The Batman: 11 Behind-The-Scenes Facts About Matt Reeves' DC Movie

The Batman: 11 Behind-The-Scenes Facts About Matt Reeves' DC Movie

Posted: May 28, 2023 | Last updated: April 10, 2024

<p>                     I am actually being honest when I say that, out of all the live-action Batman movies (and even including the animated ones), <em>The Batman</em> is my all-time favorite so far, (although not <em>everyone</em> agrees with my take on it being one of the best Batman movies). Nevertheless, Matt Reeves’ take on the DC superhero is not just an achievement in finally bringing his detective persona to the big screen, but an achievement in aesthetics with its stunning noir-inspired production design and cinematography, performances by Robert Pattinson and the rest of the star-studded <em>The Batman</em> cast, and wall-to-wall thrills on both a visual and emotional level.                   </p>                                      <p>                     If you are a Batfan like me who is still in awe of the talent on display in one of the best superhero movies and want to know more about how they pulled it all off, read on. The following are a few behind-the-scenes facts about the <em>The Batman</em> that we found by channeling our own inner detectives, starting with a glimpse at the movie that almost was.                    </p>                                      <p>                     <em>By Jason Wiese</em>                   </p>
<p>                     As many DC fans will recall, <em>The Batman</em> was initially proposed as a DCEU-canon solo film starring Ben Affleck. The Academy Award-winning actor and filmmaker was also slated to write and direct the highly-anticipated flick until he decided to step away from the director’s chair.                    </p>                                      <p>                     Warner Bros. then sought <em>War for the Planet of the Apes</em> helmer Matt Reeves, who revealed to Esquire that the script they showed him, while entertaining, did not match what he wished for his own take on the Dark Knight. However, once Affleck decided to hang up the cowl altogether, it opened up an opportunity for Reeves to bring his vision to life and he started working on a whole new script with some surprising methods of motivation.                   </p>
<p>                     Fans were stunned by how well the 1991 Nirvana track “Something in the Way” fit in the trailer for <em>The Batman</em> and in the finished film itself (twice). Little did they realize just how important their late frontman, Kurt Cobain, and the grunge gods' rally was to Matt Reeves’ process when developing his interpretation of Bruce Wayne. The filmmaker explained it to Empire Magazine with the following quote:                    </p>                                      <p>                     "When I write, I listen to music, and as I was writing the first act, I put on Nirvana’s ‘Something In The Way.’ … That’s when it came to me that, rather than make Bruce Wayne the playboy version we’ve seen before, there’s another version who had gone through a great tragedy and become a recluse. So, I started making this connection to Gus Van Sant’s Last Days, and the idea of this fictionalized version of Kurt Cobain being in this kind of decaying manor."                    </p>                                      <p>                     The character whom Robert Pattinson went on to play in The Batman was certainly not what a lot of fans were expecting, but there were also many who loved to see an “emo Bruce Wayne” that they could relate to.                   </p>
<p>                     While it is impossible to separate “Kiss From a Rose” from <em>Batman Forever</em>, the song was not originally written for the superhero film and, in fact, Seal wrote it in 1987 - years before he was even signed to a label, according to People. In response to Joel Schumacher’s passing in 2020, Seal posted an Instagram video recalling how the director’s inclusion of the song in the 1995 blockbuster turned the romantic ballad - previously a flop - into the defining hit of the artist’s career.                   </p>
<p>                     Speaking of Batman movie auditions, Zoë Kravitz’s history playing Selina Kyle actually predates <em>The Batman</em> as she provided the voice of Catwoman for a brief appearance in <em>The LEGO Batman Movie</em> in 2017. However, her connection to the Batman movies goes back even further than that.                    </p>                                      <p>                     She once auditioned for a small, unspecified role in 2012’s <em>The Dark Knight Rises</em>, but was told by an unknown person from the studio that they were not going “urban” for that part. When she first told this story to Nylon in 2015, it was widely assumed that Kravitz was told she was “too urban” to play the iteration of Catwoman that would later go to Anne Hathaway, until she clarified that that was not the case in 2022.                   </p>
<p>                     Reprising Catwoman in a live-action setting was not the only moment of déjà vu that Zoë Kravitz experienced on the set of the <em>The Batman</em>. In a featurette included on the film’s Blu-ray release called <em>Becoming Catwoman</em>, supervising stunt coordinator Robert Alonzo recalls how he knew the actor from years earlier when he taught her martial arts.                    </p>                                      <p>                     The training that Kravitz’s went through to become Selina Kyle was, essentially, a continuation of her lessons with Alonzo. The actor also mentions in the mini-doc how some of the fight choreography was conducted with social distancing through pre-recorded videos in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic - an event that had a profound impact on the production and, especially, on its leading man.                   </p>
<p>                     Like many other productions at the time, <em>The Batman</em> was forced to shut down in March 2020 - just two months after filming began - in the midst of the Covid-19 outbreak. It would resume production about five months later, only to hit pause again just days later after Deadline reported that someone on the set had tested positive for the virus.                   </p>                                      <p>                     According to Vanity Fair, the person who caught Covid-19 just happened to be most important person involved with <em>The Batman</em>: the Batman himself, Robert Pattinson. That would not be the last time that the shoot was faced with a pandemic-related setback, as The Sun reported in February 2021 that Pattinson’s stunt double had tested positive, forcing him and his team to temporarily isolate themselves from the set.                   </p>
<p>                     Why don’t we change the subject to something fun? Such as, that epic car chase between Colin Farrell’s Penguin and Batman in movie prop on wheels, the Batmobile - the design of which was first revealed in a tweet by Matt Reeves in March 2020. As we learned from another doc on <em>The Batman</em> Blu-ray about the making of the film’s suped-up muscle car, you are actually seeing more than one Batmobile in motion in the enthralling sequence.                    </p>                                      <p>                     The construction department built four complete Batmobiles in total for a different purpose each, which designer Joseph Huira describes in the featurette. There was a “ram car” made to “destroy stuff,” a more lightweight vehicle for jumping stunts, another that could be controlled by a stunt driver from a roof-mounted roll cage, and the “hero car,” which was the only one equipped with an electric motor to move around more quietly than the three other gas-powered vehicles.                   </p>
<p>                     I, like every other human being on the planet, was obviously astonished by how completely unrecognizable Colin Farrell is as Oswald “The Penguin” Cobblepot in <em>The Batman</em>. However, what really threw me about the actor’s transformation into the iconic DC villain was how much more closely he resembles the flightless bird of his namesake than any live-action iteration since Danny DeVito in 1992's <em>Batman Returns</em>.                   </p>                                      <p>                     According to makeup designer Mike Marino on the Blu-ray featurette, <em>A Transformation: The Penguin</em>, the Gotham City gangster’s truly “penguin-like” appearance was intentional. He based Oz’s eyebrows on the look of a crested penguin and if you look closely at the tip of his scarred nose from the right angle, it bears a subtle resemblance to a beak.                   </p>
<p>                     There have been many great depictions of The Riddler on screen over the years, but Paul Dano's interpretation of the DC Comics villain is easily the darkest and deadliest, with his famous knack for brainteasers feeing more reminiscent of the Zodiac Killer. Of course, an essential key to how <em>The Batman</em> - released in theaters on March 4, 2022 - portrays the puzzling foe in such a memorably creepy manner is in the masterful performance.                   </p>                                      <p>                     If director Matt Reeves’ gritty, noir-inspired reboot of the live-action Batman movies just happened to be your introduction to this acclaimed, award-winning actor, I have no doubt that it must have piqued your interest in exploring more of his filmography. There is, indeed, quite an eclectic collection of Paul Dano movies and TV shows on his resume so far, such as this underrated teen comedy...                   </p>                                      <p>                     <em>By Jason Wiese</em>                   </p>
<p>                     During the events of <em>Batman: The Long Halloween</em>, Batman keeps running into Selina Kyle, a.k.a. Catwoman, during his investigation into Carmine Falcone’s criminal activities. At first it seems like she just enjoys stealing from the crime lord, but by the time <em>Batman: Dark Victory</em> unfolds, Selina reveals that she suspects she’s Falcone’s illegitimate daughter, though she doesn’t find enough evidence to definitively prove this. Zoë Kravitz’s Selina, on the other hand, is well aware that John Turturro’s Falcone is her father, though he’s not aware of this. From his perspective, Selina is only an employee at the Iceberg Lounge he runs into on occasion, and while he eventually does learn the truth, they certainly don’t establish anything remotely like a traditional father/daughter relationship.                   </p>
<p>                     Another actor whose performance in <em>The Batman</em> came from a unique and interesting place was Jeffrey Wright as the first Black James Gordon in a live-action adaptation. While promoting the DC movie on <em>Late Night</em>, Seth Myers asked the Emmy winner about his friendship with current New York City mayor Eric Adams, whom the actor says he had known personally since he was captain of the actor’s local police precinct.                   </p>                                      <p>                     Wright eventually reveals that he looked to Adams’ career as a police officer for inspiration and “justification” for playing Batman’s main ally with a badge and the most trusted cop in Gotham City. In fact, Adams was one of a few people he cited as “touchstones” for his approach to the character, such as Keechant Sewell - New York’s current police commissioner and one of thee Black individuals to hold the position.                   </p>                                      <p>                     While it is always important to honor the source material, it is also refreshing to see actors and behind-the-scenes crew look to real-world topics and figures for inspiration when making a comic book movie, elevating the story to new levels of authenticity and believability. That effort is clear in <em>The Batman</em> - a film that effectively brings the DC character’s world to life.                   </p>

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