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Fortunately, Williams would go on to voice Two-Face in The Lego Batman Movie in 2017. [44] Nicholson convinced the filmmakers to cast his close friend Tracey Walter as the Joker's henchman Bob. [45] Irish child actor Ricky Addison Reed was cast as Dick Grayson before the character was removed by Warren Skarren for the revised shooting script. [46]
Batman, album of Danny Elfman's score for the 1989 film Batman, album by Prince with songs featured in and inspired by the 1989 film Batman "Batdance", single from the Prince album; Batman Returns, album of Danny Elfman's score for the 1992 film "Face to Face" (Siouxsie and the Banshees song), song recorded for Batman Returns
appeared in place of the album Batman. [citation needed] Despite this, Prince performed a number of the album's tracks in concert over the years. [18] A 2005 special edition DVD of the Batman film contains Prince's related videos as a bonus feature (although the video for "Partyman" is an edited down version of the original seven-minute long ...
Batman: Original Motion Picture Score is the score album for the 1989 film Batman, composed by Danny Elfman. According to the Batman DVD Special Edition, Elfman said that producer Jon Peters was not sure about him as a composer until director Tim Burton made him play the main titles. Elfman admitted he was stunned when Peters announced that the ...
Pages in category "Batman (1989 film series) music" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Batman has had a number of famous faces through the years from legends like Michael Keaton to 2000s icons like Robert Pattinson.But in every iteration, he is the same surly, dark hero of the crime ...
Batman: The Movie (1966) In between the TV show’s first and second seasons, West earned the cinematic treatment with a feature-length film. The movie included many of Batman’s most popular ...
"Partyman" is a song by American musician Prince from his 1989 Batman album, and the follow-up to his number one hit, "Batdance". [1] The song is one of the few on the album to be prominently featured in the film, accompanying the scene in which the Joker and his minions deface exhibits in the Gotham City Art Museum before meeting Vicki Vale.