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Further Reading: Dark Knight is Unforgettable, but Who Remembers James Batman?
by Kim Newman
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Page | 1 2
Further Reading by Kim Newman
The venerable Chairman, whose younger daughter Shirley (Shirley Moreno) has a crush on Batman (a picture of Adam West), is so concerned at the threats of the Organisation that he calls in Bond and Batman, who one-up each other in a split-screen shot and each childishly insist they should be given the solo mission. Later, in a frankly bonkers plot twist, the Chairman himself turns out to be behind the Organisation's nuclear plot, which allows for a poignant moment as Shirley pleads with him not to pull the lever that sets off the big bomb but begs the question of why he bothers to order the two comical but surprisingly efficient superheroes to defeat his own plan.

The heroes wear parody-of-a-parody outfits: Bond isn't in the tux usually associated with the character but a hideous check suit and hat (in one bedroom scene, they match a quilt) which riffs on the tweedy Brit-abroad outfits Connery occasionally sports in the early films; and Batman has baggy tights, a chest symbol which seems to be a silhouette of a girl with a feather boa and a floppy cowl/stripey cape combo which isn't that much sillier than the '40s look. Robin (Boy Alano) looks as if he's wearing a commercially-available Burt Ward costume, but hasn't got much to do in a movie where the hero can play his own sidekick. The budget runs to a fairly cool four-door stretch Batmobile with spindly fins, gadgets like a fork with a radio aerial and a computerised bat-device from which a Thing-like disembodied hand dispenses pre-crimefight snacks (bananas, mostly).

Most of the film consists of knockabout action comedy -- Bond is canoodling with a slinky villainess but doesn't notice her shooting him several times in the chest because he is wearing a bullet-proof vest, and later loses his swimming trunks while fleeing hordes of gunmen and is bitten on the bum by a centipede in the palm-leaf he uses to cover himself. He then pretends he's hurt worse than he is to get sympathy from a nurse and the other good guys. In fact, both Bond and Batman are such whiny dolts that a cooler, better-looking agent (the real James Bond?) and Robin's karate expert girlfriend show up to help in the busy climax.

James Batman

After it's over, everybody gets a girl but Bond, who is pursued by a goofy-looking character in a Batwoman outfit and comically hops off as if chased by Pepe le Pew ('ugly' women with 'ridiculous' desires for frankly equally gruesome-looking men remain figures of fun in gross-out comedies of all nations to this day, so this instance of horrible misogyny isn't really unusual).

From a non-Filippino point of view, the strangest thing about James Batman is that it keeps turning oddly serious. After the comedy murder attempt, this goofy Bond roughs up a hit-woman in a sexualised way even Sean Connery would have thought ungentlemanly, stopping only just short of rape. The villainess is then taken to a police station where her low-cut dress excites Basic Instinct-like interest from goony cops who absent-mindedly shove cigarettes up their noses or drink from saucers while ogling her breasts (along with the camera).

James Batman

Because the melées are shot in black and white on real locations (with thump noises but no 'Zap Pow Bam' captions) makes the karate fights seem more like the straight action of the '40s serials than the stylised silliness of the camp crusaders -- Bond vs the Penguin is especially brutal, but a pile of thugs drop a net on and then kick the helpless Batman and Robin as if acting out the wish-fulfilment fantasies of all those bonked, zapped and powed extras in the TV show. The mood swings take the edge off the Third World-level production values, and it's all bizarrely fascinating. I can honestly say I enjoyed it more than two Joel Schumacher Batmans and most Roger Moore-Pierce Brosnan Bonds.

For the record, there's more out there. Dolphy played 'Agent 1-2-3' in a string of films (Dr Yes, Dolphinger, etc) and remains a major star in his home territory (unlike, say, Adam West), but he wasn't in the 1993 Filipino musical comedy Alyas Batman y Robin. Sadly, Batman Fights Dracula (1967), a perhaps-serious Filipino cross-genre movie which vaults to the top of my 'must see' list, seems to be as lost as Andy Warhol's similarly-titled Batman Dracula (1964).

Meanwhile, if you need a bigger bat-fix, there's La Verdadera Historia de Barman y Droguin, Superbatman vs Mazinga V, La Mujer Murcielago, Bat Bitch, Splatman (which features a villain called the Pornguin), Buttman and Throbbin, Rat Pfink and Boo-Boo, The Wild World of Batwoman (aka She Was a Hippie Vampire), Bathman dal Pianeta Eros, the short Robin's Big Date (with Sam Rockwell as Batman) and Scooby-Doo Meets Batman, which is the only entry in this list authorised by DC Comics.

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Page | 1 2
Comments (1-20 of 22 posts) | Reply
arendr
arendr writes:
on Jul 24 2008 08:16 AM

Wow, incredible. This reminds me of the Bollywood Superman movie.

(Reply to this)
Dark Knight jr.
Dark Knight jr. writes:
on Jul 24 2008 08:18 AM

Now that's scary..

(Reply to this)
evil pixie
evil pixie writes:
on Jul 24 2008 09:45 AM

I'm surprised the MST3K guys never got a hold of this one...

(Reply to this)
bethehero7404
bethehero7404 writes:
on Jul 24 2008 09:53 AM

Evil pixie is right...MST3K would have destroyed this movie.

(Reply to this)
h-town24
h-town24 writes:
on Jul 24 2008 10:41 AM

WTF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Yeah, and I would have loved MST to handle this!

(Reply to this)
nathanpoitras
nathanpoitras writes:
on Jul 24 2008 11:01 AM

Is Batman on a game show in that scene or something? If he is, it looks like the got the answer wrong.

(Reply to this)
arendr
arendr writes:
on Jul 24 2008 01:23 PM

Coincidence? http://webvillage.files.wordpress.com/2008/04/batman-suparman-02a.jpg

(Reply to this)
pynchmeawake
pynchmeawake writes:
on Jul 24 2008 04:00 PM

MST poked fun at movies that took themselves seriously. The makers of James Batman were clearly fun-pokers themselves and must have been high on the same brainwaves that decades hence infused the creative chakras of Joel Hodgson... isn't that so, Tom?






(Reply to this)
quentintarantado
quentintarantado writes:
on Jul 24 2008 05:00 PM

For what it's worth, the director is Artemio MARQUEZ, not Martez. He's the father of model Melanie Marquez who has her own curious spin on the English language (translated: "My father is the only living legend I know who is alive"). Artemio Marquez is quite proud of the fact he can shoot his movies in two weeks.

(Reply to this)
martinscorsese25
martinscorsese25 writes:
on Jul 24 2008 05:16 PM

you know.. i lived in the philippines and dolphy is the king of comedy hear cause he started doing comedy the time that no one else does comedy.. though he's jokes are kinda korny i still see him as a legend

(Reply to this)
jocampo
jocampo writes:
on Jul 24 2008 05:18 PM

Hi Kim, I'm Filipino, and I'm sure glad you enjoyed seeing this movie starring our country's top comedian, Dolphy. I don't know how you managed to get hold of a copy of this movie, as I myself rarely ever see any of the old comedies nowadays. In his heydays, Dolphy made hundreds of similarly camp comedies, and these have become part of the fond childhood memories of so many million Filipinos. For us Filipinos, when viewing these vintage comedies, we are reminded of a much more innocent time, when laughter was sparkingly naive and untouched by cynicism. I find your review very open-minded and refreshingly non-patronizing. By the way, Dolphy celebrated his 80th birthday in Manila recently by launching his memoirs.

(Reply to this)
pynchmeawake
pynchmeawake writes:
on Jul 24 2008 05:55 PM

More apt MST3K fodder than this one would be sci-fi mangas like "Appleseed" and "Ghost in the Shell". I'd love to see the MST debuggers make fun of these wetdream candies.

(Reply to this)
genshiken
genshiken writes:
on Jul 24 2008 06:38 PM

In reply to this comment (#1919129)
What a crazy movie...those revolting dress
But maybe it wasn't worse than that stupid "Superhero Movie", I'd like to watch it if I found a copy XD.


(Reply to this)
d4nugster
d4nugster writes:
on Jul 24 2008 06:40 PM

if its any consolation, even we filipinos cannot watch this with a straight face...

(Reply to this)
BeastyBrad
BeastyBrad writes:
on Jul 24 2008 08:03 PM

What is MST?

(Reply to this)
jocampo
jocampo writes:
on Jul 24 2008 10:14 PM

In reply to this comment (#1920430)
mst3k = mystery science theater 3000, a tv series in the 90s. it featured a man and his robot critiquing b movies, specially scifi ones.

(Reply to this)
pynchmeawake
pynchmeawake writes:
on Jul 24 2008 10:16 PM

In reply to this comment (#1920430)
Mystery Science Theater... aka Mystery Science Theater 3000... aka "Beavis and Butthead Do the SciFi Channel"... and that's plain simile, not pun; I happen to be a huge MST fan myself.

(Reply to this)
Poptique
Poptique writes:
on Jul 25 2008 05:54 AM

I remember James Batman, in fact I even posted some poster art from it and other Caped Crusader cash-ins earlier this week ;) (Batman vs. Dracula included!)

http://poptique.blogspot.com/2008/07/fight-batman-fight-gregarious-gallery.html


(Reply to this)
Ged2012
Ged2012 writes:
on Jul 26 2008 09:51 AM

You haven't seen anything yet. There are still many spoofs of superhero movies in the Philippines, namely:

1. Superwantutri-- a "Superman" movie which appeared after Superman III. It stars Tito Sotto, Vic Sotto, and Joey De Leon. Yup, three Supermen in the same movie. These three guys have made dozens of movies together, and are popular as a trio.

2. Gagambino-- a TV series on GMA which would start in a few months, which is inspired by Spider-Man, and which boasts impressive special effects (gagambino is a word taken from the Filipino word "gagamba", meaning spider).

3. Lastikman-- its more recent version was shown a few years ago, starring Vic Sotto (one of the Supermen above), inspired by Plastic Man. Yup, there have been several versions of the same hero in Philippine cinema before. His enemy this time was inspired by the Green Goblin, but without the mask, and looked more like Heath Ledger's Joker.


(Reply to this)
ice_chiyo
ice_chiyo writes:
on Jul 29 2008 04:44 AM

Wow. I'm surprised as my fellow Filipinos that you found a copy of this movie. There are loads of other Pinoy movies just like this (heck even Tarzan was parodied in Starzan by Joey de Leon) and in my opinion they are the fun kind of camp.

(Reply to this)
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