Bruce Wayne: Last News

+59

Jonathan Nolan Says One of Christopher Nolan’s Unmade Film Projects Is A Comedy

The annals of unmade Christopher Nolan films are not particularly long. Perhaps one of the legendary projects mentioned in the past was Nolan’s unrealized Howard Hughes project—some brief elements of which he folded into Bruce Wayne’s recluse period in “The Dark Knight Rises.” There was also, at one point in the past, Nolan’s intentions of remaking the surreal 1960s TV series, “The Prisoner,” created by and starring Patrick McGoohan (which is loosely rumored to be among the next projects he is thinking about making post “Oppenheimer”).
theplaylist.net

All news where Bruce Wayne is mentioned

dailymail.co.uk
81%
557
Batman voice actor Kevin Conroy dead at 66: voiced caped crusader in multiple animated shows
Kevin Conroy, a voice actor who played the voice of Batman in multiple animated show has died. He was 66. The actor's publicist says Kevin died Thursday following  a 'short battle with cancer.'The news was announced in a statement Friday from the actor's co-star, Diane Pershing, who provided the voice for Poison Ivy, who wrote 'Sad news: our beloved voice of Batman, Kevin Conroy, died yesterday.'  Kevin Conroy who played the voice of Batman has died as age 66'He's been ill for a while but he really put in a lot of time at the cons, to the joy of all of his fans. He will be sorely missed not just by the cast of the series but by his legion of fans all over the world.' Conroy's co-stars spoke fondly of their friend in an obituary released by publicist Gary Miereanu. Mark Hamill, who played The Joker opposite Conroy's Batman, honored his friend, saying, 'Kevin was perfection.'  Batman: Conroy began providing the voice of Batman/Bruce Wayne in the acclaimed Batman: The Animated Series in 1992 and continued to play the part in various spinoffs in the DC Universe Like a brother: Mark Hamill, who provided the voice of the Joker opposite Conroy's Batman called the late actor, 'one of my favorite people on the planet, and I loved him like a brother''He was one of my favorite people on the planet,' he continued, 'and I loved him like a brother.
variety.com
64%
832
‘The People’s Joker’ Review: Trans Comic Finds Her Truth in Unauthorized Batman Parody
Peter Debruge Chief Film Critic In the DC Extended Universe, it’s not the villains who have identity issues, but the heroes. Bruce Wayne watched his parents get murdered, adopted a teenage sidekick and now spends his nights cosplaying as the creature everyone associates with vampires. Kal-El also saw his parents die and goes through life trying to pass as the earthling Clark Kent, wearing spandex under his work clothes, just in case. These are not the traits of well-adjusted normies, and as such, there’s enormous subversive appeal in seeing trans artist Vera Drew turn such iconic characters inside-out in the illicitly made marvel that is “The People’s Joker.” Coming from a place of deep fan love and equally profound institutional mistrust, Drew’s anarchic feature-length parody impishly treads the line of fair use, so much so that the helmer pulled the film from the Toronto Film Festival after its raucous Midnight Madness premiere, citing “rights issues.” But what did she expect? The irreverent underground project reimagines the Joker’s origin story as a queer coming-of-age/coming-to-terms narrative, using a mishmash of styles: mostly crude live-action of the kind you expect from public-access programming (shot against greenscreens, then composited with rudimentary CG sets), embellished with various forms of homemade animation.
DMCA