With Interstellar hitting theaters, Christopher Nolan is again in the headlines, be it the adorable factoid about him always keeping a flask of Earle Grey tea on him, or a blown-out-of-proportion quote about his views on post-credits sequences. Similarly, just last week we heard that director Joel Schumacher is possibly going to bring his original vision for the Batman films he made and didn’t get to make to a special comic book mini-series. Plus, anyone who has HBO can testify that they seem to be playing Nolan’s Batman Begins on an endless loop right now. So, Schumacher is the man that killed Batman with Batman & Robin in 1997, and Christopher Nolan saved Batman, beginning in 2003 when he was first hired to start developing Batman Begins. It begs the question: What was happening with Batman after Schumacher, but before Nolan? Well, it’s not like Warner Bros. was just purposefully taking a break from Batman that whole time. They were just stuck in a realm knowingly called development hell.
1. Batman Triumphant –
We all know Batman is going to ultimately win, but doesn’t that title kind of eliminate any doubt we might have had about that?
It’s actually kind of hard to remember now, but before we’d all suffered the misfortunate of actually seeing Batman & Robin there was no reason to doubt that it would get a sequel. So, it wasn’t all that surprising when just two weeks after wrapping Batman & Robin Joel Schumacher announced to Daily Variety that they were already working on a sequel. Akiva Goldsman was out as writer, having moved on to Lost in Space, and I Am Legend writer Mark Protosevich was hired as his replacement. George Clooney and Chris O’Donnell were set to return as the stars and Schumacher would again bring his neon glory to directing. All anyone really cared about at that point, though, were the villains, i.e., the true stars of the Burton/Schumacher Batman films. They finally settled on Scarecrow and Harley Quinn, the latter being re-configured as the Joker’s vengeful daughter instead of psychotic lover, as in Batman: The Animated Series. The option was even on the table for Jack Nicholson to come back as the Joker as a hallucination Batman experiences when exposed to Scarecrow’s fear toxin. All of that went out the window once Batman & Robin came out, though, and turned into one of those Spider-Man 3/Amazing Spider-Man 2-esque franchise killers that actually makes money but destroys the audience’s thirst for a sequel in the process. A repentant Schumacher vowed to make another one, but only after waiting a while beforehand and coming back with a far darker approach, positioning Batman & Robin as the one for the kids, and Batman 5 as the one for the adults. By 1999, rumors swirled that Clooney was being replaced with either Kurt Russell or Keanu Reeves, a rumor Reeves appeared to confirm in interviews at the time, causing Warner Bros. to officially deny that Batman 5 was in production.
2. Batman: DarKnight –
3. Batman Beyond –
4. Darren Aronofsky’s Batman: Year One
Here’s the part where Aronofsky comes clean about how he never wanted to make a Batman movie at all, from an interview with CinemaBlend (as quoted in the book Billion Dollar Batman):
“It was a kind of bait and switch strategy. I was working on Requiem for a Dream, and I got a phone call that Warner Bros. wanted to talk about Batman. At the time I had this idea for a film called The Fountain, which I knew was gonna be this big movie and I was thinking, “Is Warners really gonna give me $80 million to make a film about love and death after I come off a heroin movie?” So my theory was if I can write this Batman film and they could perceive me as a writer for it, then maybe they’d let me go ahead, which worked out great until Brad Pitt quit.”
Aronofsky eventually got The Fountain made at Warner Bros. with Hugh Jackman as the star, bombing in 2006 to the tune of $15.9 million worldwide against a $35 million production budget.
5. Bruce Wayne – The TV Series
Trevor Ferhman was the leading choice to play Bruce Wayne
Around the time that Aronofsky was hired but before he’d completed his insane script with Miller, the WB Network was taking meetings with TV producers who had the idea to do a Bruce Wayne origin story as a TV series. The WB Network loved the idea, keen to get this thing onto their schedule since it was soon to have a gaping hole with Buffy the Vampire Slayer on the way out. They commissioned a pilot script, centering around whether or not Bruce Wayne would sign a legal document authorizing the WayneCorp trustees to continue running the company in his absence. He was about to turn 18, having spent the past 12 years traveling the world. Upon his return to Gotham, he would reconnect with old pal Harvey Dent, become acquainted with Detective Gordon and his 13-year-old daughter Barbara, and meet potential love interests Susan Dent (Harvey’s sister, a creation of the show) and Selina Kyle. In the show’s 5-year plan, by the end of the first season, Bruce would discover the underground cavern beneath Wayne Manor that we all know would become the Batcave, and by the end of the fifth season he would finally don the infamous cape and cowl. Along the way, he’d study criminals at Arkham Asylum, briefly attend an FBI academy, and battle to regain completel control of WayneCorp. His love interests would grow to include Vicky Vale and Harleen Quinzel, as a young psychology student. However, it was all killed by Darren Aronofsky and X-Men. They were forced to hit the pause button while it was decided which project would get first priority, Aronofsky’s film or the WB’s TV series, and that pause became permanent once the first X-Men movie came out to bigger-than-expected box office totals the summer of 2000. Bruce Wayne was canceled, ultimately turning into Smallville, and Batman Beyond and Batman: DarKnight were each killed in favor of Aronofsky’s Year One.
6. The Wachowski’s Year One –
7. Batman vs. Superman –
8. Joss Whedon’s Year One Proposal
Eh. This one’s probably not a movie that ever came close to actually getting made, but I include it anyway because who doesn’t like a good Joss Whedon story? During the ginormous success of The Dark Knight in 2008, geek god Whedon revealed to MTV that once upon a time he’d actually pitched his idea for a Batman movie to Warner Bros., shortly before they hired Christopher Nolan. The tone of his approach was in keeping with Nolan’s, but he described it as “a bit less epic” and “more in Gotham City” (as quoted in the book Improving The Foundations: Batman Begins From Comics to Screen) suggesting no trips to the other side of the world for his Bruce Wayne. His story would have featured an entirely new villain, though, described as a Hannibal Lector-type Bruce Wayne would first train with while studying the criminal mind at Arkham Asylum and later fight, much as he begins Batman Begins training under his eventual villain.
Which one of the aborted projects intrigues you the most? I personally kind of like the idea of DarKnight, Batman retiring because who could take him seriously after bat nipples? Plus, Jeff Goldblum as The Scarecrow! Are you a huge fan of Aronofsky’s approach even though it turns out he never actually wanted it to get produced? Let me know in the comments.
Sources: Julian Darius’ Improving The Foundations: Batman Begins From Comics to Screen; Bruce Scivally’s Billion Dollar Batman
If you like this, check out our other “Batman 75” articles:
- End of An Era? – 2015 Could Be the First Year in Nearly 2 Decades Without An Animated Batman Series on TV
- Batman 75: How Robin Williams Almost Played the Joker & The Riddler
- Is Fantastic Four Doomed to Because It No-Showed Comic-Con? It Didn’t Hurt Batman Begins
- Batman 75: How We Almost Got a Bruce Wayne Origin Series Instead of Smallville
- Batman 75: The Sad Fates of Batman Actors of the Past Translates to a Very Promising Black Comedy: Michael Keaton’s Birdman
- Batman 75: Did An ABC Executive’s Visit to the Playboy Club in 1965 Really Inspire the Adam West Batman TV Series?
- Batman 75: Looking Back at Batman’s Film Debut in the Casually Racist & Generally Atrocious 1940s Film Serials
- Batman 75: Will We Ever Be Able to Accept a Non-Bruce Wayne Batman on Film?
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- Batman 75: Watch New Animated Batman Beyond Short & Assault on Arkham Trailer
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- Batman 75: How the Joker Was Created & Then Saved from an Early Death
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