MayaGay

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posts from @MayaGay tagged #batman

also:

The outside of Film Noir Cinema, a small movie theater in Brooklyn.
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A picture from inside the movie theater, showing an episode of Batman: The Animated Series.
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Two beers at a bar next to VHS tapes of Dracula's Daughter and A Return To Salem's Lot.
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Finally went out and did something my partner and I had been thinking of doing for quite some time. There is a theater in Greenpoint called Film Noir Cinema. It's owner used to own a video store nearby that I went to back in the day (I bought the screenplay for Ed Wood there if you want a taste of the vibe) and he opened in a new location a minute and a half ago. I never have been there but decided to hit it up for their surprise film noir Mondays, where they show a random noir without telling anybody in advance what the film will be. This week it was Odds Against Tomorrow, directed by Robert Wise and starring Harry Belafonte. I had never seen it before, and I thought it was excellent! Add it to the pantheon of great upstate New York movies. Robert Ryan's character reminded me of Duck Phillips. Before the movie they also showed the episode of Batman: The Animated Series with Man-Bat, so obviously it won me over.

They also had tapes!! The owner was telling us that when he started he had 6,400 in his store, and now he only has less than 200. Sun rise, sun set. I almost grabbed my beloved Pokemon 3: The Spell of Unown but instead opted for two movies that have definitely been on my Most Wanted list: the amazing Dracula's Daughter, perhaps my favorite of the original Universal monster movies because of it's lesbian undertones, and A Return To Salem's Lot, a Larry Cohen masterpiece. On a good day I could tell you about how I think his collaboration with Michael Moriarty is just as impressive as Scorsese with DeNiro, but needless to say thrilled to have the grandmaster join the collection. (Now just need to source a copy of Hell Up In Harlem...)

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I love movies based on real people that gives room for a "oh, you think you're better than me, people watching this movie at home? well you're not you little rat. we're not so different you and I" monologue. like I get what you're doing but idk Mr. Screenwriter Man, maybe I am not the Batman to Bernie Madoff's Joker.

anyway, thinking about that weird Bernie Madoff miniseries on ABC starring Richard Dreyfuss again, as I often do.



Kevin Conroy's death is devastating for anyone who grew up with Batman. The Animated Series will probably always be the platonic ideal of Batman. It's sharp, smart, funny, and takes the character seriously (while not being overly serious). One of the ways it did that was by really taking the time to care about the voice performances, and Kevin Conroy was the standard bearer of that. He wrote a comic called Finding Batman earlier this year about his struggle as a young gay actor during the AIDS crisis and how he turned that pain into his performance, and it really shows in the work. The final page of Finding Batman. Kevin Conroy monologues "I imagined myself as young  Bruce witnessing my parents attacked and crumbling right in front of me. I saw them lying in their blood in the filth of Crime Alley. I saw my own father lying drunk in a pool of his dried blood. As Bruce, I held them, comforting them in my arms. As Kevin, I cradled my bloody father as he struggled for life. As Kevin I held Chris, cradling him as he raved at the voices plaguing him. As Bruce, I felt disoriented and lost, not sure of my identity as my parents were cruelly yanked from me. Was I my public face or my private face? Had I made too many compromises? My heart pulses, I felt my face flush, my breath grow deeper. I began to speak, and a voice I didn't recognize came out. It was a throaty, husky rumbling sound that shook my body. It seemed to roar from thirty years of frustration, confusion, denial, love, yearning...yearning for what? An anchor, a harbor, a sense of safety, a sense of identity. Yes, I can relate. Yes, this is terrain I know well. I felt Batman rising from deep within." There are a million moments from that show that are jumping to my mind right now (Bruce begging his parents forgiveness in Mask of the Phantasm, his instantly iconic "I am vengeance, I am the night" monologue from "Fear Itself", pretty much all of "Beware The Grey Ghost") but what is jumping to me the most right now is "Epilogue" from Justice League Unlimited. In the episode, which really is a goodbye to the character from every incarnation of the DCAU, he comforts Ace, a superpowered girl who also had her childhood taken from her. It's everything that is great about his incarnation of the character.

I hope he found peace in the end. He's a hero.