AKA Batman: The Movie
Starring Adam West, Burt Ward, Lee Meriwether, Cesar Romero, Burgess Meredith, Frank Gorshin, Alan Napier, Neil Hamilton, Stafford Repp
Directed by Leslie H. Martinson
Expectations: Moderate. I expect to have fun.
I’m sure that anyone sitting down to watch the 1966 Batman film based on the TV series knows what they’re getting into, but just in case you don’t, Batman is pure camp. It’s ridiculous, over the top, and going directly at the laughs. When Batman runs around the pier searching for a place to dispose of a bomb, it’s not nail-biting, it’s hilarious. It’s important to know this going in, because you must leave all expectations and logic at the door. The filmmakers immediately acknowledge this as well, with a rather funny dedication that opens the film.
The plot is somewhat inconsequential as you’re really here for the laughs and the crazy Batman hijinks. I tried my best to follow it through its many twists and turns, but by the end I found myself completely lost in a sea of exploding sharks, dehydrated pirates and Robin shooting a giant raygun into the sea. That’s not to say the film is incoherent, just so overboard and ridiculous that it becomes mind numbing and easy to lose track of exactly what’s going on. But at the end of the day, the most important thing is that the major Batman villains have teamed up so our caped crusaders must face off against not one, not two, but four supervillains!
As Batman was made in 1966, and its lineage is firmly rooted in television, the film reminds me to a great degree of the original Star Trek. From Adam West’s Shatner-esque line delivery to the well-made, colorful sets, it’s a superhero, camp-focused Star Trek. And consequentially I am also reminded of the very early Shaw Brothers films, as they, having also arrived in the same period, have always reminded me in ways of the original Star Trek. But Batman’s fight on the “open sea” in front of a giant, blue-sky matte painting with obvious ripples and imperfections seals the Shaw Brothers connection. Shaw Studios always had some glaring evidence that their sets were sets, and the sky was usually the most obvious. And just because we’re being reminded of things in this paragraph, I’ll also say that the huge matte painting will also make you think of The Truman Show.
The film’s style and tone also seem to be directly referencing and playing off of James Bond’s established tropes. Some of these are also Batman’s tropes, but at the time this was made I feel that James Bond was more firmly rooted in the American movie-going psyche, and we all know that the James bond films hammer home those same tropes again and again. So when an obviously suspicious, but very beautiful Russian girl approaches Bruce Wayne mid-press conference, we all pretty much know she’s not to be trusted… except Bruce, of course.
The film is very well-shot for what it is, although it does feel like a really long episode instead of a true movie. It’s been a long time since I’ve watched the show, but it seemed like it the film featured the same shooting style and visual aesthetics that I remember, and the sets for the main locations were definitely the same. This film was made in between the first and second seasons of the show, so it all adds up. I did enjoy that all the villain’s lair scenes were shot entirely with dutch angles to give them the more ominous, evil feel that the angles provide.
As long as you know what you’re in for, Batman is good fun. I was a huge fan of the show growing up, but somehow I never saw the film. Watching it brought back a lot of memories of sitting on the floor and watching Batman punch evildoers in the face with a giant POW! blasting onto the screen. It still makes me smile and I really enjoyed watching Batman. It’s super loud, and can be exhausting at times with the sheer amount of shit packed into this film, but it’s fun and that’s really all they set out to achieve with this one.