MOVIE REVIEW
The Lego Batman Movie
Directed by Chris McKay
By Noel Vera
The first 20 minutes are best (What is it about recent pictures that the first 20 minutes are always best? Have they forgotten to teach the importance of the next 80 at script writing class?): Batman leads a spectacular public life, soaking in wave after wave of adulation with a celebrity鈥檚 limitless confidence. The joke about his private life 鈥 in his vast Batcave located deep within Wayne Island, surrounded by miles of tunnels and countless memorabilia and tons of military-style weaponry 鈥 is that he doesn鈥檛 have a life; he鈥檚 basically kidding himself saying everything is awesome when he (and we watching him) know otherwise. In short: life as someone like Trump would like it to be vs. life as it really is.
It鈥檚 a gag that deserves a bit more appreciation, considering all the worshipful ink spent analyzing the comic-book character. The official DC gospel is that Batman is driven by a sense of hurt, anger, vengeance (but is really a nice guy deep inside); that he goes vigilante for the sake of justice (no effort to reconcile act with opposing motive); that he fights tirelessly for the weak (and goes back to his billion-dollar mansion in the morning to rest). Maybe the only truly interesting subversive note anyone鈥檚 ever added is from Frank Miller鈥檚 The Dark Knight Returns: that the Caped Crusader knows he鈥檚 a criminal and gleefully acknowledges the contradiction; it鈥檚 part and parcel of his war against crime.
But forget Miller鈥檚 take on the character (megalomanic sociopath) or for that matter Christopher Nolan鈥檚 (Mephistophelean manipulator behind Gotham鈥檚 brief golden age) much less Zach Snyder鈥檚 (Miller鈥檚 version only with a lobotomy). To director Chris McKay, Bat is a self-centered jerk (鈥淲hy did you build this thing with only one seat?鈥 鈥淏ecause last I checked I only had one butt.鈥) who has been doing all this to win love and approval from his dead parents (鈥淗ey Mom, hey Dad, I um, I saved the city again today, I think you would have been really proud鈥), so when the real thing comes along he keeps it at arm鈥檚 length (鈥淵ou鈥檙e seriously saying听 there鈥檚 nothing special about us?鈥 鈥淭here is no 鈥榰s鈥; never will be.鈥). McKay working with his six writers through Will Arnett鈥檚 monotone growl understands something no one 鈥 not Miller nor Nolan nor Snyder 鈥 seems to realize: that The Batman is a monstrous overgrown child playing with oversized toys in his oversized underground playpen; that the black armor and gruff voice and pointed cowl are really his way of overcompensating; that all this is hideously funny, even if (or especially because) the character reverently depicted in comics and recent movies is so resolutely not.听 听
Wish McKay had pushed the joke to its logical conclusion (skip the next two paragraphs if you plan to see the movie!) 鈥 forced the Dark Knight to try operate in a post-supervillain world, watch him become more annoying and self-centered, dangerous even 鈥 superhero turning supervillain to fill a brutal vacuum. Instead we have this overelaborate plot where the Joker (Zach Galifianakis) has himself projected into the Phantom Zone (ostensibly for safekeeping, in reality a recruitment ploy). We have this unfunny subplot where Michael Cena as the world鈥檚 most annoying Robin (think the previous Lego movie鈥檚 insufferable Emmet only in bright green, red, yellow underwear). The Dark Knight must grapple with his responsibilities to other people, learn how to be father to Robin and (ugh) become a better person overall.
The movie doesn鈥檛 have the balls to be what I hoped it would be 鈥 what it needed to be 鈥 but what there is ain鈥檛 bad. Michael Sragow in his Film Comment review points out how Barbara Gordon (Rosario Dawson) plays Hilary to Batman鈥檚 petulant Trump and in a more competently managed world that鈥檚 how it should turn out (unfortunately this isn鈥檛 that world). My own ideal scenario would be funnier, in a Swiftian sense: have Batrump sit in his own mess, the filth getting more rancid and unbearable until something or someone snaps 鈥 but hey, who wants psychological realism when you can just escape into that better world for a while? I doubt if my version would enjoy the same box office ($90 million worldwide on its opening weekend) but would enjoy a more interesting integrity.
Wish the Daleks had a bigger role (appreciated their presence nevertheless); wish the Klingons or Romulans played a part too. He Who Must Not Be Named (happy to oblige) I couldn鈥檛 care less 鈥 anyway all Lego characters look essentially noseless 鈥 but wasn鈥檛 there enough room for a few New Gods, or the Swamp Thing, maybe an Eternal or two?
In my list of favorite Batman movies 鈥 an important historical document I鈥檓 sure 鈥 I figure this to rank somewhere in the middle: not quite as good as Bruce Timm and Eric Radomski鈥檚 The Animated Series, but better than Nolan鈥檚 Dark Knight trilogy, or Snyder鈥檚 Dawn of Justice (which to be fair are better than Schumacher鈥檚 atrocities 鈥 I may be crazy but I鈥檓 not stupid). Can think of worse ways to pass a Sunday afternoon.
MTRCB Rating: PG



