MovieChat Forums > Batman (1989) Discussion > Who saw this in cinemas back in '89?

Who saw this in cinemas back in '89?


Who saw this back in the day? What are your memories - the anticipation of seeing it in the weeks/days before, the actually seeing it and how much a big deal was it where you were back then, the crowds, audience etc and after coming out of the cinema what were your thoughts and in the days/weeks that followed.
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I saw it must've been a week or so after was released. I remember ALOT of hype in the weeks/months before, bat logo was everywhere t shirts, badges, posters everywhere. There was also ALOT of discussion in the news about the rating. Initially it was to be a 15 (which would mean I couldn't see it) but then the BBFC invented a new rating especially for it (that's how much of a big deal the movie was) so it got 12 (more equivalent to the PG13, before that in UK PG13either had to be cut for PG or get the kid unfriendly 15 rating)

I didn't really get the hype, id never been that interested in batman (was a superman fan) and beyond the AWest TV show had little knowledge of the character (only read the odd DC comics in annual form, had no knowledge of any of the adult Frank miller stuff) and the rating stuff confused me..how violent could it be?..this was batman not the terminator!

Onto the film it was something that id never really seen before, the retro/modern 1930s gangster look, the hard violence, the dark atmosphere and gritty hard urban legend edge..I was a huge superman movie fan and just 2 years before had seen SIV at cinema (and loved it!) But this was like the dark twisted side of those films, very adult in tone. Suddenly I felt like superman was for kids Saturday morning cartoons but this was a real adult film with very adult feel. I completely got why it was almost a 15 like the movies I was too young for back then. When I emerged from the darkness of the cinema I definitely felt more grown up more of a man 

In the weeks that followed I bought (or had bought for me) stuff like the TOPPS magazine, poster magazine, DC comic adaptation (which had incredible artwork and cover), the novel, some badges, as well as started collecting the TOPPS bubble gum cards, the Elfman soundtrack LP (the score sounded amazing back then..had to be careful not to get the Prince album by mistake which was everywhere).. I even got a bat logo t shirt that everyone was wearing (although initially I didn't want one)

there was ALOT of movies to see in 89 - Indiana Jones was just before batman like happened almost 20 years later in 2008 (with a new joker - almost a remake of Bat89 in some ways), BTTF2, Ghostbusters 2, Star trek V, Bond (which was 15 so couldn't see it) but Batman topped them all..

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30years today

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I did!

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Heres a fun video I watched of a guy reminiscing about batman 89 and all the toys memorabilia https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Krqg9EFhFNo

he also makes some interesting points of it being almost like a horror/halloween movie

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I was 7 in the summer of 1989 and I didn't get to see it until the fall at the $1 theater. My Mom was afraid to take me at first because she saw on the news it was too violent.

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I remember it like it was yesterday. I was 16.

We found out that Thursday night we found out we could order tickets to the Friday show (when we thought it was coming out) three of us headed over to Tower Records, where they had a BASS ticket agency. That was where you ordered tickets to concerts and plays before the internet.

So when this happened I was at my neighbor's house swimming. I didn't have shoes - they were next door.
So we get to Tower in wet swim trunks (we had to go that second in case they sold out) and the guy at the counter says there are three tickets left to the Thursday sneak preview, which was in an hour. We had no idea there was a sneak preview. We looked at each other and said 'hell yes' and drove straight to the theater. I was nervous they wouldn't let me in without shoes but as Andy said in Shawshank, "Who looks at a man's shoes?"

I remember waiting in the line to get in, where we sat, the crowd, everything. The buzz around this thing was so insane I can't describe it. It didn't open in every other theater like they do nowadays. Tickets were going to be hard to get and people waited in line for days to see a hyped film like this.

I didn't even care that I was walking around a gross movie theater in bare feet. Luckily the majority was carpeted and I sat cross-legged in my seat. I remember seeing it again a couple weeks later but with my flip-flops on.

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There was a LOT of enthusiasm for this movie when it came out. I think we only got in on our third try. Everyone was a bit nervous about Michael Keaton in the role. As soon as he voiced the coarse-voiced "I'm Batman" the fans were sold. I like that movie better than any of its sequels or the reboots.

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Strange to think these days that kids/teens/guys in their 20s and 30s have no idea just how fricking HUGE Batman was in 89.. they must just think it was another batman movie like Batman Begins was.. or the way the Matt Reeves film is going to be lol

The reality is it was another Jaws, another Star Wars, another Superman, another Raiders, another ET, another Ghostbusters (and later on T2/Jurassic Park/ID4/Titanic/Avatar).. a mega blockbuster phenomenon the likes no one had ever seen before

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I saw Batman in the cinema in '89. Yes, it was huge. I loved it at the time - at last we had the serious Batman film that so many of us had wanted for so long (have to say though that as soon as Batman Returns came out I preferred that - and still do).

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I was really looking forward to seeing Batman on the big screen especially since Superman was dominating the big screen in those days. I went out of my way to avoid any articles or advertising about the movie since I wanted to see the final product in the theater. I had doubts about the selection of Michael Keaton for the lead role as he was known primarily for his comedy and didn't come across as a leading man action star. I personally would have chosen someone like Patrick Swayze (with shorter hair). I loved the Gotham City landscape and the monster batmobile. I enjoyed the performances though I felt that Prince's music in this movie amounted to ad placement. I had issues with Jack Napier (Joker) as the criminal who essentially fostered the creation of the Batman. I don't particularly care for interconnected story lines. THe original Joe Chill story worked for me.

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