Matt Reeves' Gotham is a perfect mix of Tim Burton and Christopher Nolan: gothic and noir infused with German Expressionism and Art Deco, but grounded and realistic.
@CountlesS Yeah, that's always been one of my biggest issues with the Dark Knight trilogy. The city kept changing _way_ too much with each film. I didn't mind the change from Begins to TDK so much as both were filmed in Chicago and at least had some consistency (e.g., in TDK you can spot the train system from Begins in some shots if you look closely enough), but then they filmed TDKR in NY, Pittsburgh, and LA (you can literally make out the buildings of downtown LA along with a few palm trees in the scene where Batman is being chased by the cops) and it just looked too different from its appearance in the previous two films. I really hope that Reeves continues filming the next installments in Liverpool to keep his version of Gotham from suffering the same fate.
Which is why Nolan’s Gotham was terrible. Gotham should feel like…y’know…GOTHAM!!! Nolan’s insistence on just filming in real locations and hardly changing a thing makes the city just feel bland and forgettable. At least Joker 2019 at least used 1970s New York as the blueprint which worked since that’s basically what Gotham City is anyway.
@@LanceVanceDance84 i am from Pittsburgh. So it’s maybe a personal thing but as cool as it is to see all the iconic buildings I grew up with, it’s very distracting and it never felt like Gotham.
@@christianmanka3884 I totally get it. I'm originally from NY, so while it was pretty cool seeing real-life locations I too had grown up with such as the Empire State Building or the 59th Street Bridge in a Batman film, it was too different from the setting that had already been established in the previous entries. It was just another reminder that I was simply watching a movie, which created a barrier that prevented me from becoming totally immersed in what was happening on the screen. If Begins and TDK were also filmed in NY then that wouldn't have been as much of an issue and it might've been a little easier for me to look past the scenes shot in LA and Pittsburgh.
I love all of the Gotham City depictions, except Adam West’s Gotham (I still love his Batman). My list would be; 1. Matt Reeves’ Gotham 2. Zack Snyder’s Gotham 3. Tim Burton’s Gotham 4. Joel Schumacher’s Gotham 5. Todd Phillips’ Gotham 6. Christopher Nolan’s ‘Batman Begins’ Gotham, TDK, TDKR (still love TDKR) 7. Rob Bailey’s Gotham (Gotham TV show) 8. Adam West’s Gotham
Yeah, definitely makes sense for Burton’s to be the worst. I mean for years I remember being put off by prostitutes straight up targeting children. 😐 Like how desperate can you be for cash?
The worst version of Gotham is the Snyderverse, because not only is it the Gotham crime ridden cesspool that we're all familiar with, but now you how the high probability of an alien, magical, or mythological being causing world wide, or universal destruction. The Synderverse is almost as dangerous as the comics. The safest is without a doubt the Adam West 60's Gotham. I would even argue that you don't need a Batman for that Gotham...anyone of us could kick any of the villains asses...or just blow them away with a handgun.
@@mysticalmaniac2 Doesn't matter. We knew it wasn't a Utopia, and the implication that Gotham was awful was there when Perry made a sarcastic remark to Clark telling him someone was murdered there. You have to assume that this Gotham was just as bad if not worse than the others, especially because there are more Batman villains in this Gotham than any other universe, on top of that you have the threat of extraterrestrial, magical, and mythical threats. This is a Gotham where you can get pick pocketed, mugged, chased by Killer Croc, and finally killed by having a building fall on you because Doomsday is attacking.
@@mysticalmaniac2 There was nothing wrong with the writing. It was the editing that fucked those films up. The Ultimate Edition of BvS is a masterpiece.
This is nice. Any chance we could get a similar one about the animated ones? Or certain video games (I'm curious how you'd rank the Gotham from the Arkham or Telltale games).
Alright this is before I have watched the video. Personally from what I’ve seen I’d say it’s Gotham from The Dark Knight Rises. It was basically blown up around the city and turned into a crime world and it would’ve been completely blown up if not for Batman.
Whats the best Gotham is really 90s animated But i say batman 1989 because it mashes a large east Coast industrial city mixed with the gothic ,noir n arc Deco look
@@WarpingFist I mean from a design standpoint it's pretty much explained in the lore why Gotham has such a strong gothic revival architecture the city was founded by a Wayne who pretty much gave them an infinite budget. Tim Burtons Gotham comes the closest to this and is pretty realistic when you take the lore into account. Reeves versions feels like a more modernizing Gotham city as modern tech covers the old gothic buildings while Nolan's version just feels nothing like Gotham City. When I hear "Realistic" I think of something possible and there's nothing imposable about Burtons Gotham the city could've been made in our world, weirder cities have existed lol
My favorite gotham interpretations. 1. Rocksteady Gotham- Perfection. 2. Matt Reeve’s Gotham- The best on screen Gotham yet. Mix of old and new. 3. Burton’s Gotham- Dark, Gothic but alittle too over the top.
Rocksteady’s Gotham was perfection in the background of Arkham City. Knight was a HUGE letdown. “Fully Explorable Gotham” my ass! Knight’s Gotham was fucking tiny. Even the small new area of Origins had a better atmosphere and vibe.
Matt reeves Gotham is literally just chicago man. Just another dark knight trilogy realistic Gotham. It’s trash. The best are animated series, Tim Burton’s Gotham and Joel Schumacher.
Watching this made me realize two things about Matt Reeves’ Batman Universe; His Gotham is, objectively, one of the best iterations of Gotham, ever. Also, his Batman is not a very good Batman (not in terms of quality or performance, but his impact).
That’s literally the point. It’s basically a different type of Origin Story. His Batman goes from being a hopeless nihilist just out for revenge to finally embracing the desire to be better and have a more inspiring impact. He doesn’t truly become the Batman we all know and love until the end.
@@KiLlACaMrOn94 He starts out leveraging fear as a tool to the point that even the people he saves are terrified of him. He tells us he has spent two years running around the city calling himself “Vengeance,” when people ask his name. Then he catches a serial killer who claims that Batman has inspired him since they are both targeting Gotham’s corrupt, the idea that donning a mask has created more villains, not fewer, disturbs Bruce Wayne. He admits while writing in his journal that he has played vigilante trying to protect the streets of Gotham for two years, and crime has only gotten worse. Then in the climax of the film, he discovers too late that Riddler has amassed a violent, fringe following by using the internet to foment an uprising of the disenfranchised against Gotham’s elites. When he catches one of the shooters and asks, “Who are you?” the masked man replies, “I am Vengeance.”He’s visibly distraught. He’s inspired the Riddler and his followers to take justice into their own hands. Worse still, The Riddler isn’t the only villain who has taken to the streets because of Batman’s antics. In a brief scene, an imprisoned Riddler commiserates over his failure to destroy Gotham with the fucking Joker. Matt Reeves LITERALLY said: “There’s a version of glorifying a kind of brutality of this Batman that’s fascist,” says Reeves. “And then there are other portrayals where you could see that he’s struggling in this very human way. So I wanted him to be forced to have an awakening … and confront what he’s doing. So that he ends the film having decided to become a much better and more effective version of Batman”. He saves the day by leading the people of Gotham out of danger by holding a beacon of light. Up until this moment, it’s been a dark movie which feels grim and claustrophobic. All the action takes place at night, in dark night clubs, or inside the bat cave. The only bright, daytime shot comes at the very end as Bruce helps rescue survivors from the arena the morning after the fight. In that moment, Batman is literally monologuing about evolving into a symbol of hope rather than fear. “I’m starting to see now. I have had an effect here. But not the one I intended. Vengeance, won’t change the past. Mine… or anyone else’s. I have to become more. People need hope. To know someone’s out there for them. This cities angry, and scarred. Like me. Our scars can destroy us… even after the physical wounds have healed. But if we can survive them. They can give us the power. To Endure. And the strength to fight.” You wanna try saying you never understood ANY of that?!?! You sure you even watched the fucking movie?!?!
I’d like to think architecture wise, Gotham should be a modern day Yharnam. Yharnam is so gothic and dystopian, and it’s very vertical and seems endlessly tall and massive. I always liked huge towering cities that seem to never end
I agree, have always viewed Yharnam as Gotham in the 1800s. The perfect version of Gotham for me would be yharnam in the 30s-70s, basically the burton version.
Do you think that Gotham is the true villain of the Joaquin Phoenix Joker movie and I also have an issue with the Ben Affleck’s Batman because if he is okay killing random criminals, then why would he not kill the Joker and save Harley in the first Suicide Squad movie if she helped killed Robin? Does it make you wonder why does no other hero go in and save Gotham because why do they have to stick to one city?
I don’t know much about the lore of Ben Affleck’s Batman. The idea that he didn’t murder his rouges gallery is a bit of a plot hole however. Again, I don’t know anything about Batflecks lore so maybe there’s a viable explanation for why he didn’t massacre every villain. Also, the amount of hero’s in Gotham wont change its crime rate. There will always be crime no matter how many protectors patrol a city. No, I wouldn’t really say Gotham was the villain of the joker movie. If there was an antagonist it would be the people Arthur thinks wronged him in life (Murray, Thomas, the elite, and Randel)
@@WarpingFist yes because they’re the ones who pushed Arthur too far and do you think Thomas Wayne made up that record by bribing the doctors and is Arthur’s father?
I think Batfleck's descent into madness was a very recent development. It does say in the movie that he became extra ruthless since the appearance of Superman and the sense of powerlessness that brought with him. In continuity, that was almost a year ago. Maybe since then, he hasn't had an encounter with the Joker? Or probably the dynamic he has with Joker won't push him into killing Joker, because psychologically, Batman needs that chaos. Most likely, him going kill-mode must have sent his bigger rogues scurrying away? It truly can't be solved until they release a movie explaining it (highly unlikely). But we do see that the Bafleck of the future won't hesitate killing Joker as he himself says.
Although your comment is distracting from the point of the video. You may have a problem with Batman killing but the video is about what might have probably driven him to that limit. I personally believe it's Gotham City, death of Robin and appearance of Superman, and that might have been too much for that Bruce Wayne. Didn't mind a killing Batman. If only they would expand his lore a bit more
@@joaquinthecactusman5742 I have a brother who saw it. He says the first season was grounded and then it suddenly became campy in season 2 and onwards. I’ll watch it but hopefully that tonal shift wont be too distracting.
Geez dude have u seen the Tim Burton Films? BATMAN in that universe blows the bad guys away without a second thought! It's the one BATMAN universe where literally nowhere is safe! Maybe except inside the Batmobile!
The cinematic versions of Gotham would be more appropriate. The TV versions are missing apart from '66, which also had a theatrical feature. You could also have theoretically included Catwoman, since it actually is canonically a spinoff of Batman Returns. Michelle Pfeiffer's Catwoman canonically exists in that movie. The city is never named but it could be Gotham
I think that, out of the live-action depictions, The version from Gotham is probably the best, followed by Tim Burton’s and Matt Reeves’s, but honestly, I think the animated versions and Arkham Knight’s Gotham are better than all of the live-action versions.
I think Snyder's gotham is more dangerous than any gotham in live action but because of the fact that we barely know about it his gotham always takes the backseat
Why did you not add Gotham from Gotham or Gotham from Titans or Gotham from batwoman or Gotham from the birds of prey TV show and since you did not add those versions you do not rank every live-action version of Gotham
He probably meant every live-action version of Gotham _portrayed on film._ And I can't say that I blame him because those shows are awful and it would be such a chore to go through them all to get an accurate take on their portrayals of the city.
@@LanceVanceDance84 I have to agree because of only good seasons of Gotham was one two and five for the other seasons the only good episodes were joker ones and with Titans I don't know I only watch episode 1 batwoman only good thing in that was season 1 and a little bit of season 3
You left out the obvious elephant in the room. The Gotham TV show which replicates 70s NYC. The former 24 hour post office is used as an external shot of Gotham City Police Headquarters. Plus you'll see shots of other NYC landmarks like Worldwide Plaza worked into a CGI city. Very beautiful depiction
i'd just live in matt reeves' gotham, it's gothic in architecture, nice to look at and sure i may get mugged and shot 24/7 but atleast i got a cool batman to crack a mfers' ribs and skull
Matt Reeves' Gotham is a perfect mix of Tim Burton and Christopher Nolan: gothic and noir infused with German Expressionism and Art Deco, but grounded and realistic.
You just described Matt Reeves Gotham better than I ever could have.
Burton's Gotham is the one place that I wouldn't even feel safe in my own house. It is literally a nightmare of a city.
Bale’s Batman has the most dangerous Gotham because it’s just Chicago
@CountlesS Yeah, that's always been one of my biggest issues with the Dark Knight trilogy. The city kept changing _way_ too much with each film. I didn't mind the change from Begins to TDK so much as both were filmed in Chicago and at least had some consistency (e.g., in TDK you can spot the train system from Begins in some shots if you look closely enough), but then they filmed TDKR in NY, Pittsburgh, and LA (you can literally make out the buildings of downtown LA along with a few palm trees in the scene where Batman is being chased by the cops) and it just looked too different from its appearance in the previous two films. I really hope that Reeves continues filming the next installments in Liverpool to keep his version of Gotham from suffering the same fate.
Which is why Nolan’s Gotham was terrible. Gotham should feel like…y’know…GOTHAM!!! Nolan’s insistence on just filming in real locations and hardly changing a thing makes the city just feel bland and forgettable. At least Joker 2019 at least used 1970s New York as the blueprint which worked since that’s basically what Gotham City is anyway.
@@LanceVanceDance84 i am from Pittsburgh. So it’s maybe a personal thing but as cool as it is to see all the iconic buildings I grew up with, it’s very distracting and it never felt like Gotham.
@@christianmanka3884 I totally get it. I'm originally from NY, so while it was pretty cool seeing real-life locations I too had grown up with such as the Empire State Building or the 59th Street Bridge in a Batman film, it was too different from the setting that had already been established in the previous entries. It was just another reminder that I was simply watching a movie, which created a barrier that prevented me from becoming totally immersed in what was happening on the screen. If Begins and TDK were also filmed in NY then that wouldn't have been as much of an issue and it might've been a little easier for me to look past the scenes shot in LA and Pittsburgh.
next think you see: batman goes to ohio 😳
Burton’s Gotham will always be the top tier for me, the city was alive itself
I really love Batman forever's Gotham it just always looked so cool to me like some sort of trip
I love all of the Gotham City depictions, except Adam West’s Gotham (I still love his Batman).
My list would be;
1. Matt Reeves’ Gotham
2. Zack Snyder’s Gotham
3. Tim Burton’s Gotham
4. Joel Schumacher’s Gotham
5. Todd Phillips’ Gotham
6. Christopher Nolan’s ‘Batman Begins’ Gotham, TDK, TDKR (still love TDKR)
7. Rob Bailey’s Gotham (Gotham TV show)
8. Adam West’s Gotham
Burton's Gotham is way superior to Snyder's
Yeah, definitely makes sense for Burton’s to be the worst. I mean for years I remember being put off by prostitutes straight up targeting children. 😐 Like how desperate can you be for cash?
Happens all the time
"Hi, im Chris Hanson. Take a seat."
IMO the arkham games easily have the best gotham. An amazing mix between burton and a more realistic city
Your analysis on the Gothams are top-tier.
The worst version of Gotham is the Snyderverse, because not only is it the Gotham crime ridden cesspool that we're all familiar with, but now you how the high probability of an alien, magical, or mythological being causing world wide, or universal destruction. The Synderverse is almost as dangerous as the comics.
The safest is without a doubt the Adam West 60's Gotham. I would even argue that you don't need a Batman for that Gotham...anyone of us could kick any of the villains asses...or just blow them away with a handgun.
I didn’t even consider alien and magical threats to be a factor. Yeah, that definitely makes Affleck’s Gotham even more dangerous.
@@WarpingFist Yeah, definitely ups the danger level. Anyway, good topic man.
It wasnt a very good gotham and we hardly saw anything. All of affleck's batman movies were very very poorly written.
@@mysticalmaniac2 Doesn't matter. We knew it wasn't a Utopia, and the implication that Gotham was awful was there when Perry made a sarcastic remark to Clark telling him someone was murdered there. You have to assume that this Gotham was just as bad if not worse than the others, especially because there are more Batman villains in this Gotham than any other universe, on top of that you have the threat of extraterrestrial, magical, and mythical threats. This is a Gotham where you can get pick pocketed, mugged, chased by Killer Croc, and finally killed by having a building fall on you because Doomsday is attacking.
@@mysticalmaniac2 There was nothing wrong with the writing. It was the editing that fucked those films up. The Ultimate Edition of BvS is a masterpiece.
my opinion:
.1 reevesverse
.2 jokerverse
.3 burtonverse
.4 snyderverse
.6 1940's batmanverse
.7 westverse
(in dangerousness not liking)
No Nolanverse?
This guy doesn't know BATMAN
"Jokerverse" as u call it and "Burtonverse" are the same
Burton's BATMAN is still better than the rest
@@dancooke8811 you twalkin to me?
Sir. Burton’s Gotham is clearly the most dangerous. I mean look at it. 😂
WarpingFist your channel is awesome. Great work on the videos, I've been watching the Spider-Man cut content episodes all week.
This is nice. Any chance we could get a similar one about the animated ones? Or certain video games (I'm curious how you'd rank the Gotham from the Arkham or Telltale games).
The algorithm has blessed you, Rejoice!!! But great video dude regardless.
I like this may be controversial Schumacher’s Gotham
The Adam West Batman Gotham is the safest to live in so if I was forced to choose a version of Gotham to live in for a month, it'd be that one
Joker is my favorite one because it’s from the perspective of one of its lower class citizens
1.Gotham Series
2.Reeves
3.Burton
I didn't like Snyder's
Alright this is before I have watched the video. Personally from what I’ve seen I’d say it’s Gotham from The Dark Knight Rises. It was basically blown up around the city and turned into a crime world and it would’ve been completely blown up if not for Batman.
I love the Gotham of Gotham (tv show)
7:14 I can't buy the Burton and Schumacher films as being in the same universe. They feel like 2 different ones.
Whats the best Gotham is really 90s animated
But i say batman 1989 because it mashes a large east Coast industrial city mixed with the gothic ,noir n arc Deco look
3:10
Technically not racist
Gothams Gotham?
How about the show called Gotham ?? Cant believe you put shitty Suicide Squad's version but you ignored Gotham
Gotham is just 2022 Chicago
What about Gotham the tv show? That version of gotham?
I haven't seen the show so I didn't think I was knowledgeable to rank it
@@WarpingFist ok.i havent seen much of it either but ive seen some scenes here or there.
The best live action Gothams are: The Joker (2019) and The Batman (2022).
Where’s Gotham’s Gotham?
Gotham is modern day San Francisco. 😐
Nolan’s Gotham is the worst. Not in terms of Crime. I mean it’s the worst depiction. Always thought so and you can’t change my mind.
Honestly it was pretty good in Begins but just declined in the sequels.
(Most Realistic)
1. Phillips
2. Reeves
3. Nolan
Well, if we’re going by most realistic wouldn’t Nolan be #2?
@@WarpingFist the train scene in batman begins
@@WarpingFist I mean from a design standpoint it's pretty much explained in the lore why Gotham has such a strong gothic revival architecture the city was founded by a Wayne who pretty much gave them an infinite budget. Tim Burtons Gotham comes the closest to this and is pretty realistic when you take the lore into account. Reeves versions feels like a more modernizing Gotham city as modern tech covers the old gothic buildings while Nolan's version just feels nothing like Gotham City. When I hear "Realistic" I think of something possible and there's nothing imposable about Burtons Gotham the city could've been made in our world, weirder cities have existed lol
Lol Nolan 3.
"Ew a jap"
Batman From 1940s serials
My favorite gotham interpretations.
1. Rocksteady Gotham- Perfection.
2. Matt Reeve’s Gotham- The best on screen Gotham yet. Mix of old and new.
3. Burton’s Gotham- Dark, Gothic but alittle too over the top.
Rocksteady’s Gotham was perfection in the background of Arkham City. Knight was a HUGE letdown. “Fully Explorable Gotham” my ass! Knight’s Gotham was fucking tiny. Even the small new area of Origins had a better atmosphere and vibe.
Matt reeves Gotham is literally just chicago man. Just another dark knight trilogy realistic Gotham. It’s trash. The best are animated series, Tim Burton’s Gotham and Joel Schumacher.
Watching this made me realize two things about Matt Reeves’ Batman Universe; His Gotham is, objectively, one of the best iterations of Gotham, ever. Also, his Batman is not a very good Batman (not in terms of quality or performance, but his impact).
That’s literally the point. It’s basically a different type of Origin Story. His Batman goes from being a hopeless nihilist just out for revenge to finally embracing the desire to be better and have a more inspiring impact. He doesn’t truly become the Batman we all know and love until the end.
@@thomaskilroy4573 he literally never did. I get everything you said, I just don’t agree and I want to so badly.
@@KiLlACaMrOn94 He starts out leveraging fear as a tool to the point that even the people he saves are terrified of him. He tells us he has spent two years running around the city calling himself “Vengeance,” when people ask his name. Then he catches a serial killer who claims that Batman has inspired him since they are both targeting Gotham’s corrupt, the idea that donning a mask has created more villains, not fewer, disturbs Bruce Wayne. He admits while writing in his journal that he has played vigilante trying to protect the streets of Gotham for two years, and crime has only gotten worse. Then in the climax of the film, he discovers too late that Riddler has amassed a violent, fringe following by using the internet to foment an uprising of the disenfranchised against Gotham’s elites. When he catches one of the shooters and asks, “Who are you?” the masked man replies, “I am Vengeance.”He’s visibly distraught. He’s inspired the Riddler and his followers to take justice into their own hands. Worse still, The Riddler isn’t the only villain who has taken to the streets because of Batman’s antics. In a brief scene, an imprisoned Riddler commiserates over his failure to destroy Gotham with the fucking Joker. Matt Reeves LITERALLY said: “There’s a version of glorifying a kind of brutality of this Batman that’s fascist,” says Reeves. “And then there are other portrayals where you could see that he’s struggling in this very human way. So I wanted him to be forced to have an awakening … and confront what he’s doing. So that he ends the film having decided to become a much better and more effective version of Batman”.
He saves the day by leading the people of Gotham out of danger by holding a beacon of light. Up until this moment, it’s been a dark movie which feels grim and claustrophobic. All the action takes place at night, in dark night clubs, or inside the bat cave. The only bright, daytime shot comes at the very end as Bruce helps rescue survivors from the arena the morning after the fight. In that moment, Batman is literally monologuing about evolving into a symbol of hope rather than fear. “I’m starting to see now. I have had an effect here. But not the one I intended. Vengeance, won’t change the past. Mine… or anyone else’s. I have to become more. People need hope. To know someone’s out there for them. This cities angry, and scarred. Like me. Our scars can destroy us… even after the physical wounds have healed. But if we can survive them. They can give us the power. To Endure. And the strength to fight.”
You wanna try saying you never understood ANY of that?!?! You sure you even watched the fucking movie?!?!
Titans gotham looks like the most dangerous of them all, if you watch the last episode of first season, or the third season, you will see
No one, I repeat, NO ONE in their right mind watches that show willingly. You ain’t gonna convince anyone to start buddy.
I’d like to think architecture wise, Gotham should be a modern day Yharnam. Yharnam is so gothic and dystopian, and it’s very vertical and seems endlessly tall and massive. I always liked huge towering cities that seem to never end
I agree, have always viewed Yharnam as Gotham in the 1800s. The perfect version of Gotham for me would be yharnam in the 30s-70s, basically the burton version.
man... I wish Gotham was like that in Batman Arkham Knight
@@Mr_Vakarian same yo, that’s what it looked like in the skyline of Batman, Arkham city
Do you think that Gotham is the true villain of the Joaquin Phoenix Joker movie and I also have an issue with the Ben Affleck’s Batman because if he is okay killing random criminals, then why would he not kill the Joker and save Harley in the first Suicide Squad movie if she helped killed Robin?
Does it make you wonder why does no other hero go in and save Gotham because why do they have to stick to one city?
I don’t know much about the lore of Ben Affleck’s Batman. The idea that he didn’t murder his rouges gallery is a bit of a plot hole however. Again, I don’t know anything about Batflecks lore so maybe there’s a viable explanation for why he didn’t massacre every villain. Also, the amount of hero’s in Gotham wont change its crime rate. There will always be crime no matter how many protectors patrol a city.
No, I wouldn’t really say Gotham was the villain of the joker movie. If there was an antagonist it would be the people Arthur thinks wronged him in life (Murray, Thomas, the elite, and Randel)
@@WarpingFist yes because they’re the ones who pushed Arthur too far and do you think Thomas Wayne made up that record by bribing the doctors and is Arthur’s father?
I think he is Arthurs father yes.
I think Batfleck's descent into madness was a very recent development. It does say in the movie that he became extra ruthless since the appearance of Superman and the sense of powerlessness that brought with him. In continuity, that was almost a year ago. Maybe since then, he hasn't had an encounter with the Joker? Or probably the dynamic he has with Joker won't push him into killing Joker, because psychologically, Batman needs that chaos. Most likely, him going kill-mode must have sent his bigger rogues scurrying away? It truly can't be solved until they release a movie explaining it (highly unlikely). But we do see that the Bafleck of the future won't hesitate killing Joker as he himself says.
Although your comment is distracting from the point of the video. You may have a problem with Batman killing but the video is about what might have probably driven him to that limit. I personally believe it's Gotham City, death of Robin and appearance of Superman, and that might have been too much for that Bruce Wayne. Didn't mind a killing Batman. If only they would expand his lore a bit more
Yes, the Gotham tv show is not included. I haven’t seen it.
Don’t that show is complete ass
It’s like they made it just for a money grab
you should, it aint bad, the history changes are weird, but when its done, youll appreciate it, even with it's stupidity
Tim burton has the best Batman and the best Gotham city too sooo I would love in tim Burton’s Gotham city
@@joaquinthecactusman5742 I have a brother who saw it. He says the first season was grounded and then it suddenly became campy in season 2 and onwards. I’ll watch it but hopefully that tonal shift wont be too distracting.
@@mehkaiharris5626 Tim Burton’s Gotham is the type of city you should admire from a far. Not a place you should actually live in.
The most dangerous gotham is in the Gotham series
Haven’t seen it so I can’t really give my opinion
@@WarpingFist oo ok you should it's a good series the villain are top tier they probably have the best joker right after Heath Ledger
5:23 WOW I forgot about THAT...
Geez dude have u seen the Tim Burton Films? BATMAN in that universe blows the bad guys away without a second thought! It's the one BATMAN universe where literally nowhere is safe! Maybe except inside the Batmobile!
He did put it on number 1
Back at it again
Bvs gotham wins worst. It had kryptonian level threats, my dude.
who cares lol , that gotham was absolute dogshit lol
But none of that happened in Gotham, though. 😂
@@TJUC123 Doomsday happened in both Metropolis and Gotham.
The cinematic versions of Gotham would be more appropriate. The TV versions are missing apart from '66, which also had a theatrical feature. You could also have theoretically included Catwoman, since it actually is canonically a spinoff of Batman Returns. Michelle Pfeiffer's Catwoman canonically exists in that movie. The city is never named but it could be Gotham
I think that, out of the live-action depictions, The version from Gotham is probably the best, followed by Tim Burton’s and Matt Reeves’s, but honestly, I think the animated versions and Arkham Knight’s Gotham are better than all of the live-action versions.
gotham isn’t a city
it’s a battle royale
What's the name of the song that plays during Robert Pattinson's Batman rating?
ruclips.net/video/2hgTsMkDFqg/видео.html
very nice video man good work👌
what abt Gotham's Gotham?
Best Batman is 1989
you picked the details carefully. good job
For some reason I kind of liked how Gotham and Metropolis looked in the DCEU movies
What about Batman the animated series gotham? Or Batman beyond which reminds me of bladerunner
Chicago on a daily..some one shot every 2 mins.. killed every 10 mins
What about the Gotham tv show?
1. Reeves Gotham(worst)
2. Burton Gotham
3. Joker Gotham
4. Nolan Gotham(begins)
5. Gotham Gotham
6. Schumacher Gotham
7. Nolan Gotham(TDK + TDKR)
8. 1940’s Gotham
9. 1966 Gotham(Best)
BONUS:
1. Affleck Gotham(haven’t seen enough of it yet)
2. Batwoman Gotham(don’t really care)
3. Gotham Knights Gotham(couldn’t care less)
I like how there's never a version of Gotham filmed in or based on Detroit. Even certain filmmakers are smart enough to never go there.
Batman v Superman shot in Detroit
@@hezekiahramirez6965 Word? Snyder had bigger balls than I thought
I think we can all agree the worst and most dangerous Gotham was in the SHOW Gotham
I think Snyder's gotham is more dangerous than any gotham in live action but because of the fact that we barely know about it his gotham always takes the backseat
Dark knight rises >>> every single Batman movie
You forgot the Gotham tv show’s Gotham.
Why did you not add Gotham from Gotham or Gotham from Titans or Gotham from batwoman or Gotham from the birds of prey TV show and since you did not add those versions you do not rank every live-action version of Gotham
He probably meant every live-action version of Gotham _portrayed on film._ And I can't say that I blame him because those shows are awful and it would be such a chore to go through them all to get an accurate take on their portrayals of the city.
@@LanceVanceDance84 I have to agree because of only good seasons of Gotham was one two and five for the other seasons the only good episodes were joker ones and with Titans I don't know I only watch episode 1 batwoman only good thing in that was season 1 and a little bit of season 3
You left out the obvious elephant in the room. The Gotham TV show which replicates 70s NYC. The former 24 hour post office is used as an external shot of Gotham City Police Headquarters. Plus you'll see shots of other NYC landmarks like Worldwide Plaza worked into a CGI city. Very beautiful depiction
Ok
This video's great. If you keep making stuff like this then I'll definitely subscribe.
i'd just live in matt reeves' gotham, it's gothic in architecture, nice to look at and sure i may get mugged and shot 24/7 but atleast i got a cool batman to crack a mfers' ribs and skull