The Dark Knight and his billionaire alter ego Bruce Wayne have been dominating the box office as well as pop culture for more than 50 years.
This year marks the 15th anniversary of Christopher Nolan's "The Dark Knight"
1. The Dark Knight (2008)
Heath Ledger. Period. Subject closed.
What a loss to the movie industry. Anyone who watched The Dark Knight in theaters was blown away by Ledger's Joker. At one time I thought Jack Nickolson's Joker could never be topped. How wrong I was.
The movie is as close to perfection as a film is able to be from acting to the script to effects. My only complaint is the killing off of Harvey Two Face. Bad move. Two Face would have been the perfect villain for Batman 3.
2. 'Batman' (1989)
Burton's wildly stylish masterpiece was a pop-culture comeback for the legendary character, defining Batman's world for years to come.
3. ‘Batman Begins’ (2005)
Nolan's rebooted trilogy begins with an outstanding depiction of the Dark Knight's origin amid a twisty, action-packed and expertly crafted affair. Scenes of Bruce Wayne (Bale) being trained as an assassin overseas after his parents' death leads to the comic book hero's decision to dress up as a bat.
4. ‘Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice’ (2016)
Zack Snyder made one of the best of all the superhero movies ever.
The multiple complex storylines went over the heads of many viewers who just want smashing and things going boom. Ben Affleck was a wonderful and deeply troubled Batman.
5. ‘Justice League’ (2017/2021)
Whether you prefer Joss Whedon's original theatrical release or Snyder's improved four-hour director's cut, either way you get Affleck's best Bat-outing by far as the middle-aged dude who has to recruit a superteam to stave off an otherworldly assault.
6. ‘The Batman’ (2022)
Reeves leans into the "World's Greatest Detective" label from the comics with a neo-noir plot where Pattinson's Batman navigates puzzling clues and ciphers to hunt down the Riddler (Paul Dano).
The formerly giggly weirdo villain has been retooled as a creepy serial killer, while the Penguin (Colin Farrell) – who's getting his own Max spinoff show – and Catwoman (Zoe Kravitz) also receive modern makeovers in an excellent reboot that strips away the flamboyance of these iconic personalities to find their reality.
7. ‘Batman: Mask of the Phantasm’ (1993)
Like its '60s counterpart, the influential '90s Batman animated TV series also spawned a noteworthy theatrical release. Batman (voiced by Conroy) is faced with a mysterious foe targeting mobsters in a narrative that also delves into the superhero's origins.
Batman Actors: 1943, 1949, 1966, 1989, 1995, 1997, 2005, 2016
8. ‘Batman Forever’ (1995)
Square-jawed Val Kilmer is a low-key solid Caped Crusader, Jim Carrey's out of his mind as the Riddler and you can't fault Tommy Lee Jones for giving Two-Face a go even if he seems like he wandered into the wrong movie.
9. ‘The Lego Batman Movie’ (2017)
For younger Bat-fans, there's no better introduction to Gotham City than this madcap animated "Lego Movie" comedy spinoff featuring Will Arnett voicing the supremely macho Lego Batman and Zach Galifianakis as a weirdly sensitive Joker.
10. ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ (2012)
Don't care. Burn all copies for the good of mankind.
11. ‘Batman & Robin’ (1997)
Where do you even start with everything wrong here, from a miscast Clooney (good Bruce Wayne, bad Batman) to a litany of terrible zingers via Arnold Schwarzenegger's Mr. Freeze.
The most criminal aspect of them all in director Joel Schumacher's campy nightmare, however, is the complete waste of Uma Thurman as Poison Ivy.
12. ‘Batman Returns’ (1992)
13. ‘Batman: The Movie’ (1966)
Crap. Crap. Megacrap.
Shortly after the first season of the smash '60s "Batman" TV show, West's Batman and Burt Ward's Robin hit the big screen for an adventure that famously involved the Batboat, shark repellent and a pesky bomb. This movie, though, was all about its all-star villain squad, with Lee Meriwether making her debut as Catwoman alongside Cesar Romero's Joker, Frank Gorshin's Riddler and Burgess Meredith's Penguin.
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