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Batman and Anime: Yeah!!!!

Posted : 1 year, 9 months ago on 5 July 2022 08:10

Just before the release of the masterpiece, The Dark Knight, Warner Brothers decided to follow the success of what they did with the AniMatrix, releasing a DVD of short Anime films. I was disappointed by AniMatrix, which was marketed essential viewing before seeing the second two Matrix films. They were a damp squib and only one of the shorts had anything to do with the main films. But luckily I quite enjoyed Batman Gotham Knight.

Batman Gotham Knight is six short film, around 12 minutes long, telling different stories about the Dark Knight. One includes a very interesting one about some skater teenagers saying they saw Batman, and came up with three very different versions of what Batman is. That short was good, and that was the weakest one as well. Other stories include Batman fighting against the Russian and Italian Mafia who are in the middle of a gang war, fighting the sewers against Scarecrow and Killer Croc, testing a new bit of equipment, a flashback story set in India and stopping Deadshot killing Lt. Gordon. My personal favourites out of the shorts are Working Through Pain and Deadshot, both telling good stories, and wonderfully action packed.

Batman Gotham Knight was marketed as a number of shorts set in-different the events of Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. To me it felt more Christopher Nolan's films were more an influence then directly linked. Another influence must have been the great 90s animated series, with Kevin Conroy reprising his role as Bruce Wayne/Batman. The direction and the art is so wonderful to, I love anime and I like it when American and Japanese ideas are combined together. The storytelling and action is excellent. There are detailed character designs, like in Working Through Pain you got a real scene of India and young Bruce Wayne looked and fought like Bruce Lee. There are top writers and directors working on the shorts, including David S. Goyer, the writer of Batman Begins and the Dark Knight. Like the Nolan Batmans, the shorts try to shot a dark, more unpleasant Gotham, in a realistic city. There is corruption, and crime from low level thugs to organised crime leaders. Batman here is a symbol of hope and change for the city. The storytellers also try to take a more grounded view of the villains, even trying to make Killer Croc a little more believable (i.e. not a mutated crocodile).

Unlike the AniMatrix, the stories are interlinked in some way, making the shorts as a whole stronger, more like a good TV series. They are recurring themes like the gang war.

If I had to complain, I would have like to have seen more. I would have liked the shorts to have been longer, like 20 to 30 minutes. I think this level of animation and storytelling could, and should work as a excellent TV series, with a more adult audience because of the themes and violence.

Worth watching if you can get it at a good price.


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Batman: Gotham Knight

Posted : 12 years, 4 months ago on 12 December 2011 05:04

Batman: Gotham Knight is a series of six short-films starring every comic nerdā€™s favorite Man in Black, and animated by various anime companies. Naturally, like any anthology film (or book), it is all peaks and valleys. So, I would like to talk about each of the shorts individually.

Letā€™s begin.

Have I Got a Story For You
For anyone whoā€™s seen ā€œLegends of the Dark Knightā€ in Batman: The Animated Series, this story feels completely redundant, right down to the types of characters that the kids represent. While it may not add anything new, narratively speaking, to the formula of that episode, it does provide some interesting visuals.

Generally, this is the weakest short in the set, and much of that has to do with the stylization of the animation. While it is continually fluid, thereā€™s a certain crudeness and unappealing anemic quality to each characterā€™s physique. None of them look like a natural human being, arms and legs bend in places they shouldnā€™t and there doesnā€™t seem to be a consistent musculature to any of them.

Scenes in which Batman appears as an amorphous vampire who can turn into a silver puddle and then manifest himself whole at will and as a demonic humanoid bat-creature are joys. Itā€™s a pity that they add up to nothing by the time it ends.

Crossfire
Crossfire sees two partners taking a captured criminal back to the Narrows. While completing this task they argue over the nature of Batman and his impact/presence on Gothamā€™s demimonde. Itā€™s more interesting for portraying two cops getting into a philosophical argument about Batman ā€“ the man, the icon, the hero, the symbol.

Batman never really appears in this short, his screentime being limited to a silhouette at the beginning and a very real presence after the gang warfare erupts and captures the two officers in the, yep, crossfire. Limited screentime aside, Batmanā€™s felt throughout thanks to the debate about his effectiveness. It reminded me of ā€œA Bullet for Bullock,ā€ a noir revenge story in which a morally dubious cop must ask Batman, a man he considers to be just as bad as the scum he brings to justice, for help.

Field Test
One of the odd things about anime is the way in which dreamy, hunky boys are drawn as androgynous, long-haired, glassy eyed twinks. And here we get to glimpse a Bruce Wayne who looks an awful lot like Zac Efron.

The storyline features Lucius Fox creating a device which will deflect bullets off of Batman. While using it during a gang war between The Russian and Sal Maroni, a bullet deflects off of Batman and grazes into a henchman. A distressed Batman rushes him to the hospital, and politely gives the device back to Fox saying that heā€™s willing to sacrifice his own life but not anyone elseā€™s. Itā€™s decent, but never really achieves greatness.

In Darkness Dwells
So far, none of the shorts have featured any of the more colorful villains in Batmanā€™s rogues gallery. Weā€™ve been regulated to gangsters and turf-wars, which are fun in small doses but grow tedious after three consecutive films.

In Darkness Dwells features both Killer Croc and the Scarecrow. And thank God that weā€™ve finally been treated to some costumed villainy for Batman to fight. Dwells is the most overtly noir of all of the shorts, and the better for it. From the severe angles to the gaunt shadows and reliance on sickly yellows and browns, Dwells looks like a Batman cartoon as imagined by Orson Welles circa-The Lady from Shanghai or Touch of Evil.

The plot could have taken a backseat to the visual feast, the first truly beautiful and arresting one in the bunch, but it adds a further layer or pulpy goodness. The dialog recalls the best of Hammett, or even Frank Millerā€™s work on Batman: Year One and Sin City. If it werenā€™t for the next film, this would easily be my favorite.

Working Through the Pain
One of the great joys of Batman is that he is mortal. Thereā€™s a perverse pleasure in seeing damaged, obsessed hero being made to bleed. His vulnerability makes him relatable and unique in a way that other heroes like Wolverine or Superman can never hope to achieve with their invincibility. Batmanā€™s also animated in a more slender form, making this feel like a true early-years story.

Working Through the Pain sees Batman having been shot and struggling to climb his way out the sewers alive. In-between setbacks, conversations with Alfred, and performing first aid on himself, we sees flashbacks to Bruce Wayne training in India to, you guessed it, work through the pain.

Itā€™s an astonishing work from top to bottom. Batman: Gotham Knight takes a while to get going, but by the time we reach the last three films itā€™s finally started cooking. Pain is easily the best, for a variety of reasons. The animation is beautiful, the voice work is great, but itā€™s the story that really allows this one to soar. Itā€™s an untold story, and it provides a great access point to the man and the myth behind the cowl.

Deadshot
Deadshot explores the symbiotic and perverse relationship in which the very things that spawned Batman, and his obsessive and single-minded mission, can also create the very enemies which infect his city. As Bruce explains, the seductive power of a gun repulses and fascinates him, but our villain for this piece is Deadshot, a villain who sees nothing but simplicity, artistry, and beauty in the destructive power of a gun.

Itā€™s a stellar ending to the omnibus, but it offers nothing truly new to the animated legacy of Batman. After Batman: The Animated Series, everything seems cute and quaint by comparison. The intelligence with which the writers and animators delved into the psyches of their characters and turned up surprising and moving images and bits of dialog in a supposed childrenā€™s cartoon remain unparalleled, especially since Gotham Knight feels like retreads of episodes of B:TAS given freer reign and the ability to swear and show blood.


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