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Kontynuacje TDK- jakie powinny wedlug was byc??

Zaczęty przez Leon Kennedy, 27 Styczeń 2008, 15:51:34

pauers

Wiem ,ze nie dlatego to by moglo byc najbardziej racjonalne wytlumaczeni jej postaci...Swoją drogą mozna by bylo ja przerobic..No ale duzo jest postaci , które są zbyt fantastyczne...
Na samotność skazują człowieka nie wrogowie, lecz przyjaciele.

Maxie Zeus

Na IGN pojawila sie druga cześc artykulu ''From Comics to Film: Batman's Villains''...
http://comics.ign.com/articles/891/891521p1.html
Sami przeczytajcie.... Umieszczam wszystkie ''koncepcje'' tu.. ;)

TALIA AL GHUL
With Ra's playing such a huge role in Batman's origin in Nolan's first film, bringing Talia into the fold is pretty much a no-brainer at this point. Talia should surface as the new leader of the League of Assassins following Ra's apparent death at the end of Batman Begins. Her love for Bruce can be seeded with a few flashbacks to her time as a little girl who witnessed Bruce's training under Ra's, and can be further developed when she re-enters Bruce's life under the false pretense of an exotic foreign aristocrat visiting Gotham for the first time.

Talia's true motivations should be continuing Ra's quest for the end to modern civilization, but it'd also be nice to see her explore a way of resurrecting her father via the Lazarus Pit. If you remember correctly, Batman Begins already sort of established an angle to explore Ra's apparent immortality with a throwaway line of dialogue, so a careful and clever writer definitely can pull this off convincingly. Whether or not Ra's is actually brought back isn't all that important. What's crucial is that Talia's love for Batman temporarily alters her plans to resurrect her father, and she sets about convincing Bruce to join her in leading the League of Assassins back to glory. For casting, we'd love to see Monica Belucci in the role.

PENGUIN (Oswald Cobblepot)
Early on in the production of the Dark Knight, there were rumors the Penguin would pop up in a supporting capacity, with Phillip Seymour Hoffman in the role. As far as we're concerned, that would have been perfect. The Penguin works best, not as a heavy hitting rogue, but as a supporting player that Batman can turn to for information. With the films exploring the influx of costumed freaks that follows the fall of Gotham's once powerful mafia, the Penguin would make for a logical choice to fill an important part of the underworld's power vacuum.

It'd be best if he was only mockingly referred to as the Penguin behind close doors (and perhaps face-to-face by only Batman), and was prone to violent outbursts when hearing the name used openly by his thugs. On the casting front, we like the idea of Hoffman. But just to throw it out there, how about the idea of Toby Jones – another actor who played Truman Capote that has more freakish features – in the role of Cobblepot? Food for thought.

POISON IVY (Pamela Isley)
From a comic book fans perspective, it doesn't get any better than seeing a modernization of any mythos use one important device to inform the rest of its fictional world. We saw it in the recent Hulk movie, which used Captain America's super-soldier serum as the catalyst for upcoming developments. Likewise, that serum, as well as the mutant gene, informs a lot of the foundation of Marvel's Ultimate Universe.

In the case of Nolan's Batman universe, it's possible to get a lot of mileage out of the Lotus flower that Batman first encountered while training under Ra's Al Ghul, the same plant that later served as the main ingredient in the Scarecrow's fear toxin. An inventive writer can definitely tie this same flower into Poison Ivy's origin, and might even be able to tie Ra's quest for worldwide genocide into Ivy's war against the environment's greatest pest – man. That last bit might be a stretch, but the Lotus Flower-Ivy connection should definitely be explored. For casting, any sexy redhead who can act will suffice, really. How about Isla Fischer?

RIDDLER (Edward ''Nigma'' Nashton)
Let's work backwards from the Riddler first seen in Hush and currently found in Dini's Detective Comics: a man obsessed with 1) solving the mystery of the Batman; and 2) outsmarting the Dark Knight. For this, we're going to take some dramatic license with the character.

A PHD professor in Criminology and Forensic Science at Gotham University, Edward E. Nigma could work best as the GCPD's go-to man when it comes to crime's they can't solve. When Batman comes onto the scene, murders that once would have required lab tests, manhunts and consultations with Dr. Nigma now come to a close with the unconscious perpetrator gift-wrapped on Gordon's doorstep. Nigma grows obsessed with the efficiency of Batman's deductive skills, and since he has no way of following the Dark Knight's crime-solving process (after all, it's done in the Bat-cave), he sets up an elaborate mystery of his own for Batman to solve, one that sees him give into his deeply rooted pathology. For casting, we have one man and one man alone in mind for the role: Lost's Michael Emerson (Benjamin Linus).

CATWOMAN (Selina Kyle)
With Carmine Falcone resigned to the role of a stark raving lunatic, the window for adapting the Long Halloween/Dark Victory's Selina/Falcone connection might have already shut. Still, there's definitely some way to connect Selina with the last remnants of Gotham's organized crime families and explain her Catwoman persona with the debut of Batman.

Selina works best as a high society bombshell that gets her kicks out of stealing from the very same aristocrats that attempt to woo her at pricey fund raisers and ribbon cutting ceremonies. It's here that writers can get the most mileage out of the Batman/Catwoman/Selina/Bruce dynamic– Selina and Bruce fall for each other because they both sense each other's boredom at having to put up a false front at upscale shindigs, and Batman and Catwoman fall for each other after they first meet in costume while both trying to take down the mafia. For casting, we're looking for a darkly sexy femme fatale along the lines of Adam Hughes' recent Catwoman covers. Actress Shannyn Sossamon definitely fits the part.

BANE
First off, let's just throw out the whole idea of the brain-fed tube and arm-activated steroid pump. Making Bane a chemically enhanced brute will suffice just fine in the steroid culture we currently live in. It's far more important to focus on Bane's fierce intelligence and singular devotion to his cause. In both these ways, he's very much the mirror image of Bruce Wayne, which is why he makes for such a fantastic antagonist.

If you want to tie him into Ra's and Talia's story, you can definitely make Bane's quest to prove himself against the Dark Knight coincide with Talia's appearance in Gotham, a coincidence that leads Talia (or Ra's) consider him as an heir apparent to The Demon's Head. If you want to keep it simple, you can have Bane use the mafia's (or perhaps the Penguin's) desire to rid Gotham of the Bat as an excuse to attempt his life's mission. Either way, there's tons of potential for this character. As far as casting goes, good luck with that. We've already seen how hard it is to find a muscular brute capable of decent acting. Just look at Hollywood's attempt to find a new Conan.

MR. FREEZE (Victor Fries)
Yes, Mr. Freeze is one of Batman's most over-the-top, unrealistic villains. And yes, Christopher Nolan's take on Batman's world is very much rooted in reality. At first, the very idea of Mr. Freeze stepping into Nolan's Gotham seemed patently ridiculous. But then we thought about it for a while, began to look past the character's bulky cold-suit and science-fictiony origin, and finally realized that the inherent power of the Victor Fries character has little to do with his gimmick and everything to do with his pathos. Fries is one of the most tragic Batman villains of all time. By focusing on that tragic essence, we're going to circumvent everything that makes Freeze unrealistic, and arrive at all that makes him great. Hopefully.

Waynetech's Dr. Victor Fries is a highly regarded expert in cryogenics who rose to fame on his controversial yet trailblazing experiments with cryo-stasis. Just as Fries nearly succeeds in freezing and rejuvenating a live animal (a bat maybe?), his beloved wife Nora discovers that she has terminal cancer and only weeks to live. Desperate to save the only person he's ever loved, Fries begs the Waynetech board for permission to use Nora as his first human test subject. He's flatly denied. Still, he decides to take matters into his own hands, freezes his wife in a prototype cryogenic chamber, and then hides the structure in one of the laboratories' large storage freezers.

For months, Fries spends every possible moment he can beside his wife's chamber, shivering violently from the harsh cold until his body can't take it anymore. He begins to develop a twisted little pathology wherein he can't feel close to or empathize with his wife unless he's blue in the face and nearly frozen to death. After the Waynetech board of directors learns what he's doing, they shut him down, leave Nora to die and fire him. Overcome with anger at the board and grief over the loss of his wife, Fries builds a freeze gun and then sets out to kill the heads of Waynetech. Forget the cold suit. The cold gimmick works better as a symptom of his failure to accept Nora's death. Can't you picture a bunch of executives suddenly noticing the AC is turned up too high, then turning to see Mr. Freeze standing in the doorway ready for mass murder? Peter Stormare comes to mind when it comes to casting this cold killer.

BLACK MASK (Roman Sionis)
Once again, our take on this character's role in Nolan's world is a major departure from the his established origin, but it'll (hopefully) retain the character's essence. We're going to make Roman Sionis one of the mafia capos that steps up to fill the power vaccum left by the fall of the Falcone family in Batman Begins.

We'll even go a step further and assume the Dark Knight (still haven't seen it) and the third film will adhere to Two-Face's origin from the Long Halloween and Dark Victory, and make Sionis part of the Maroni family. Let's assume Harvey goes after the Maroni family and the mob in the third film. Wouldn't it be great to see Big Bad Harv send a message to Maroni by dumping the very same acid that scarred him all over the face of Sionis, one of his capos? Sionis is left horribly disfigured, but manages to survive and even rise up the ranks of power, even if he has to hide his scarred face behind a mask. Would fit wonderfully beside Catwoman. From a casting perspective, we'd love to see John Malkovich take this one.

VENSTRILOQUIST (Aronold Wesker)
The idea of the Ventriloquist and Scarface might seem too silly for the big screen, but I actually think he (or is it they?) would fit seamlessly into Nolan's world. What if Wesker's simply a highly skilled mob hitman with an...eccentric side. The key is to play up his complete lack of ventriloquism skills, but make him insist that the Scarface puppet is in charge and doing all the talking. Because Wesker's so crazy and dangerous, most mobsters play along and look at the Scarface doll while Wesker pathetically tries to throw his voice. A secondary role for sure, but one with a lot of potential. Ideally, Larry David would take this role. He could nail the look and the insanity. Christopher Lloyd would suffice as well.

MAD HATTER (Jervis Tetch)
Last week, we suggested how Hugo Strange might work on the big screen, as Bruce Wayne's court or board-appointed shrink. Forget all the brainwashing hats and what not, we like the idea of Jarvis Tetch as a hypnosis specialist and associate of Strange. Let's say Bruce visits him as a way to maintain his dopey, superficial front while appeasing the worries of the press and Waynetech shareholders. Little does he know, Tetch's pretty good at what he does, and hypnotizes Bruce into revealing his identity. Excitement ensues. Ian Holm could definitely pull this one off.

MAN-BAT (Kirk Langstrom)
This is a tough one. How do you integrate what is essentially a werewolf into a reality-based drama? I suppose you can start by seriously playing up Langstrom's quest to heal deafness by learning the secret behind bats' sonar. Then you can make Langstrom's loss of hearing coincide with his gradual understanding of bats, which he soon learns to control and wield as a weapon. Or you can just make him turn into a freaking Man-Bat. This realism isn't going to last forever.

HUSH (Thomas Elliot)
Writers have been telling Batman stories for nearly seven decades now, yet the huge chunk of time between the murder of Bruce Wayne's parents and his emergence as Batman remains largely unexplored. It's one of the reasons why Batman Begins succeeded in blowing the minds of even the most diehard Bat-fans – we simply haven't seen enough stories that take place in this timeline. This is where our take on Hush comes into play.

First of all, lets just throw away the idea of a pre-adolescent orchestrating his parents' death – if we're talking realism, Hush (both the character and the story) is harder to accept than most of the outrageous characters on this list. Instead, lets make Tommy's parents die via cancer, a (natural) freak accident or anything random, make him a teenager and stick him in the same prep school dorm room as Bruce Wayne. The two teens come of age together and share a mutual love for risk taking and adventure. They go their separate ways after prep school. Years later, when an adult Tommy returns to Gotham, he encounters Batman and recognizes his body movement's as Bruce's. Intrigue ensues... As for an actor, we'd go with one of the biggest action stars in cinema right now - James Bond himself, Daniel Craig.

CLAYFACE (Matt Hagen)
Forget shape shifting. Think more along the lines of a master of disguise...Struggling Gotham-born actor Matt Hagan can't seem to catch on as the big blockbuster superstar he yearns to be. As folks like Batman, Joker and Two-Face become more and more synonymous with Gotham city, and his failures as an actor become more and more devastating to his fragile psyche, he finally decides that his big shot at fame is to embark on a career in crime. He then uses his considerable acting skills to disguise himself in inventive ways and commit horrific murders. We're going for a serial killer motif here. Any solid actor with good looks could fill this particular role.

HARLEY QUINN (Harleen Quinzel)
If Warners, DC and Nolan do indeed decide to recast the Joker following Heath Ledger's tragic death (and they should), then Harley Quinn should definitely factor into the film franchise. Though the film version would obviously require a different tone, there's no better place to look for inspiration that Bruce Timm and Paul Dini's Eisner Award-winning one-shot, Mad Love.

Keep this one straight with the comic, with a little twist: instead of Harley being the psychiatrist assigned to treat the Joker in Arkham, she's the grad student assistant/intern of the Arkham psychiatrist assigned to the Joker. Mr. J woos her slowly and subtly, until Harley is so madly in love with him she enables his escape.

DR. HUGO STRANGE
As Batman, Bruce Wayne is going to be forced to explain a whole lot of injuries with tales of skydiving, auto accidents, etc. It makes sense either Gotham's media or, perhaps more fittingly, Waynetech's board of directors would take notice and become concerned with Bruce's apparent death wish.

Bring in appointed psychiatrist Hugo Strange, who somehow – either by technological or purely intellectual methods – deduces Bruce's double identity. From there, the storyline potentials are endless. Like the Penguin, Strange is also probably better suited for a supporting role.

LADY SHIVA (Sandra Wu-Shan)
By our accounts, we've already brought Talia into the fold, so why not go the distance and bring in Lady Shiva as well? It'd be easy as hell to tie Shiva into either Bruce's training, the League of Assassins or both. And as Bruce's only equal in martial arts, it'd make for some killer fight scenes, assuming Nolan is willing to zoom out enough to show us a decent fight.

FIREFLY (Garfield Lynns)
Yeah, Firefly is a pretty damn obscure character. Still, Nolan's Batman universe is deeply rooted in reality, and the idea of crazy pyromaniac would work well in his world. Although using multiple villains hasn't always worked well in superhero films, we think Batman films can operate a lot like James Bond flicks, with the opening action sequence involving a rogue and a development that has only the slightest tie to the ensuing storyline. Forget the goofy costume. Who wouldn't enjoy seeing Batman and Firefly duke it out while Gotham burns in the background?

CORNELIUS STIRK
We dug deep into the bowels of our useless Batman knowledge for this one. Like Firefly (pyromania), Stirk gets the nod because his fundamental affliction (cannibalism) would work well in a real world setting. Wouldn't you love to see Batman bust into an apartment to find Stirk mixing up a stew of his victims? No?

KGBeast (Anatoli Knyazev)
This one's a no brainer for a supporting role. Whether you want to make this badass assassin the head of Gotham's Russian mob or a work-for-hire hitman, there's definitely room for this character in Nolan's world.

CALENDAR MAN (Julian Day)
Another great set-up character for Batman to trounce in the first ten minutes of a movie. Open on Gordon and Batman investigating his fourth or so calendar related movie, give us a nice sequence of the Dark Knight taking him down, then jump into the film's overall plot.


isild87

Co do Talii zgadzam sie - swietnie by pasowala do wijzi rezyserskiej Nolana,wedlug mnie nadawalby sie jescze Riddler - przeciez sam Oldman szepnal slowko o tej postaci
Hmm,moze jeszcze Bane - postac z wielkim potencjalem,zszargana paskudnie przez Schumachera w plastikowym Batman & Robin :)

Grim Knight

Taa.... Gośc w masce luchadora, który pompuje sie i rozrasta dzieki środkom chemicznym.... Jakoś średnio pasuje do wizji Nolana :D
"Okrutny ?wiat... Nabi?e? bro?. U?pi?e? go, dziurawi?c skro?. To nie jest zemsta, bracie od ko?yski. To moja praca- zabójcy. Artysty."

Adolf

Mozna byloby wprowadzic Robina. Wystarczylo by przeciez tylko umiejetnie napisac dla niego historie. Trzeba by tez od podstaw wykreowac jego wizerunek. Np. początkowo by byl to dziecinny Robin, jednak przez caly film zmienial by swój charakter na bardziej powazny. Historia moglaby przedstawiac Batmana, który początkowo odrzuca pomoc dzieciaka. Potem móglby zostac, np. porwany, a pomóc mu móglby Robin, który jakimiś meskimi decyzjami i walecznymi czynami zaskarbil by sobie sympatie Bruce'a.

Inna sprawa. W nastepnych filmach mozna by tez wykreowac postac Zattany. Wprowadzila by ona do serii pierwsze elementy fantastyki, dzieki czemu Nolan mialby ulatwione zadanie wprowadzając mniej realne postacie.

A moze mala odskocznia. Co byście powiedzieli na Hunters? Motyw śmierci jej rodziców i wloska mafia. Móglby pojawic sie tez pan Zagadka.

Grim Knight

lowczynie zawsze uwazalem za coś w stylu podróby samego Batmana. Nolan raczej nie jest zbyt chetny do wprowadzenia kolejnego trykociarza.

Po drugie, Zatanna jest calkowitym odlotem, który cisnąlby filmowego Mrocznego Rycerza w odmety superheroskich opowiastek pomiedzy meta-lud?mi, a tego Nolan nie chcialby raczej.
"Okrutny ?wiat... Nabi?e? bro?. U?pi?e? go, dziurawi?c skro?. To nie jest zemsta, bracie od ko?yski. To moja praca- zabójcy. Artysty."

Maxie Zeus

Macie tu kolejny ciekawy artykul o potencjalnym sequelu TDK...

With The Dark Knight now in theaters, IGN Movies is already looking ahead to a third Christopher Nolan-directed Batman movie and pondering what it might be about. Just as the ending of Batman Begins introduced the theme of escalation that its sequel explored, The Dark Knight established that things were going to get much worse for Batman and for Gotham City before they will get better. (PLEASE BE ADVISED OF SPOILERS FROM HERE ON OUT.)

TDK ends with Batman a wanted man, falsely accused of murdering five people including police officers. Batman sacrificed his own reputation in order to protect the memory of fallen district attorney Harvey Dent, who had transformed into the vengeful Two-Face. Gotham needed a hero, a figure of hope to believe in so that it could remain inspired to save itself from crime and corruption. In the end, Batman finds himself alone, hunted by his former police allies, and mourning the loss of his beloved Rachel Dawes.

A third Batman film would likely focus on the redemption of the Caped Crusader in the eyes of the public. What better or more obvious way for that to happen than for Batman to save the city (once again) from a villain bent on its destruction. The trick is to select villains that can be adapted to a real world environment AND fit in thematically with the storyline and stakes established in the first two films. That's a rather tall order and would seem to narrow down the list of potential villains quite a bit.

Why not just recast the Joker and bring back Two-Face, you ask? With Heath Ledger dead and his portrayal of the Joker now indelibly etched into filmgoers' minds, we think it highly unlikely that the filmmakers would recast the role to bring the Clown Prince back. It would also be tough for that character to top what he did to Batman and Gotham in TDK so perhaps once is enough. Likewise, the ending of TDK seemed to suggest that Harvey Dent/Two-Face was dead, although producer Emma Thomas told IGN after an early press screening that Dent's last scene was ambiguous enough to suggest that perhaps he was still alive.

If Dent is still alive, did Gordon have him covertly locked away in Arkham? Given TDK's overt political overtones, the idea of a secret prisoner hidden from the world would be in line with the ethical questions raised in the second film. Having Dent escape and show the city what he'd really become would at least get Batman off the hook for the murders that he didn't commit, but we don't see the filmmakers bringing Dent back either. Story-wise, what more could be done with Joker or Two-Face that TDK didn't accomplish? We suggest the filmmakers bring in new villains for the third movie, but that doesn't mean they can't be tied to the events of the first two films.

Employing a villain such as Talia al Ghul, the estranged daughter of Batman Begins' Ra's al Ghul, would not only tie Batman 3 back to the first film but also give the series a new female lead (and potential love interest) now that Rachel Dawes has been killed off. Talia could be out to finish the job her father had failed to do: destroy Gotham, which after TDK seems more hopeless than ever. Ra's may have had a Lazarus pit in the comics, but we don't see Nolan resorting to such comic book gimmickry to bring him back. Talia and a new League of Shadows would be enough. Talia would have the resources and will to bring about Gotham's destruction, the prevention of which might just put the Dark Knight back in the good graces of his hometown. (One problem with Talia, however, is that Warner Bros. might not want Nolan to use the character if they make a JLA movie and she's a villain in that.)





Perhaps the filmmakers could use a "No Man's Land"-esque storyline that finds Gotham City sealed off from the rest of the county, the victim of some terrible calamity such as a biochemical attack or a viral outbreak. In keeping with the series' war on terror metaphors, as well as the abandonment of Gotham City in "No Man's Land," a private corporation could be brought in to save and secure the city and those who have stayed behind. This outfit, obviously, would be a front for the villains who were behind the attack (Talia and the League). Batman would have to expose and defeat them, thus restoring himself as Gotham's savior. Even playboy Bruce Wayne could be redeemed in the public eye thanks to his philanthropic efforts in aiding his forsaken city.



What of the more colorful (and better known) members of Batman's rogue's gallery? Is there room for them in a third Nolan Bat-flick? The answer might be found in TDK.As the Joker told Batman, "You've changed things forever. There's no going back." A third film would likely show how this has panned out, with the underworld being divvied up between increasingly eccentric criminals, such as The Penguin (who is perhaps never referred to by that name), Black Mask and maybe even the Ventriloquist. None of them have to be the main villain; they could merely be there to show how wild and bizarre things are getting in Gotham. Some characters, no matter how popular they are, just might not fit into the world that Nolan has created or operate on a grand enough scale for the stakes that have been established in the first two films (nothing less than the salvation of Gotham City and Bruce Wayne's efforts not to abandon his own moral code in pursuit of that goal). Catwoman might be cool but how exactly does she fit into Nolan's take on the Batman universe? How do you explain a woman dressing up as a cat? It took a whole movie just to justify why Batman wore his outfit. The real world tone necessitates a supervillain who could conceivably exist. That's why we think the next major villain Batman will fight on-screen will be King Tut. Just kidding. No, our hunch is that the Riddler will be the secondary (yet better known) supervillain in the next film.



Given the ending of TDK, the most obvious antagonist for Batman to face in a third film would be Jim Gordon and the GCPD. With Batman now a wanted murderer (a cop killer to boot), it would make sense for the public and politicians to demand the GCPD bring in Batman once and for all. But seeing as how Batman has made short work of the cops in the past, they would need help catching him. The Mayor (or perhaps Boss Rupert Thorne) could demand that they bring in a hired gun to help get the job done. Enter the Riddler, who is currently portrayed in the comics as a good bad guy who helps the cops crack cases. He possesses a superior intellect and proves it by solving mysteries.



The trick with the Riddler is not portraying him as a Joker wannabe or a garish buffoon. By making him Batman's intellectual equivalent and a possible replacement hero for the city, he becomes more of a threat to Batman. What if Edward Nygma is brought in to find out who Batman really is and help the cops get him, but he secretly has his own nefarious agenda? Primary villain Talia al Ghul doesn't have to know that Bruce was Ra's pupil or is Batman, so her seeking Riddler's help would make that much more sense then. Whomever that next villain is their job will be to test Batman. Ra's al Ghul did so by seeing if Batman's compassion was also his weakness; the Joker pushed Batman to the brink of breaking his one rule (no killing) and almost revealing his true identity. Seeing as how the Riddler has always posed questions to Batman, he seems like the right villain to continue Nolan's tradition of testing Batman's ethical boundaries.

Hydro

Talia wg. mnie nie?le by pasowala, skoro byl juz Ra's Al Ghul, lecz wątpie, ze Nolan ją umieści... Chyba najbardziej Riddlera bym chcial zobaczyc. Takie jego powstanie z grobu, który wykopal mu Schumaher...
It's a funny world we live in.

(A)nonim

Talia w ogóle nie pasuje! Skoro nie bylo o niej nawet wzmianki w pierwszej cześci, to teraz pojawila by sie jak Filip z konopi, zupelnie znikąd, niemile skojarzenia z komiksowym Hushem.
Riddler nie! Goyer lub mlody Nolan powiedzieli ze chcieliby pokazac jeszcze niepokazanych w filmie i mniej znanych zloczy?ców i to jest bardzo dobry pomysl. Chociaz jezeli glówne duo z dwójki przezylo to chcialbym ich powrotu. No i moze nawet nie potrzebujemy trzeciego filmu?
Jestem Jen. Najpierw chciałabym założyć panu te rękawiczki. Sondaże mówią, że wyborcy lubią palce.

Gieferg

#219
Najlepszym mozliwym przeciwnikiem do cześci trzeciej jest Bane, taki jakiego znamy z Knightfallu. 2,5 godzinny film lączący elementy batman:venom, Vengeance of Bane i samego Knightfallu bylby świetnym zwie?czeniem trylogii Nolana, po prostu lepszego sobie nie potrafie wyobrazic, ale jak sądze... not gonna happen.

CytatTaa.... Gośc w masce luchadora, który pompuje sie i rozrasta dzieki środkom chemicznym.... Jakoś średnio pasuje do wizji Nolana

Taa, bo Bane to przede wszystkim kupa miesni na sterydach... tylko dla tych którzy nie mają o nim pojecia bo to jest jeden z tych najbardziej inteligentnych przeciwników Batmana, a samo rozrastanie sie u Nolana byloby i tak ograniczone do minimum (tzn praktycznie niewidoczne).
NACZELNY HEJTER MATTA REEVESA
O filmach i komiksach na filmożercach.

MaroBot

Takze uwazam ze Bane bylby świetną postacią którą Nolan móglby przedstawic w bardzo realistyczny i mroczny sposób , co do jego "rozrostu" i "Maski Luchadora" moznaby to wytlumaczyc tak ze Bane bylby wyje*anie duzy przez caly czas , a narkotyki którymi by sie szprycowal bylyby czymś na bazie Adrenaliny dzieki którym bylby praktycznie nieczuly na ból jednak efektem ubocznym zazywania tego byloby to ze cialo Bane'a powoli ulegaloby zniszczeniu i dlatego tez nosilby maske , zeby ukryc to co zrobily z nim narkotyki ... juz wyobrazam sobie scene w której Batman roztrzaskuje glowe Bane'a o lustro , tym samym niszcząc mu maske po czym przystawia jego glowe do odlamków szkla i krzyczy do niego tym swoim Bale'owskim Growlem "Look what you've become " (wy tez dostaliście dreszczy ?;):P)

Super Robin

Ostatnio zadowolily mnie sugestie obsady.Ale widac ze pojawi sie wniej wiele gwiazd:
Jonas Brothers(chodzi tu oczywiście o solowy wystep Nicka,Joe'a lub Kevina),Zac Efron,Vanessa Hudgens,Corbin Blue.Jeśli któyś z JB mial zagrac Robina,to raczej Nick czyli mój ulubiony(ale raczej zmienil by fryzure,bo raczej Robinowi nie do twarzy jasnobrązowych
kreconych wlosach).

LelekPL

Cytat: Super Robin w 30 Lipiec  2008, 15:04:56
Ostatnio zadowolily mnie sugestie obsady.Ale widac ze pojawi sie wniej wiele gwiazd:
Jonas Brothers(chodzi tu oczywiście o solowy wystep Nicka,Joe'a lub Kevina),Zac Efron,Vanessa Hudgens,Corbin Blue.Jeśli któyś z JB mial zagrac Robina,to raczej Nick czyli mój ulubiony(ale raczej zmienil by fryzure,bo raczej Robinowi nie do twarzy jasnobrązowych
kreconych wlosach).
omg

Daruj sobie takie posty, bo one nic nie wprowadzają do rozmowy
: 30 Lipiec  2008, 15:12:00

 Ale coz tu wiecej dodawac... Zac Efron? Jonas Brothers? OMG jest chyba najlepszym komentarzem! Sam nie wiem co jest bardziej zabawne... to ze ktos uwierzyl w ta durna plotke, to ze komus ten pomysl sie rzeczywiscie podoba, czy to ze ja niestety wiem o kogo chodzi? :)

Huntersky

<br />http://huntersky.deviantart.com<br />WHATTUP, BIOTCH! - Harrison Ford

(A)nonim

CytatTaa, bo Bane to przede wszystkim kupa miesni na sterydach... tylko dla tych którzy nie mają o nim pojecia bo to jest jeden z tych najbardziej inteligentnych przeciwników Batmana, a samo rozrastanie sie u Nolana byloby i tak ograniczone do minimum (tzn praktycznie niewidoczne).
To jest bezproblemowe, Venom mialby dzialanie podobne do amfetaminy tylko zancznie silniejsze. Sam Bane bylby juz mocno wypakowany dzieki cwiczeniom, a maska (tylko przypominająca luchadorską) sluzylaby do ukrycia jego tozsamości, bo w ko?cu zabija ludzi.
Te najnowsze propozycje obsady to nie powiem co bo regulamin zabrania.
Jestem Jen. Najpierw chciałabym założyć panu te rękawiczki. Sondaże mówią, że wyborcy lubią palce.