectionist or theatre owner in Tokyo who saved the posters for everything he ever exhibited, cause the collection he's sold off so far has covered every imaginable facet of Japanese cinema. And as a designer, I just can't resist this stuff. His first round of auctions a couple of years ago, I was just lucky to nab an awesome poster for CLEOPATRA JONES AND THE CASINO OF GOLD. His next round I completely missed until it was too late to get in on the bidding. This latest round netted me eight little gems, including some gorgeous Pinky style posters that I can't really display here, but not necessarily the ones I was really after, either.
Got most of these fairly early in the day, before the number of bidders increased I suspect, so my prices ranged from the $9.99 starting price to around $12. Only the first one shown here cost a bit more, at $21.50.
Three I can show:
Kokosei Burai Hikae (1972) (1972)
Last Days of Planet Earth (1974)
Yaju Shisubeshi: Fukushu no Mechanic (1974)
Some I can't show, but perhaps searching the names will bring up images of the posters:
Onna no Shinshitsu: Sukikurabe (1978)
Mibojin Geshuku: Iroiro Oshiemasu (1977) & Niiduma no Shitatari (1976)
2-poster auction
Inranna Kankei (1976)
I was fortunate that these (plus one other) only set me back about $100 shipped considering their vintage, but much more disheartening was the stuff I was outbid on, or knew I couldn't afford altogether. With the exception of the first one, most of these might not seem like they went for unreasonable sums, but unfortunately I was up against a couple of those wonderful ebay bidders who bid the starting price of $9.99 on these, then entered a maximum bids of, like $150 or something like that, so I knew I never had a shot, which really sucked:
Female Prisoner Scorpion : #701's Grudge Song (1973)
(this one just made me friggin' cry!)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 0264049821
Female Convict Scorpion : Jailhouse 41 (1972)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 0264049254
Lady Snowblood (1973)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 0254883755
Terrifying Girls' High School 1 (1972)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 0254882115
School of the Holy Beast (1974)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 0264045653
Angel Guts : Red Classroom (1979)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 0264034332
Maruhi Hong Kong Jinniku Ichiba (1974)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 0264022883
The Car (1977) Yes, the James Brolin flick. A personal favourite, and a poster I didn't get home in time to bid on!
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 0254788041