If there’s one thing we know about Batman, he’s not a colorful guy. Sure, there’s plenty of internal color, but he likes simple colors. Black suit. Maybe a splash of something here and there, but it’s simple, and it’s dark. That was especially true in The Batman, which introduced Robert Pattinson’s Bruce Wayne as a younger, angrier, standing-in-the-rain-listening-to-Nirvana version of Gotham’s Dark Knight. The film was lit in black and red, but the next outing for Bruce Wayne might be shaking things up a bit.
Production on The Batman Part II is now underway in Liverpool, England, and the first set photos making their way onto social media have already revealed a small but potentially important design change. While images have shown Gotham police vehicles and production equipment, one detail has caught fans’ attention: a bat logo appearing on an ALEXA 265 camera, and it’s set against a blue background. Not massive at first glance, but it could mean a lot more, because The Batman had an extremely clear visual identity. The film leaned very heavily on red and black throughout its marketing and overall mood, with red flares being lit and Bruce Wayne being lit by them. It gave the whole thing a very angry and aggressive feel, and it reflected his inner rage.
When the first film ended, though, that had started to change as Batman began to focus on saving people rather than being a vigilante, and the final stretch of the movie saw him becoming more of a symbol of hope. The blue could mean he’s calming down a bit. Or, Matt Reeves might just really like blue!
The scores below reveal how the Force sees you. Your highest number is your true alignment. Read on to understand what that means — and what it will cost you.
Disciplined, compassionate, and deeply attuned to the living Force, you have walked the path long enough to understand its demands — and accept them. You lead not through authority alone, but through example. You have felt the pull of the dark side and chosen otherwise, every time. That is not certainty. That is courage.
You are earnest, powerful, and brimming with potential — and you know it, which is both your greatest asset and your most dangerous flaw. You act before you think, trust your gut over your training, and sometimes confuse impatience for bravery. The Masters see something in you, though. The question isn’t whether you have what it takes — it’s whether you’ll be patient enough to find out.
You are not simply dangerous — you are certain, and that is worse. You have decided what the galaxy needs, and you have decided you are the one to deliver it. Your power is genuine and formidable, earned through sacrifice that would have broken lesser beings. But examine your victories carefully. Every Sith believed their cause was righteous. The dark side’s cruelest trick is that it agrees with you.
You were forged in fire and reshaped by those who found you at your lowest. You serve, because service gave you structure when you had none. Your allegiance is not to an ideology — it is to survival and to the master who gave you purpose. But there is something buried beneath the conditioning. The Jedi you hunt? You recognize them. Because you remember what it felt like before the choice was taken from you.
You have looked at the Jedi Code and the Sith Code and found both of them incomplete. You walk the line not out of indecision but out of conviction — you genuinely believe both extremes miss something essential. The Jedi don’t fully trust you. The Sith think you’re wasting your potential. They’re both partially right. But so are you.
The Batman Part II stars Robert Pattinson (Tenet) as Bruce Wayne/Batman; Jeffrey Wright (American Fiction) as Detective Jim Gordon; Andy Serkis (The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers) as butler Alfred Pennyworth; Colin Farrell (The Banshees of Inisherin) as Oz Cobb/The Penguin, Gotham’s new crime boss; Jayme Lawson (Till) as Mayor Bella Reál, Gotham’s reform-minded leader; Gil Perez-Abraham (The Batman) as Martinez, a GCPD officer; and Barry Keoghan (Saltburn) is also expected to return as the Joker.
They are set to be joined by Sebastian Stan (The Apprentice) as Harvey Dent, Gotham’s future district attorney; Scarlett Johansson (Black Widow) as Gilda Dent, Harvey’s wife; Charles Dance (Game of Thrones) as Charles Dent, Harvey’s father; Sebastian Koch (The Lives of Others) in an undisclosed role; and Brian Tyree Henry (Bullet Train) also in an undisclosed role.
The Batman Part II is currently in production and is expected to release in 2027.
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Matt Reeves, Mattson Tomlin, Bill Finger, Bob Kane
Bruce Wayne / The Batman