Batman: Year One (2011)
Starring the voices of:
Benjamin McKenzie
Bryan Cranston
Eliza Dushku
Katee Sackhoff
Directed by Sam Liu and Lauren Montgomery
Based on Batman: Year One by Frank Miller, this dark film has all the
requirements that will make all Batman fans crave for more and make new ones
wonder what they’ve been missing. The Bruce character was well deployed, and
such deployment is still yet to be toppled, as the one pulled off by Michael
Keaton still remains the best Batman/Bruce Wayne character I have seen in
either a movie or cartoon.
This addition to the series of DC animations sees our hero’s first year
in the crime-fighting life. We see Bruce emerge from the dark trying to
discover himself, to evolve from fighting on the streets to protecting the
just, then to hiding under a mask. It also introduces Gordon, as he too moves
to Gotham from Chicago with his family.
We hardly see movies that depict heroes as humans. Although the Bat is
human under the mask, his enemies didn’t think so. The movie has scenes that
include Bat being shot and wounded with blood dripping, and him finding it hard
to move about. Such scenes didn’t happen just once.
Hey! Who jumps around in a costume, fighting bad guys with guns and
expects not to be stabbed, shot and hit one too many times?
Our Bat was, and we get to see him injured. (Not taking all the bullets
on his chest and still finding it hard to deal with a mere human called Lex,
just making a point.)
Both Gordon and Bruce run into one another at different times, with
Gordon suspecting Bruce Wayne as the new vigilante named Batman. Side stories
are also introduced. We see Catwoman’s character being formed, and we also get to see what made Gordon
rise in the ranks to become commissioner.
What makes this movie different from the others before it is the side it
takes, which is, THE DARK SIDE.
Meant for mature viewing, Year One has it all — from fights, adultery,
drinking, corruption, blackmail and all that is required to make a hero stand
out in a corrupt society.
One thing I felt did not work is that after a while, I felt the
humanizing of Batman kind of marred the spectacle of the character, Batman. Who
seems to always be thinking and be one step ahead of everyone, here he seems to
bumble around more than I would like, affecting the mystique of what makes him Batman and what makes villains fear him.
The movie is meant to be a prelude to the game Arkham City, which was
one of the best games of 2011.
Directed by Animation Director Sam Liu, and the scenes and the animation
are a little different from the shading you may be used to. Which for me I did
not like, but it did not affect the explosive scenes that have action and
fights drawing in from all around.
This is a better movie than Under the Red Hood and as interesting as Public
Enemies, but different from both in the all-out action and fight scenes that
were introduced.
I recommend it.

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