mattel has these in various sizes, from 4" to 12" but the ones in the pictures are there 6" movie masters and there 12" figures.What size are these?
Yeah back to the topic please. I found this pics from the mattel line from SDCC. For some reason never saw those figures until now.
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Bale could have used one of these helmets to compensate for that overdone growly voice in DK. Specially at the "Where's the tweager...where's the tweager"! in TDKR. That part always cracks me up.
Yeah, the mechanical/robotic voice sounds cool. I think they got that idea from the show Arrow.
As far Bale goes, this was his best voice, and it was awesome.
He sounds awesome in Begins! Its sounds natural. I remember people were even wondering after seeing the movie if he was using some sort of voice changer. but everyone thought he sounded awesome in Begins.
The whole movie, he was fine...heck even in "Swear to me" scene.
But the sequels, he went overboard on the voice thing.
I remember people in the theater, including myself laughing hysterically at that "Where's the tweager" scene I mentioned. That part wasnt supposed to be funny...it was supposed to be a tense moment...but I couldnt help laughing in the movie cause right away...I quickly thought of the interrogation scene mock up video on youtube.
He used that same voice from the video on the Batman Begins video game. He seemed to have four voices, the more natural Begins voice, the whisper voice, the slightly more raspy voice, and then the full heavy metal voice. It didn't help that he had so much dialogue and scenes where he had to raise his voice and show emotions. I don't mind the evolution of his voice, since even his technology, batcave , suit, and body evolves from his first year as Batman.
Affleck so far has two different voices, the armor voice, and the "I thought she was with you" voice, which is less robotic, but it still sounds similar to Affleck's voice.
I didn't have a problem with that scene. I thought the acting was good and he came across as someone who was primarily concerned for his son's safety...which is how most parents are in real life. Usually after a tragedy, you don't see parents hugging other kids first..they hug their own kids. He seemed conflicted about saying that Clark should have let the kids died. He knows the right thing is to save those kids, but at the same time, he knows the world is not ready for someone like Clark and as a parent his primary responsibility is to protect his son. If he doesn't put his son's safety first...wouldn't that make him a bad parent?
He was basically telling him to be more careful and perhaps not to intervene in certain situations....I guess that sounds kind of bad, but I think his heart was in the right place...I mean, the dude literally committed suicide because he wanted to protect Clark At least he's not a hypocrite. Also, if I remember correctly, Pa Kent also told Clark not to use his powers in the 1978 film...different scenario, but the concern for Clark to hide his abilities was still there.
The one thing I did like was how the woman said "this was an act of God." I think that'd be a cool thing to touch on, in some sort of story. Clark saving someone in broad daylight and the people chalking it up to some miracle and parading him around some tent revival in the middle of Kansas.
What's a "tweager"?
Honestly I didn't think the trigger scene was that bad, there were a lot worse scenes in the movie where he sounds like an idiot. Like the scene with catwoman on the batpod and no one is around yet he's still doing the voice. Or the scene with catwoman where she disappears and he still does the voice just talking to himself. Beyond stupid.
I'd be more strange if he stopped using the voice in mid sentence while wearing the costume. It would make the"joke" even more obvious..and that would make it worse.
I think you may be missing the point, he's dressing as a giant bat to intimidate and inspire fear. The voice is part of that persona.
It's not a person-it's a batman.
He's there to inspire fear.
They made that perfectly clear in batman begins.
He's not Bruce Wayne when he's wearing the mask.
He's the batman.
If you don't get that, you don't understand any of the batman comics, history
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I think you may be missing the point, he's dressing as a giant bat to intimidate and inspire fear. The voice is part of that persona.
It's not a person-it's a batman.
He's there to inspire fear.
They made that perfectly clear in batman begins.
He's not Bruce Wayne when he's wearing the mask.
He's the batman.
If you don't get that, you don't understand any of the batman comics, history
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Bats is a method actor, he gets so into his role that he acts like a bat even when no one's there.
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