10/31/2023 0 Comments Batman forever movie references![]() ![]() ![]() The third installment of Warner Bros.' initial Batman film series, it is a stand-alone sequel to Batman Returns starring Val Kilmer, replacing Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne / Batman, alongside Tommy Lee Jones, Jim Carrey, Nicole Kidman, and Chris O'Donnell, while Michael Gough, and Pat Hingle reprise their roles. Batman Forever (on-screen title is simply Forever) is a 1995 American superhero film directed by Joel Schumacher and produced by Tim Burton, based on the DC Comics character Batman by Bob Kane and Bill Finger. This would lead more fluently to his final showdown with the Riddler, and his assertion that he has consciously embraced both of his identities. Bruce eventually realizes that he was not to blame for the tragic killings, and all of his memories of Batman finally resurface. They had actually gone to see Zorro (as in the comics) upon his father's insistence. Bruce finds the abandoned diary and reads the last entry more carefully. Alfred finally goads him into visiting the hidden portion of the Batcave. After Bruce wakes up from the shot, he has temporary amnesia. The Batcave actually had a hidden layer beneath the Batmobile floor, explaining how the Batwing and the Batboat were saved from the climactic bombing. This is hinted in the Theatrical Cut from his repressed memories, and the line of Bruce to Alfred "I killed them" referring to the death of the Flying Graysons. The red diary subplot was extended, with Bruce having guilt over his parents' death, since he insisted on going to the theater on that fatal night. Many scenes were removed from the final cut for pacing reasons. ![]()
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