The Slovak town of Dunajska Streda has its own local superhero, Zoltan Kohari. Zoltan is a 26-year-old guy living in a derelict house without heat, water and electricity. He wanted to make a difference in his hometown so he equipped himself with an all-leather Batman suit and some homemade gadgets and started patrolling the streets.
Although he doesn’t fight criminals, he waters people’s plants, trims various lawns, helps to clean up the local area by picking up trash and he also calls the police whenever he sees anything suspicious in the neighborhood. Local dwellers like Zoltan and sometimes give him food in return for his efforts.
The Sean Ward Show set out to make a “Shit Batman Says” video on the streets of Toronto with Toronto Batman but ended up with something much better, Batman’s Night Out. The Toronto Batman knows the best way to find villains is to scream at everyone in general.
When you’ve been around for over 70 years, chances are you’ve made your fair share of fashion statements. As a great new infographic by Screenrant shows, every “significant” Batsuit from Batman’s 1939 debut through the present, in comic books, movies, TV, video games, and even “Batman Live.”
Christian Bale and Tom Hardy were both spotted on the New York set of The Dark Knight Rises over the weekend. A clash between Gotham City Police and escaped inmates from Arkham Asylum, led by Bane (Hardy), footage shows hundreds of extras duking it out at a smoke-filled intersection until the sound of air-horns signal the end of the take.
Christopher Nolan's last Batman movie in his Batman trilogy, opens in theaters on July 20, 2012 and stars Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Gary Oldman, Morgan Freeman, Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marion Cotillard, Juno Temple, Josh Pence, Daniel Sunjata, Nestor Carbonell, Matthew Modine, Tom Conti, Joey King, Brett Cullen, Chris Ellis, Josh Stewart, Christopher Judge, Adam Rodriguez and Rob Brown.
You’ve got to be an expert at both LEGO-craft and Batman architecture to create a masterwork like this. And Alex Schranz is clearly both. He used around 9000 Lego parts to build this 68-brick high Batcave replica, complete with Batman figure modded to scale and a neon lamp in the back illuminate all that glorious detail.