
Forever would have us believe Bruce has lost touch with his inner Dark Knight and needs to be reminded of why he dons the cape and cowl every night. In Forever, Bruce is plagued by nightmares of his parents' murders, their subsequent funeral and the giant bat that inspired his costumed identity. Kilmer is caught in the middle of that uneasy clash between old and new, particularly when it comes to Bruce Wayne's character arc. Batman & Robin may be an objectively worse movie in many respects, but at least it's more honest about what it's trying to be (in other words, a flashy, feature-length toy commercial). Traces of Burton and composer Danny Elfman's Gothic fairy tale sensibilities still remain, particularly when it comes to the flashback scenes and locales like Arkham Asylum. Day 6 - Ben Affleck's Superhuman Dark KnightĪ lot of what doesn't work about Batman Forever stems from the film neither being a full-fledged sequel to Batman Returns nor one that makes clean break from the Burton films.Day 5 - Christian Bale and the Burden of Heroism.Day 4 - George Clooney Makes Batman Likable.Day 3 - Is Val Kilmer the Funniest Batman?.Day 2 - Michael Keaton as the Haunted Dark Knight.Day 1 - Adam West: The Bright Knight or a Sad Clown?.



More From The Quest for the Perfect Batman Actor In day 3 of our recurring look back at the Batman movie actors, we examine why Kilmer perhaps deserves more credit than he's been given for bringing a little levity back into Bruce Wayne's life. Forever was a film that attempted to both maintain continuity with the previous Burton movies and forge a new, more commercial path forward for the franchise. Even with all their on-set disagreements, the late director Joel Schumacher often spoke very highly of Kilmer's take on the Dark Knight.
