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Batman Forever is a film about the superhero theme. In the film, Batman clashed with Two-Face and Mark Quiz (a brilliant but mad scientist because of inventor: reading other thoughts which was self-invented), with the help of an young acrobat, who lose his family due to the harm of Two-Face and a beautiful female psychiatrist.
As for Kilmer, he gamely steps into the dual Batman/Wayne role but can't get much traction, finding, as Michael Keaton had, that beyond a stern jaw there's not much to be done with it, since the suit does most of the work.
April 16, 2007
EmanuelLevy.Com
Under Joel Schumacher's helm, this third chapter is disappointing--despite a new Batman (the vain Val Kilmer), new femme, new villains and characters, new costumes and even new Batmobile.
As for Two-Face, my favorite Batman baddie on the printed page, Tommy Lee Jones makes a complete mockery of the character with a broad performance that's difficult to stomach.
Joel Schumacher submits to the Wagnerian bombast with an overly busy surface, and the script by Lee and Janet Scott Batchler and Akiva Goldsman basically runs through the formula as if it's a checklist.
The film recovers from that initial confusion to get stronger as it goes along, and to shape up as a free-form playground for its various masquerading stars.
May 20, 2003
Film4
Die-hard Batman fans will be even more disappointed with this than they were with Burton's version.
The gulf between the dark universe Burton's film set up and the tremendously silly camp world that [Batman Forever was] hunting for was too great to hybridise the two.