The Lego Batman Movie

⭐⭐⭐ ½ based on 2 reviews.

tl;dr: A clever look at both Batman and superhero motifs in general tied together in a funny, clever kids movie with a surprising amount of heart.

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Review

Spoilers Ahead: My reviews are not spoiler-free. You have been warned.

In honesty, I can't really review Lego Batman properly. I've been incredibly excited to watch the film since the first trailer dropped and love the idea of a DC movie from the minds behind the first Lego Movie, but it was a bad time to go to the cinema as I felt horrendous. As a result I spent the entire film running a temperature and focusing more on either not passing out or throwing up then what was happening on screen.

What I did catch made me certain that I want to rewatch this film in the future. The scripting and animation didn't seem to be as intelligent as The Lego Movie but then the subject matter is also a lot more restrictive. In fact I was impressed by how much they tied the two together yet defined clear boundaries; Lego Batman is not a DC movie that happens to be animated in lego, with frequent references to master builders, instruction manuals and the ability to reconstruct the world around them. No, this is clearly a spin-off from the popular movie, not related to the straight-to-DVD DC lego franchise films. That also means that we aren't restricted to DC characters, with the likes of Sauron, Voldemort and King Kong all making major appearances, which was refreshing to see.

From the DC perspective, again I was impressed. The character of Batman in The Lego Movie was largely a pastiche, which made sense given the context of that film; he was the idea of Batman as viewed by a 10-year-old, so harboured little nuance. Whilst the core of that character has remained for the spin-off, the surrounding cast and overall story arc are far deeper than required. Better yet, the focus is a close retelling of the "Bat Family" storyline from the comics, allowing the writers to dive into some of the aspects of Batman as a character that rarely make it into the big-screen adaptations. It was wonderful to see this happen and I think it was done pretty well, given the context of a kids film. Within that context I doubt we'll see the sequel (if there is one) conclude that arc 'correctly' with "A Death in the Family", or even the creation of Oracle, but I can hope! If ever those stories were to make it through the Hollywood vetting process, an animated and light-hearted kids film might just be plausible.

Overall I enjoyed what I managed to see. The humour still made me laugh on several occasions, the meta concepts and pop-culture references were largely clever and well placed and the featured characters were treated surprisingly cleverly and fairly. Simple sequences like Robin's descent into Nightwing, replete with voiced reasoning, were done wonderfully well and managed to equally advance the plot, point a finger at the often ridiculous nature of comic book narrative and be humorous to people without the knowledge to 'get' the deeper subtext. Definitely a film I would like to spend some less distracted time with in the future.

Rewatch

Nearly six years later, I finally found the time to rewatch (/properly watch) this film, and I'm so glad I did. A lot of what I said first time around still holds true: it builds on the "Batman" from the Lego Movie well; has a lot of fun with cameos and general pop culture references; and does a solid job of bringing together the "Bat Family" as a core concept. I'd also forgotten how ridiculous the finale is, with the whole Lego linking ab crunches 😂 Not sure it was necessary, but it's a joke worth squeezing in.

The final song is perhaps a little too on the nose, and I'm not sure about the Barbara x Batman shipping, but I didn't really notice anything negative second time out. If anything, not feeling ill just made it more enjoyable (woulda guessed 😅) and I had a great time overall.