Time may
change me...
A critical difference between comic book
protagonists, especially superheroes, and their counterparts in
literature is that the former are practically immortal. The obvious
reason for this is that books are seldom serialized, while most
comic books are. Therefore, it is understandable for the
personalities of comic book heroes to evolve over time, and
sometimes end up as the polar opposite of what they started out as.
This typically happens in cases where more than one writers
contribute to the comic, and more often than not one or more of
them start drifting towards mediocrity. The character is then
revamped to renew the waning interest of readers and/or add a new
dimension to the character's makeup.
Characters like Tintin and Asterix, and their entire supporting
cast, were very tightly knit by their creators and retained their
essential qualities all through their "careers". Their enduring
popularity is largely due to the extremely professional and
well-developed "script" of the comics. While Tintin relied on the
continuous success of a formula that struck a chord with the
readers, Asterix surprised its audience by incorporating
sci-fi/fantasy elements into the stories. But none of these
witnessed a significant change in the portrayal of the leading
protagonists. On the other hand, collaborative efforts such as
Archie Comics tend to develop a loose outline of a character, and
keep revising and revisiting it as and when the storyline demands.
In case of superhero comics, it is relatively easier to add a novel
hue to the character's personality. In many cases, it is as simple
as adding a new superpower to his repertoire. Other than this,
general revamp tactics include new origin stories, new love
interests, and in cases as extreme as DC's Crisis on Infinite
Earths, new universes.
The curious case of The Bat
Batman, and
also his arch-nemesis Joker, are somewhat different in this regard.
Batman's origin story has remained almost unchanged throughout his
80-year history. He has no superpowers, no constant love interest
(Catwoman is a recurring one, but clearly not in the same vein as
Lois Lane to Superman or Mary-Jane Watson to Spiderman). It would
appear that his character would be tricky to revamp. Maybe it is
too. Nevertheless, Batman has possibly witnessed more character
revisions than most other popular superheroes. Superman has always
been the big blue boy scout. The fact that he is always meant to do
the "right thing" makes his character rather monochromatic.
Spiderman has always been a bumbling, troubled and confused
crime-fighter. His choice to become a superhero wasn't entirely a
conscious one, it resulted from an accident which altered him
physiologically. Although he could have chosen not to fight crime,
it's hard to conceive that he would've lived a normal life.
As for Batman, one can argue that the murder of his parents was an
accident that altered him psychologically, in a way similar to,
though not the same as Spiderman. Be that as it may, a
psychological change always leaves a lot more wiggle-room for
reshaping the character. Spiderman's accident gave him superpowers,
Batman's gave him nightmares.
The early era
But we're
getting ahead of ourselves. To begin with, Batman was created as a
typical private detective of the 1930s, with an intense hatred for
criminals. He was born in the era of pulp, and the influence was
clearly visible. In many ways, he was quite similar to Sandman (the
original pulp detective of the 1940s, not the protagonist of the
Neil Gaiman series or the Spiderman villain). He was bitter towards
a world that took his parents from him at an early age, and this
served to fuel his brooding persona. It is interesting to contrast
the seedy surroundings of Gotham in which he operates with the
dazzling skyline of Superman's home turf Metropolis. While Superman
was the personification of the "American dream", Batman's stories
were in many ways, the representation of the concomitant "American
nightmare" - the crime, the increasingly violent and immoral
society that accompanied the progress and prosperity - and one
man's fight against it.
However,
the problem with a character that reflects an era is that it needs
to change when the era changes. And so, in the years following
World War II, DC Comics "adopted a postwar editorial direction that
increasingly de-emphasized social commentary in favor of
lighthearted juvenile fantasy." Once his environment was changed to
a more cheerful one, there was no way Batman could continue with
his dark and menacing image. Instead, he too became a boy scout but
with a costume that now seemed even funnier than Superman's. He got
himself a teenage boy as a sidekick, and it just got worse from
there on. Interest in the character waned, because the readers
already had a superhero who was much better at being a
goody-two-shoes. As if this wasn't enough, psychologist Frederic
Wertham criticized Batman comics for their supposed homosexual
overtones and argued that Batman and Robin were portrayed as
lovers. By the latter half of the 1950s, female characters such as
Batwoman and Batgirl were also introduced to make the comics more
warm and sunny. Batman also became a part of the Justice League of
America around this time (1960 to be exact), which further
reinstated his image as a "regular"
superhero.
The rapidly declining popularity of
Batman forced DC to introduce the "New Look" Batman in 1964. The
detective-oriented stories returned, and the campy sidekicks were
retired or killed off. At this point, one might have thought that
Batman was returning closer to his original portrayal. One would be
so wrong.
The darkly "sunny" times
The
Batman television series, which debuted in 1966, is now
remembered as the worst thing to ever have happened to the
franchise. But it was immensely popular in its time, and this
drastically impacted the image of the character in comic books too.
Adam West's Batman was an unfit comic vigilante in an
embarrassingly tight costume, who slid down a pole a la
firemen to reach the Batcave, and the screen flashed "KAPOW" when
he punched criminals. He was a sad sad parody of his dark brooding
former self. Robin as his sidekick was even more of a joke,
figuratively as well as literally, and most of his sentences
started with "Holy" and ended with "Batman". Although initially
successful, as most parodies are, the show as well the comics
eventually lost its audience. As the comic editor Julius Schwartz
himself said, "When the television show was a success, I was asked
to be campy, and of course when the show faded, so did the comic
books."
By the
late 1960s, a conscious effort to distance the character from this
comic image had started through the collaboration of writer Dennis
O'Neil and artist Neal Adams. Batman once again found himself in
grim surroundings, investigating dark, dirty cases, and sick
criminal minds. Some of the stories had a gothic feel to them and
nearly bordered on horror, as the readers were made to realize once
again that the bat costume is not supposed to be funny. However,
the popularity of the franchise continued to drop throughout the
1970s and early 1980s, until some lifelong fans and graphic novel
veterans decided to do some damage
repair.
The
resurgence of the anti-hero
Frank Miller's 1986 limited series
Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, which tells the story of
a 50-year-old Batman coming out of retirement in a possible future,
reinvigorated the character. DKR, as it is affectionately
referred to by fans, was not only critically acclaimed, but was a
major financial success too. Although the importance of this may be
downplayed by "true" fans, it is noteworthy that the Batman of the
70s was critically acclaimed too, but was still on the verge of
being cancelled due to lack of popularity. Miller pretty much laid,
or maybe re-laid, the ground for Batman and everything related to
him as we see it today. The scary Joker, the hopelessly corrupt
Gotham city police force, Bruce Wayne's recurring nightmares about
his parents' murder, and of course, to top it all he added a dash
of Batman vs. Superman to the mix. The artwork was also markedly
different, bordering on avant-garde, and in a macabre way.
Miller's Batman was morally ambiguous, in the sense that although
he had very high moral standards which he chose to impose on the
society that just refused to get in order, neither his opinions nor
his methods always fell within the moral bounds prescribed by
society. He was, in many ways, an anti-hero, who despised the fact
that Superman had "sold out" to the government and derided his
righteous attitude as boy scout-like. The concept of Batman and
Joker being each other's raison d'etre also gained
mainstream popularity following this series. Readers lapped it
up.
During the same period, DC was in
the process of rebooting the histories of its major characters
through the Crisis on Infinite Earths series. Batman's origins were
re-written by Frank Miller in the Year One storyline, which also
attempted to beef up the character of Jim
Gordon.Alan Moore continued this dark
trend with 1988's 48-page one-shot Batman: The Killing Joke, in
which the Joker, attempting to drive Commissioner Gordon insane,
cripples Gordon's daughter Barbara (Batgirl), and then kidnaps and
tortures the commissioner, physically and psychologically. Moore
continued the theme of Batman being the reason for Joker's
existence and vice-versa. In fact, the last few panels, with the
two arch enemies laughing like madmen over a silly joke (the
Killing Joke) exemplifies just how beautifully twisted this
superhero really is.
Following
this, the character has essentially stuck to its image, despite
minor variations. The 1988 release A Death in the Family and 1993's
Knightfall are good examples. Although the artwork was not as
unconventional as DKR, the themes remained morbid. After sustained
popularity throughout the 1990s, Jeph Loeb's 2003 Batman: Hush
series marked the return of Batman at the
to
Movies
The portrayal of Batman
and other related characters in other media has followed more or
less the same pattern as in the comics, but over a much shorter
period of time. Tim Burton's two Batman movies were dark and
violent in a depressing way, much like the early Batman comics as
well as DKR
and The Killing Joke, which served as his primary inspirations.
Michael Keaton made a sufficiently dark Batman, while Jack
Nicholson figuring as the best Joker until Heath Ledger came along.
However, Batman
Returns, the second movie
in the series, turned out to be too morbid for the mainstream
audience, and the baton passed on to Joel Schumacher to revive
popular interest. His portrayal of the franchise took it back to
its 60s campy feel, but with bigger budgets and elaborate special
effects. While Batman
Forever (1995) was a huge
commercial success, and Val Kilmer was not too much of a compromise
as Batman, try pitting Tommy Lee Jones' part comic act as Harvey
Dent/Two-Face against the character as depicted in
DKR or the recent version portrayed by Aaron
Eckhart in The Dark
Knight (2008). In both the
latter cases, the character of Harvey Dent is seriously scarred,
not only physically, but emotionally as well, and Miller makes it
clear that even if his face is fixed, the emotional scars can't be
remedied by plastic surgery. Schumacher's next offering
Batman & Robin
(1997) was not just a bad
Batman movie, but a really bad movie from every aspect. George
Clooney, in his nippled costume, was a pathetic caricature of the
dark knight, and the others are not even worth mention.
Then, following a 8-year
hiatus, Christopher Nolan re-launched the character the way it was
meant to be.
The rest, as they don't say, is the
present.
Reference: Wikipedia
Images: In Entertainment, Studio Daily,Wikipedia,
DC Wikia
Post Comments