He confronts Batman (Val Kilmer) with the nearly impossible choice of saving either Robin (Chris O’Donnell) or Dr. Carrey wears this suit when the Riddler sits on his throne in his lair on Claw Island. The costume includes the original production tags with, “Show: Batman, Char: Riddler, Actor: Jim Carrey, CG: 7, and SC# 494 - 509.” The soles of the shoes have minimal evidence of use due to the fact that they were only worn on the sound stage and the floor was a polished veneer. Also included with the costume is the green and silver glitter Creeper shoes made by "Underground Shoes" in London, accompanied by the original box. This particular suit does not have any of the ? mark appliques sewn onto the garment. Eventually some of the ? appliques were hand stitched onto the garment to stop them from popping off the costume when Carrey would jump around the stage. The costume supervisor had a team of people on set that would put each costume on a mannequin and re-apply new rhinestones before Carrey put the suit on form filming. The adhesive glue that was used to attached the rhinestones, gold decals, and green ? marks would come loose due to Carrey's animated movement and excessive sweating during filming. The rhinestone continuity constantly changed while filming this scene. It was all a little much for me.This rhinestone suit was worn by the character "The Riddler," portrayed by actor Jim Carrey, in the 1995 motion picture, "Batman Forever." This signature costume was constructed out of a white spandex material and is encrusted with multi-colored rhinestones, iridescent gold decals, and emerald green ? marks. The movie was just all over the map - it was silly and bombastic, and there are times where you got shots focused on just Batman’s ass. “To me, it was like a stage musical, but without the music, more than it was a Batman movie. I was at the screening, but I was thinking to myself, ‘This is not good,'” he said. “I don’t even know that I finished the film, to be honest. It was a bit obscene, so we took the nipples off.”įernandez said when it came to the controversy, he “didn’t really care or think much about it” as it “got its own life” around the film, but that when it came to his own opinions on the finished movie, he didn’t feel it was a strong Batman entry. ![]() “After I sculpted it though, everybody realized, maybe not. ![]() “They said, ‘If the guys have nipples, the girls should have nipples, too,'” he recalled. Fernandez said that conversation came up, but the team ultimately passed after seeing a version of it. While the suits for George Clooney’s Batman and Chris O’Donnell’s Robin suits both featured the design element, Alicia Silverstone’s Batgirl suit notably did not. “I didn’t want to do it, but he’s the boss, so we sharpened them, circled them and it all became kind of ridiculous.” They were also circled, both outer and inner - it was all made into a feature of the batsuit,” Fernandez said. “Schumacher wanted them sharpened, like, with points. The sculpture also explained the evolution of the suits’ nipple design noting that for Kilmer’s suit, that part was subtle and “just a little blob of clay” before Schumacher, who “loved the nipples,” decided to showcase them more in Batman & Robin. Amazon Lands Animated 'Batman' Feature and TV Spinoffįernandez went on to say that he didn’t “know exactly where my head was at back in the day” but that was how he remembered his approach and at the time, “had no idea there was going to end up being all this buzz about it.”
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