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Who is the Best BATMAN (actor)

11th Mar 2019
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Who is the Best BATMAN (actor)

Ranked by 4
Views: 5.7K
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#8.

Lewis Wilson

8/8
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“Batman” (1943 serial) Wilson merits at least a footnote in pop-culture history for being the first big-screen Batman, in the 15-chapter Columbia Pictures serial released just four years after the Caped Crusader made his first appearance in Detective Comics. There’s little else that can be said about his performance, however, and even less that can be described as complimentary. An inadvertently comical figure in a Batsuit that overemphasized his sizeable paunch, and a Batmask tricked out with pointy ears large enough to double as radio towers, Wilson managed to out-camp Adam West’s high-camp Batman when the 1943 serial was reissued in theaters around the time the 1966-68 “Batman” TV series premiered on ABC. Even so, the serial itself is not without some curiosity value, in that it reveals how Batman, not unlike Sherlock Holmes, Tarzan, and other fictional good guys, was pressed into wartime service during WWII. Here, Batman and Robin (Douglas Croft) serve as government agents pitted against Japanese superspy Dr. Daka (played by the conspicuously non-Asian J. Carrol Naish).
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#8.

Lewis Wilson

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“Batman” (1943 serial) Wilson merits at least a footnote in pop-culture history for being the first big-screen Batman, in the 15-chapter Columbia Pictures serial released just four years after the Caped Crusader made his first appearance in Detective Comics. There’s little else that can be said about his performance, however, and even less that can be described as complimentary. An inadvertently comical figure in a Batsuit that overemphasized his sizeable paunch, and a Batmask tricked out with pointy ears large enough to double as radio towers, Wilson managed to out-camp Adam West’s high-camp Batman when the 1943 serial was reissued in theaters around the time the 1966-68 “Batman” TV series premiered on ABC. Even so, the serial itself is not without some curiosity value, in that it reveals how Batman, not unlike Sherlock Holmes, Tarzan, and other fictional good guys, was pressed into wartime service during WWII. Here, Batman and Robin (Douglas Croft) serve as government agents pitted against Japanese superspy Dr. Daka (played by the conspicuously non-Asian J. Carrol Naish).

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