To enter the game again, tap the game iconContact our Support Team!WB GamesEnglishBatmanBatman Return to ArkhamBatman: Arkham VRBatman Arkham AsylumBatman Arkham CityBatman Arkham City Armored EditionBatman Arkham City LockdownBatman Arkham KnightBatman Arkham OriginsBatman Arkham UnderworldGotham City ImpostorsDC ComicsDC Comics LegendsInjustice: Gods Among UsInjustice 2Harry Potter & The Wizarding WorldFantastic Beasts: Cases From the Wizarding WorldLEGOLEGO Batman 3LEGO Batman 2 LEGO FriendsLEGO FusionLEGO Harry Potter Years 1-4LEGO Harry Potter Years 5-7LEGO The HobbitLEGO Jurassic WorldLEGO The Lord of The RingsLEGO Marvel's AvengersLEGO Marvel SuperheroesThe LEGO Movie VideogameLEGO Ninjago: Shadow of RoninLEGO WorldsLEGO Star Wars: The Force AwakensThe Lord of the RingsGuardians of Middle-earthLord of the Rings War in the NorthMiddle-earth: Shadow of MordorMad MaxMortal KombatMortal Kombat XMortal Kombat X MobileMortal Kombat (2011)ScribblenautsScribblenauts RemixThe Witcher 3: Wild HuntWWE ImmortalsWB Games General FAQOtherDying LightF.E.A.R.Game PartyGauntletHappy Feet 2Lollilpop ChainsawScooby Doo and The Spooky SwampSesame Street Cookie's Counting CarnivalWitcher 2Witcher 3: Wild HuntDeutschAndereLollipop ChainsawBatmanBatman Arkham CityGotham City ImpostorsBatman Arkham KnightBatman Arkham OriginsBatman Arkham UnderworldDC ComicsDC Comics LegendsInjustice
: Gods Among UsHarry Potter & The Wizarding WorldFantastic Beasts: Cases From the Wizarding WorldLEGOLEGO Batman 2LEGO Harry Potter Years 1-4LEGO Harry Potter Years 5-7LEGO The Lord of the RingsMad MaxMiddle-earth: Shadow of MordorMortal KombatMortal Kombat XMortal Kombat (2011)WB Games General FAQEspañolBatmanBatman Return to ArkhamBatman: Arkham VRBatman Arkham CityGotham City ImpostorsBatman Arkham KnightBatman Arkham City LockdownBatman Arkham OriginsBatman Arkham UnderworldDC ComicsDC Comics LegendsInjustice: Gods Among UsHarry Potter & The Wizarding WorldFantastic Beasts: Cases From the Wizarding WorldLEGOLEGO Batman 2LEGO Harry Potter Years 1-4LEGO Harry Potter Years 5-7LEGO The Lord of the RingsMad MaxMiddle-earth: Shadow of MordorMortal KombatMortal Kombat XMortal Kombat (2011)ScribblenautsScribblenauts RemixWB Games General FAQOtroLollipop ChainsawFrançaisBatmanBatman: Arkham VRBatman Arkham CityBatman Arkham KnightBatman Arkham OriginsBatman Arkham UnderworldGotham City ImpostorsDC ComicsDC Comics LegendsInjustice: Gods Among UsHarry Potter & The Wizarding WorldFantastic Beasts
: Cases From the Wizarding WorldLEGOLEGO Batman 2Lollipop ChainsawMad MaxMiddle-earth: Shadow of MordorMortal KombatMortal Kombat XMortal Kombat (2011)WB Games General FAQItalianBatmanBatman Return to ArkhamBatman: Arkham VRBatman Arkham CityGotham City ImpostorsBatman Arkham KnightBatman Arkham City LockdownBatman Arkham OriginsBatman Arkham UnderworldDC ComicsDC Comics LegendsInjustice: Gods Among UsHarry Potter & The Wizarding WorldFantastic Beasts: Cases From the Wizarding WorldLEGOLEGO Batman 2LEGO Harry Potter Years 1-4LEGO Harry Potter Years 5-7LEGO The Lord of the RingsLollipop ChainsawMad MaxMiddle-earth: Shadow of MordorMortal KombatMortal Kombat XMortal Kombat (2011)WB Games General FAQNederlandsBatmanBatman Arkham CityGotham City ImpostorsDC ComicsInjustice: Gods Among UsiOS GamesInjusticeLEGOLEGO Batman 2Lollipop ChainsawMortal KombatWB Games General FAQPortuguêsBatmanBatman: Arkham VRBatman Arkham KnightBatman Arkham UnderworldDC ComicsDC Comics LegendsHarry Potter & The Wizarding WorldFantastic Beasts: Cases From the Wizarding WorldMortal KombatMortal Kombat XWB Games Geral FAQSuomiBatmanBatman Arkham CityGotham City ImpostorsDC ComicsInjustice: Gods Among UsiOS GamesInjusticeLEGOLEGO Batman 2Lollipop ChainsawMortal KombatWB Games General FAQ繁體中文蝙蝠俠阿克漢地下世界 Batman Arkham Underworld蝙蝠俠:阿卡漢虛擬實境 Batman
: Arkham VR繁體中文 DC Comics Legends 虛擬實境裝置與Topic #: 24022-763Date Created: 09/15/2014Last Modified Since: 12/01/2016Viewed: 4254The Lego Batman Movie was one of the biggest surprise announcements to come out of the success of The Lego Movie. Now the first pics are here, and the movie looks just as fun as its predecessor. I mean, just look at his happy little Lego face! USA Today revealed the first stills from the movie, featuring Batman showing off his fancy lair and getting into some aerial action with the Batwing. For a man who works in black (and sometimes very very dark grey) Lego Batman’s Batcave is surprisingly colorful. I really want to see what “Glam Bat” looks like. This film looks just as funny and delightful as The Lego Movie—just with, you know, even more Batman. Check out a few more pictures below: Good news: it won’t be long before we see even more from Lego Batman. The first trailer for the film is being released this Wednesday, March 23rd.
Last week, in contemplating the Internet-wide casting-about of a new director for Ben Affleck’s stand-alone Batman movie, titled (pauses, consults notes, furrows brow) The Batman, your Flavorwire proposed a radical suggestion: yeah, maybe they actually don’t have to do that? This was posed in jest, of course; as long as there’s still one fan with a dollar to spend, Warner Brother and DC will continue to beat that dead Bat-horse. But it’s even harder to understand why they would bother making another mopey, serious Batman flick when the same parties are, this very week, releasing The LEGO Batman Movie – which satirizes the ethos and aesthetics of those films so successfully, it’s hard to imagine ever taking them seriously again. That it’s any good at all places it firmly in the tradition of its predecessor, The LEGO Movie, i.e., a movie that sounds like a terrible filmed deal, yet turns out to be ingenious and delightful. That film’s directors, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, have kinda made such turnabouts of expectation their specialty (they also helmed the Jump Street flicks and the forthcoming Young Han Solo stand-alone);
they’re listed here among the producers, handing the reins over to frequent Robot Chicken director Chris McKay, along with five credited screenwriters (including Pride & Prejudice & Zombies author Seth Grahame-Smith). They do not attempt to replicate the structure or surprise of the original LEGO Movie, with its somewhat divisive third-act meta-narrative turn. They aim, instead, for a cheerful animated comedy – and an affectionate but nonetheless relentless satire of the entire Batman #brand. There’s something of a Deadpool flavor to the picture’s self-awareness, which it announces from the opening frames – I mean literally the opening frames, before the production company logos even, with our Batman (Will Arnett) growling, over a black screen, “Black. All important movies start with a black screen. Edgy music, that’d make a parent or studio executive nervous.” He also calls himself, over the DC Entertainment logo, the label’s most important character, dismissing the more obvious candidate: “What, Superman?
Come at me, bro.” That’s the first of many little jabs at WB and DC’s widely reviled Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, which becomes one of LEGO Batman’s more satisfying runners. But, to be clear, you don’t have to have suffered through that toilet fire to get the gags here. One of the pleasures of this script are the several threads it pursues: general comic book movie satire (the spoken password to get into the Batcave is “Iron Man sucks”), humdrum regular life gags (Batman’s Siri double, going through his mail, tells him he got a soon-to-expire Bed Bath & Beyond coupon, “but I hear some stores will honor them after the expiration date”), left-field references (Robin mentions his skill at gymkata, “a gymnastics-based martial art”), and barely-heard throwaways (you have to strain hard to hear Scarecrow’s description of his special power: “I have a sack for a face!”) But its juiciest target is Batman himself – particularly his more recent emo iteration in Snyder’s BvS and Suicide Squad, but also the general “darker, grittier” Batman of the Burton and Nolan movies, and the graphic novels of Frank Miller and company before and during them.
But while they gave us a rain-soaked Blade Runner riff, LEGO Batman gives us the indelible image of a bored Batman watching his dinner heat up in the microwave before settling in, all alone, to watch Jerry Maguire on his big screen. It gives him dialogue like “For a brief moment, I could’ve sworn I… felt something.” It gives us a particularly patient-parent Alfred (gamely voiced by Ralph Fiennes) who is glimpsed reading a book titled Setting Limits for Your Out-of-Control Child. These are funny bits. But they also, slyly, underscore the fundamental silliness of the super-serious interpretations. Early on, the Joker (an uproarious Zach Galifiankis) runs down all of the Bat-nemeses he’s gathered – one of those long lists of characters that these movies do so well – and in the middle, he switches to made-up ones that are barely less ridiculous, like Condiment Man. When the Joke brags, of his latest evil plot, that “Batman’s never gonna see it coming,” his victim replies, “Like that time with the parade and the Prince music?”