Batman Forever YIFY

What do you think was the most Schumacher made that set his Gotham apart from Burton's?

It is a film caught between worlds—too weird to be a standard blockbuster, too commercial to be "art," and too colorful to be "dark." Seeing it today reminds us of a time when superhero movies weren't part of a "cinematic universe," but were standalone, flamboyant experiments in style.

Batman Forever was a violent pivot. After Tim Burton’s Batman Returns (1992) horrified parents and McDonald's executives with its dark, oozing psychosexual undertones, Schumacher was brought in to "lighten" the franchise. The result was a Day-Glo fever dream.