Monday, July 14, 2008

[Trivia] 11 Little Known Things about The Dark Knight


The Dark Knight, the sequel to Christopher Nolan’s take on the Batman mythos arrives in Philippine theaters later this week. But before its big opening on the 17th, let me share to you some little known trivia about Batman.

1. Almost a lot of people know that Bob Kane created the Caped Crusader. He made his comics debut on Detective Comics #27 on May 1939, with the story entitled The Case of the Chemical Syndicate. What most people don’t know is The Dark Knight’s co-creator was Bill Finger. Kane was the artist and Finger was the writer.

2. Among Kane and Finger’s inspirations for the very first Batman design were Da Vinci’s ornithoper (a primitive flying machine with bat-like wings), the main character in the movie The Bat Whispers (1930), Zorro from the movie The Mask of Zorro (1920) and several pulp fiction magazine characters (including The Phantom and The Shadow).

3. There are varied stories concerning that fateful night when his parents were murdered, due to a lot of writers consistently changing/messing up/updating Batman’s origins. The most common/simplest version is that when Bruce was eight years old, his parents took him to a screening of The Mark of Zorro at a cinema in Gotham's Park Row and were held up by a thief named Joe Chill on their way home (In the wake of this tragedy, Park Row was given the nickname Crime Alley). In Batman Begins, it was shown that the Waynes were leaving an opera house showing Mefistofele at the time of the murder.

4. Batman’s initial hometown was New York. Finger changed the name to Gotham City in 1941 because they wanted everybody in any city to identify with it.

5. Robin made his comic debut on Detective Comics #38 on April 1940.

6. The Joker and Catwoman were the first super villains to be. Both first appeared in Batman #1, in 1940. The inspiration for The Joker was a photograph of actor Conrad Veidt wearing make-up for the silent film The Man Who Laughs (1928). Catwoman was initially only known as The Cat. Her first appearance donning her famous skintight purple costume was in July 1946.

7. Batman’s very first official (customized) Bat-vehicle was the Batgyro, modeled after Igor Sikorsky’s helicopter. Batman’s first sedan, not yet called the Batmobile, was colored scarlet. The first official Batmobile was introduced in Batman #5 in 1941. The very famous 1966 television Batmobile was designed by George Barris from a Lincoln Futura concept car.

8. Though Batman doesn’t have any known superpowers, he makes it up by having the famous utility belt, having a large arsenal of specialized gadgets in his war against crime. His first bat-themed gadget was the batarang, his version of the boomerang.

9. During the 50’s, there has been some controversy over various sexual interpretations made between Bruce Wayne/Batman’s and Dick Grayson/Robin’s relationship. This accusation, together with comics’ depiction of violence, sex, drug use was brought up by Dr. Frederic Wertham in his 1954 book Seduction of the Innocent. Subsequent to the publication of Seduction of the Innocent, the Comics Code Authority was voluntarily established by publishers to self-censor their titles.

10. Yes, Batman does have a true love. She is Catwoman, Selina Kyle. They have a daughter named Helena (Kyle), also known as The Huntress. Batman also is said to have a son, Damien, with Talia al Ghul (Ra’s al Ghul's daughter).

11. The Batusi was 60s style go-go dance invented for the Batman television series, This dance is performed by making a horizontal V-sign with one's index and middle fingers of both hands, and drawing them across in front of the eyes, one hand at a time, with the eyes roughly between the fingers. This is performed in time with the music, and is improved upon by continuing to dance with the lower half of the body, simultaneously. John Travolta and Uma Thurman’s dance routine in Pulp Fiction (1994) was based on this dance.

With these, I hope you’re ready to watch The Dark Knight. As an avid Batman fan, my fearless prediction is that this latest Batman movie will outdo Batman Begins. I tell ‘ya, Bruce Wayne and company will certainly kick ass in the box office. :)

Sources

Batman - The Complete History by Les Daniels

http://en.wikipedia.org/

http://www.imdb.com



For comments, suggestions and requests, you can contact me at
Eyes.X.Only@gmail.com

Monday, July 7, 2008

Don't Talk, Just KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid)

For the techies out there (and movie lovers at the same time), I found this good link featuring 10 Rube Goldberg Machines shown/used in films. A Rube Goldberg machine is a deliberately overdesigned machine that performs a very simple task in very indirect and convoluted fashion. Rube Goldberg was a Pulitzer-winning American political cartoonist who popularized such machines in his cartoons.

Here's the link. Enjoy!

http://gizmodo.com/5015735/the-top-10-rube-goldberg-machines-featured-on-film



Sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/

http://www.imdb.com


For comments, suggestions and requests, you can contact me at Eyes.X.Only@gmail.com

Friday, July 4, 2008

Superfashion for Superheroes and Romantic Robots

I want to share these two links which I chanced upon just recently (from imdb.com).

The first link grades and criticizes the costumes of some superheroes shown in the silver screen. Would you believe that they actually like The Hulk's fashion sense? Check this out.

http://movies.msn.com/movies/incredible-hulk/galleryfeature/superhero-costumes/

With Pixar's WALL-E just around the corner, the second link gives a (rather long) list of what they call the Best Robot Love Stories from the movies. I didn't know there were that many.

http://www.wired.com/entertainment/hollywood/multimedia/2008/06/robot_love_stories


Later.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

[Trivia] Trivia Tessellation (Part 1) – Of Bikinis, Bombs and Hollywood Babes

A tessellation is a collection of plane figures that fills a greater figure with no overlaps and no gaps, with each of the figure comprising the larger figure capable of standing up on its own. In a way, each piece is linked to each other, forming a greater design.

Much like a tessellation, the knowledge tidbits (about the bikini, the nuclear bomb and a certain Hollywood bombshell) that I will share today are informative individually. However, you’ll appreciate them further once you know how they are linked with each other.

Let’s talk about the bikini, first. Arguably, the bikini is one of the of 20th century’s inventions that has so much cultural impact. Consider this – the scene in the very first Bond movie Dr. No (1962) where Ursula Andress (the very first Bond girl) emerged from the sea holding a sea shell and wearing a white bikini is such an iconic view that Halle Berry and David Craig paid homage to this scene in Die Another Day (2002) and Casino Royale (2006), respectively. Of course, Craig wasn’t wearing a bikini in his scene.


According to the official version, the modern bikini was invented independently by two French fashion designers: Jacques Heim and Louis Reard. Heim, a swimsuit designer, designed a two-piece suit in Cannes which he marketed as the Atome, named after the atom, for its small size. He proclaimed it “the world’s smallest bathing suit.”

Louis Reard also created his own similar, two-piece swimsuit, claimed that it was the “smaller than the smallest bathing suit in the world”. He named his creation bikini, after the Bikini Atoll. It is an atoll in one of the Micronesian Islands in the Pacific Ocean, part of Republic of the Marshall Islands. The bikini soon superseded the Atome as the official name of the two-piece swimsuit.

Reard’s creation was a bit scandalous at the time when it was released that he could not find a model who would dare to wear his design so. He ended up hiring Micheline Bernardini, a nude dancer from the Casino de Paris as his model (shown in the left).

Now, the Bikini Atoll from which the bikini got its name is the site of a nuclear weapon test called Operation Crossroads.

Operation Crossroads was a series of nuclear weapon tests conducted by the United States in the summer of 1946, the same time that Reard was introducing his swimsuit creation. These nuclear tests were the fourth and fifth nuclear explosions done by the USA (the first was the Trinity test in New Mexico and the second and third were the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki respectively). Reard hoped that the bikini swimsuit was supposed to have caused the same “earth-shattering” reaction among those who viewed it as was inspired by the rising mushroom clouds of atomic bombs.


This now brings us to Hollywood bombshells. One of the bombs that were dropped during the tests was named Gilda, named after the movie in which Rita Hayworth starred. The bomb even had a picture of her attached to it, as Hayworth was one of Hollywood’s sought-after bombshells at that time. Her most famous pin-up picture was the one from LIFE magazine’s August 1941 issue (photo taken by Robert Landry, right).

It’s a small world after all, right? Speaking of a small world, the song It’s a Small World, whose theme is global peace, was written by the Sherman brothers (Richard and Robert) in response to Walt Disney’s request to write a song for his Children Of The World pavilion in the 1964 World's Fair in New York City. After the fair, the ride was transferred to Disneyland (along with three other attractions from the fair that year - Primeval World Diorama, Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln and the Carousel of Progress). The song plays continuously during the ride and there are many claims that this is the most performed and translated song of all time (maybe rivaled only by the songs Yesterday and You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin').