MTV News caught up with Michael Caine at the Toronto film festival yesterday, and in-between talking to the British star about his new film Harry Brown, they also quizzed him about the future of Batman 3.
MTV News caught up with Michael Caine at the Toronto film festival yesterday, and in-between talking to the British star about his new film Harry Brown, they also quizzed him about the future of Batman 3.
Megan Fox has signed up to play Catwoman in the next "Batman" movie. That's what UK paper The Sun is reporting. Columnist George Smart says the "Transformers" star is set to follow in the footsteps of Michelle Pfeifer and Halle Berry in donning the skintight catsuit. Shooting is scheduled to start next year, with the film slated for release in 2011.
Michael Caine is out promoting his latest feature, "Is Anybody There," but he's perfectly willing to share his thoughts on the next "Batman" sequel -- fortunately for Collider, which had plenty of questions to ask.
Rumors going around suggest that Bale's Terminator: Salvation co-star may take his superheroic cape and cowl away.
Warner Bros. really wants Christopher Nolan to direct Batman 3. That much is obvious, but a new report suggests that the studio already has a replacement in mind just in case Nolan should pass on helming a third installment.
IGN Movies has learned that, as of right now, Christopher Nolan is the only screenwriter attached to Batman 3.
While the sequel to The Dark Knight is just in the beginning stages of development, Warner Bros is already looking much further down the line. During today’s Time Warner earnings call, CEO Jeff Bewkes compared the Batman series to the Harry Potter film franchise, saying that they hope to release a long line of sequels.
New Jersey's Courier-Post talked to Batman Begins and The Dark Knight executive producer Michael Uslan, who expects the third installment of the Christopher Nolan-directed films, starring Christian Bale, to hit theaters in 2011.
While there’s been no shortage of attention given to Heath Ledger’s portrayal of The Joker in “The Dark Knight,” the record-breaking sequel to “Batman Begins” might’ve never come to be if it wasn’t for the success of director Christopher Nolan’s first cape-and-cowl tale — and the portrayal of its villain, Ra’s Al Ghul, by Liam Neeson.