So where did Bruce Wayne fail? Why didn't it happen? Before
we look to the end of the story, we'll go backward a little bit,
to the first pitch.
Tollin-Robbins
Productions was approached by Tim McCanlies' agents the very weekend
that The Iron Giant was released. He had something to pitch, and
came in with the story of an American icon; a JFK Jr. kind of
story. He laid out the whole thing. The character, his grandfather-type,
his two-faced friends, the one cop in the city that he could trust,
and the empire he was to inherit. The pitch was sait to be riveting
by itself. At the end of the pitch, McCanlies revealed that the
icon in question was none other than Bruce Wayne.
Tollin-Robbins
bought it on the spot.
From
the get-go there was question about whether a new television series
and a movie franchise could blend seamlessly. An insider who was
close to the project said that it seemed to work from a narrative
standpoint. However, chiefs at the Warner Bros. movie studio insisted
they'd be making another film, at that time rumored to be either
Batman: Year One or The Dark Knight Returns, and
they used that as an excuse as to why the show couldn't move forward.
The WB network is said to have loved the idea and knew it would
be their next big franchise, to pair with the then-new Buffy
spinoff Angel. The movie division still wasn't budging.
On
July 14, 2000, X-Men, a film based on the Marvel Comics
group of super-hero characters, opened, and it made over $54 million
in its opening weekend. Suddenly all chances of Bruce Wayne on
television were shot dead.
The
insider told us that Bruce Wayne tells the pre-Batman days
of the character much like Batman Begins does, but with
a major difference: Instead of the entire story being told in
two hours, you'd have 100 hours more of seeing young Bruce getting
his life together, but at the same time going down such a dark
path that we're not sure if we're supposed to be rooting for him
or against him. "Because the fans know that while an hour
of seeing Bruce Wayne before he puts the mask on is great, what
we really want to see are 22 hours of him. 44. 66. Would an hour
of pre-boss Tony Soprano be anywhere near as captivating as 30
hours of pre-boss Tony? This is what the feature guys never got,"
the source said.
"The
script was pure beauty," we were told. "The characters
were all dead-on, but better. More fully realized and modernized
than they had ever been before. The opening tease... an unidentified
young man kicking the sh*t out of a jail cell full of street thugs,
only to reveal Alfred at the end of it....could it possibly get
better than that?"
The
project didn't get far enough to go for serious casting, but an
actor named Trevor Fehrman (Now You Know, Clerks 2) was
considered for the role of Bruce, as was Shawn Ashmore (Bobby
Drake/Iceman from the X-Men films). Michael Rosenbaum,
later to be the iconic Lex Luthor, was once tossed around for
the role of Harvey Dent. David Krumholtz (Numb3rs) was
considered as a possible contender to play Jim Gordon.
Years
later, when Smallville became a hit for the WB, attempts
and pitches were made by Smallville's creators Gough and
Millar to do Bruce Wayne as a companion show to their young
Clark Kent series. They were denied. Chances for Bruce Wayne
on television were turned into absolute nothing when a good writer
- David S. Goyer - was teamed up with a noted director, Christopher
Nolan. That team, with actor Christian Bale added to the mix,
led us to Batman Begins, which hit theatres on June 15, 2005.
Tollin-Robbins
Productions did eventually get a Batman-oriented television series
on the screen: Birds
of Prey, which premiered in 2002. Where Bruce Wayne
was a prequel to the Batman of myth, Birds was a sequel,
taking place in the future with the daughter of Batman and Catwoman
teaming up with the former Batgirl to stop crime in New Gotham.
Birds was limited in its use and mentions of the Caped
Crusader, but the producers often fought and won, such as in the
series pilot, where Batman and the Joker are actually seen. Unfortunately,
Birds didn't catch on as well as Smallville did or
Bruce Wayne would have done, and it ended after 13 episodes.
The
ship for Bruce Wayne to work as a television series has
now sailed away, now that Batman
Begins quite adequately gives its version of Bruce Wayne's
early years. But in 1999, when the Batman movie franchise was
dead and the WB Network needed a hit, this project could have
been one of the biggest comics-to-television successes to date.
We can only speculate on how cool it really would have been.
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