Gotham City Origins series -Commissioner Gordon

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Interesting choice. This is VERY pre-Batman then. Not really sure I like the idea of Bruce being a kid and yet his villains are already running a muck in Gotham. Would seem to make them kind of old when Batman finally shows up.

To be fair, they said they had access to the characters, but they didn't say how they'd be featured , nor whether or not they all would. For all we know, Selina Kyle's a 14 year old who keeps winding up in the GCPD.

They should have Jeph Loeb on board. LOVE The Long Halloween.

Eh, Loeb's hit and miss. His 90's Batman work is great, but his television stuff is spotty, at best.
 
Personally I want it to be like a Person of Interest + Law & Order in a DC world. Very much like the Gotham Central comic books by Brubaker & Rucka. They could just follow that comic book series it could be amazing IMO.

For me Gotham Central is one of the best Batman comics EVER, and Batman is hardly in it.
 
I hope Ben McKenzie's return to the Batman universe as a live-action Gordon is a lot better than his last visit there as a voice-over Batman. I liked the Year One animated adaptation, but his voice-acting missed the mark for me in most scenes.
 
Hmm, don't really know any of those actors, I saw the dude in Walking Dead but barely remember him. Still, I have high hopes for this series. I'm just hoping it focuses heavily on being a cop show and not so much on young Bruce Wayne.
 
Not off to the best of starts :lol

I don't see how that is. McKenzie was widely praised for his role as a police officer on Southland, and he looks the part. Bruno Heller was the man behind "Rome," one of HBO's critically acclaimed series, and they've got the characterizations pretty much perfect, judging by those brief bios (Alfred being a more modern take, akin to Earth One). Also, keep in mind that this is a prequel series. The Penguin's a frumpy, old, fat man when he goes toe to toe with Batman, but this is ten to twenty years, depending on the timeline, until that happens. As for the women, I haven't seen them in anything, but I'll give them the benefit of the doubt, so, what, exactly, is "not good" about this start?
 
Interview with Donal Logue (Harvey Bullock)

The character of Harvey Bullock has gone through several iterations in the comics and the animated series. Can you tell us what we can expect from this version?
It’s dangerous, because my kids watched the animated series and I remember listening to it over the speaker on road trips up to Oregon, I would hear it. It’s that tricky thing where I’m not that guy, I don’t look visually like the guy even in the cartoon. Then there’s that weird thing where I don’t want to take someone’s choice from the cartoon and match it. I want to create a character, no different from Lee Toric in Sons of Anarchy or King Horik [fromHistory's Vikings] or Hank Dolworth in Terriers. They’re all uniquely different scenarios and I don’t want to feel forced to do an impersonation of something else, which is a difficult thing to keep up over the course of a longer series. So we’ll have those talks.

What I do love about Gotham, that I can say so far, is that it creates this incredible world that, for me, you can step into things that almost feel like the roaring 20s, and then there’s this other really kind of heavy Blade Runner vibe floating around. It has this anachronistic element to it where it feels like it’s either New York in the 70s, or it kind of exists independently of time and space in a way, and you can dip into all of these different genres. So I’m excited by it.

There are elements of it that are completely contemporary and there are pieces of it that are very old-fashioned. I’m excited to see which way they go with the production design and wardrobe and all that kind of stuff. My main concern to start with, I was just going over this relationship between him and Gordon, just to find out how that dynamic plays out. Just to do my homework, basically.
It’s interesting that there’s something that exists that you can watch, but Ben obviously is not going to be tied to the cartoon and who Gordon is in that. I’m going to have to take a little bit of license and bring Bullock more towards me, and not me more towards the dude in the cartoon.

So is the timeframe of Gotham ambiguous then? Gordon isn’t whipping out his cellphone and texting people and stuff like that?
You know what, that’s hard for me to really get into, I don’t want to say. But there were a couple of examples of modern technology, but maybe an antiquated version of it, that gave me a little bit of sense that it’s certainly not the 50s and the 60s. No one’s making a joke about how “there’s no way you can press a telephone button and have a piece of paper show up in another machine.” There is an acceptance of a certain technological reality. But its not high tech and it’s not futuristic, by any means.

The official character description that was released describes Bullock as someone who plays a bit fast and loose with the rules. Do you foresee that creating some conflict with Gordon, who’s supposed to be the idealistic rookie?
Not only do I foresee it, I guarantee that is the complete and utter core of the conflict. One guy’s been around Chinatown for a long time, and knows how it has to work. Someone who’s come in from a more idealistic world – not to say non-violent, he’s coming back from the war – steps into it, and absolutely there’s a huge moral quandary.

I had a friend who’s a combat vet of Iraq and Afghanistan, and he was telling me the other day about one of his partners who, after retiring from active military life became a police officer in New Orleans, and how much it threw him. And it’s not that violence throws the person, it’s just the nature of it and who’s doing it.

It’s a lot like Gotham, where there’s kind of an ambiguous line between good and bad. We have to let certain bad guys do certain things, in order for the greater good, for this machine to keep working. And then someone comes in who’s like “no, I have a much more black and white view, I’m not into this notion of moral relativism. There’s right and there’s wrong.”
And what is law? Is law this platonic form of truth that floats in space that is fixed, or is it something that’s this arbitrary thing where it’s like “the law is me and you, right now, in this car. Whatever we determine, that’s the law.” And that’s the kind of thing that will be a conflict in this show.

Can we expect Bullock to be a recurring character, or are you just showing up at the beginning?
Contractually, I’m obligated to be there. I’m gonna be around, for sure. But the story falls squarely on Jim Gordon’s shoulders, and this awesome world where we get to meet the super infamous villains of Gotham City for the first time, when they’re young. For me, that’s the really interesting part: “oh, so that’s where you come from, Riddler.”

Is that the sort of thing we can look forward to in the pilot, just little sprinklings of the Gotham universe?
Absolutely. I don’t know if I’m not supposed to say it, but yeah. I think it’ll be fun. There will definitely be Gotham villains that you’ve come to know and love being shown in a light that… maybe it’s the first time that light’s been shone on them.
 
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So I assume If Jada Pinket Smith is in it, Jayden Smith will be to. That family always has to have their kids involved.
 
What We Learned from the Script for Gotham's First Episode

https://io9.com/what-we-learned-from-the-script-for-gothams-first-epi-1530515272/@tcraggs22

Gotham is one of this fall's most anticipated new TV shows: the story of Jim Gordon and Gotham City, years before Batman. We obtained what appears to be a draft of the first episode, although it could be fake or draft that will change a lot before filming. If the script is for real, then Gotham has some terrific potential — but it also may have much bigger issues than Batman being 12 years old.
 
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