This redirect is within the scope of WikiProject Comics, a collaborative effort to build an encyclopedic guide to
comics on Wikipedia. Get involved! If you would like to participate, you can help with the
current tasks, visit the
notice board,
the attached article or discuss it at the
project's talk page.ComicsWikipedia:WikiProject ComicsTemplate:WikiProject ComicsComics articles
I see the page was
moved on May 14 by
User:Unreal7 with no discussion here. [Edit: If the edit summary for the move is true,
WP:NCF needs some work.] Since I have never, ever heard these films be collectively referred to as âBatmanâ (as opposed to, say, Harry Potter or The Lord of the Rings), I have no complaints about a move away from the parenthetical disambiguation. But is âThe Motion Picture Anthologyâ really in use for these movies outside of a particular way of packaging them? I think Iâd go for
Batman film series (no parentheses, but named for the 1989 movie), assuming no confusion with the serials, distinct from The Dark Knight Trilogy. Thoughts? â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
04:38, 29 May 2016 (UTC)edited 05:38, 29 May 2016 (UTC)reply
I've moved it back. This move should never have been made. Since when do we name film series after a DVD box set?
WP:NCF is the applicable guideline here. --
Rob Sinden (
talk)
12:28, 21 July 2016 (UTC)reply
Fully protected edit request on 3 June 2016
This
edit request to
Batman Triumphant has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request.
A protected redirect, Batman Triumphant, needs redirect category (
rcat) templates added in order to remove it from
Category:Miscellaneous redirects. Please modify it as follows:
from this:
#REDIRECT [[Batman: The Motion Picture Anthology]]
{{redr}}
to this:
#REDIRECT [[Batman: The Motion Picture Anthology]]
{{This is a redirect|from unsuitable title|unprintworthy}}
WHEN YOU COPY & PASTE, PLEASE LEAVE THE SKIPPED LINE BLANK FOR READABILITY.
The {{This is a redirect}} template is used to sort redirects into one or more categories. When {{pp-protected}} and/or {{pp-move}} suffice, the This is a redirect template will detect the protection level(s) and categorize the redirect automatically. (Also, the protection categories will be automatically removed or changed when and if protection is lifted, raised or lowered.) Thank you in advance!  OUR Wikipedia (not "mine")! Paine Â
02:25, 3 June 2016 (UTC)reply
I have just modified one external link on
Batman (1989 film series). Please take a moment to review
my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit
this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:
When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the checked parameter below to true or failed to let others know (documentation at {{
Sourcecheck}}).
This message was posted before February 2018.
After February 2018, "External links modified" talk page sections are no longer generated or monitored by InternetArchiveBot. No special action is required regarding these talk page notices, other than
regular verification using the archive tool instructions below. Editors
have permission to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the
RfC before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template {{
source check}} (last update: 5 June 2024).
If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with
this tool.
If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with
this tool.
The following is a closed discussion of a
requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a
move review. No further edits should be made to this section.
Batman (1989 film series) â
Batman film series (1989) â This article is about the series of Batman films begun with 1989âs Batman. To the best of my knowledge, there is no collective title for this series. The current name of the article implies that the four films are collectively called simply âBatman,â which seems misleading if this is not the case. The proposed title is descriptive, with the parenthetical year disambiguating it from the Dark Knight movies and earlier serials (which are also not collectively named âBatmanâ).
Oppose both proposed titles. Anon's because the series was not confined to a single year;
BD2412's because plain Batman is not a proper title for the series; there is no real title.
Ribbet32 (
talk)
00:05, 22 March 2017 (UTC)reply
Number 1, it doesn't matter. Number 2, if the closer moves it to the non-endashed version, I'm sure you or someone else will move it to the endashed version shortly afterward anyway. Number 3, see Number 1. Topic hijack: Honestly, I'd be in favor of changing the dash guidance around and mandating normal dashes in titles and never using weird unicode characters... whenever I *try* to use an endash, even copy-pasting it, someone always moves the article later claiming it wasn't an endash. It's too minor a change to be detectable in most fonts I found, and only typographical buffs seem to really care. (Em-dashes, sure, those are noticeably different. En-dashes vs. hyphens is invisible to the vast majority of users.) It is really not worth the amount of editor attention wasted on worrying about it.
SnowFire (
talk)
21:28, 23 March 2017 (UTC)reply
@
SnowFire: A hyphen has different semantic meanings than an en dash. It matters as much as a spelling error, misplaced comma or apostrophe, incorrect usage of a word, etc. in a project that aspires to be an authoritative reference work. Simple mistakes should be avoided or corrected, not defended against correction. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
23:12, 23 March 2017 (UTC)reply
Normally I'd take this to your talk page so as not to distract, but I guess I can't since you're an IP... a typographical change that isn't seen by definition isn't meaningful. Even if - especially if - the change inverted the meaning of everything, if the reader can't tell the difference, what use is it? Anyway, I'm not defending it against correction, merely noting that no one will complain if you "fix" such a move afterward without requesting a new RM or even a technical request if you really feel it matters, and as such, there's no need to talk about it in RMs that focus on issues more related to content policy than style.
SnowFire (
talk)
00:37, 24 March 2017 (UTC)reply
IP users have talk pages too. Use the âtalkâ link in my signature, if you want. But on the tangential topic: Iâm not sure why you canât see the difference, especially in larger text like titles, but I can, easily. Also, looking at the default font on a computer screen is not the only way to read Wikipedia; see for instance
WP:ACCESS. It may not matter to you (
and thatâs okay), but it does matter. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
01:15, 24 March 2017 (UTC)reply
Discussion
Without the parenthetical disambiguation, the current title and the supported alternative both refer to the subjectâa series of four filmsâas Batman. If itâs meant to reference the first of the series, shouldnât we use the form Batman film series rather than Batman (film series)? Or am I missing some other way to interpret it? â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
23:08, 21 March 2017 (UTC)reply
So how do the opposing editors view the standalone name âBatmanâ in the title? @
BD2412,
In ictu oculi,
Roman Spinner, and
Argento Surfer: if this isnât meant to say the series itself is called Batman (I donât think any of us would say it is), what is it saying? Why have âfilm seriesâ in parentheses if itâs not disambiguating? Please help me understand the intent. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
04:31, 23 March 2017 (UTC)reply
@
Argento Surfer: Based on those sources, they seem to be known as âthe Batman Collectionâ (when commercially packaged together), not âthe Batman movies.â And both labels rather seem descriptive, a bit like calling the Lord of the Rings films âthe Frodo movies.â But to the best of my knowledge, no one anywhere has ever referred to this set of four movies as simply âBatmanâ (including your links). Why does our title? â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
23:02, 23 March 2017 (UTC)reply
I might agree with you if the first LotR movie had been titled "Frodo". I assume you're not familiar with the packaging on the first link - there's a line of DVDs called the "Film Favorites Collection" that packages 3 or four films with a common theme (see
this and
this). So "Collection" doesn't go with "Batman" on that one. The other is the "Ultimate Batman Collection", which I guess we're just reading different. I don't think it's calling itself the ultimate edition of the "Batman Collection" movies. It's the ultimate collection of the Batman movies.
That was my point, that those sources used descriptive titles and did not call the series by any proper name. As for the category,
WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS and broad statistics donât account for every scenario. What is the ratio of such
ITALICTITLEs where Foo (the name of the first movie) is also the name of the title character who was a preexisting property in many forms, and where Foo is not a commonly used name for the series, in which sequels are not numbered (Foo 2, etc.)? Iâd be shocked if we had a large enough sample size left to have a reasonable margin of error (which is pretty high to begin with). The only example that immediately comes to mind for the last point is the Matrix trilogy, which is in fact commonly called âthe Matrix trilogyâ or even just The Matrixâbut that article is about the whole franchise rather than just the movies, so we canât even directly compare that data point. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
23:27, 24 March 2017 (UTC)reply
Despite my disagreement with 67.14.236.50 above on hyphen style, I do agree with them that since nobody uses just "Batman" unadorned to refer to the series, it'd be nice to not imply that was true here. "Batman film series" with no parens gets that across better than "Batman (disambiguator)", which sounds like "Batman" is a title rather than a descriptor.
SnowFire (
talk)
00:41, 24 March 2017 (UTC)reply
It's tough to prove a negative, but what evidence to you have that "nobody uses just Batman"? It's not like we can compare hits on google searches for these terms. Anecdotally, I rarely hear people lump the four together at all - they're usually discussed as the Burton movies, the Schumacher movies, and the Nolan movies.
Argento Surfer (
talk)
12:42, 24 March 2017 (UTC)reply
Itâs trivial to disprove a negative, so we can safely assume itâs true if that canât be done. Besides, we choose article titles based on what is used in reliable sources, not based on whatever we want until proven that it isnât used. This title does not appear to have been chosen based on actual usage. We could call these the Burton/Schumacher Batman films, or the Batman films (1989), or we could rewrite the article to be about their version of the character and keep the current title without italics, and any of these would be perfectly justifiable. But as I understand it, we cannot call it âBatman, yâknow, the movies, no not just the first one, thatâs what peoplewho? call all four and you canât prove otherwise.â Which is what any Batman ([disambiguator]) title does. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
23:27, 24 March 2017 (UTC)reply
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a
requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page or in a
move review. No further edits should be made to this section.
The following is a closed discussion of a
requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a
move review. No further edits should be made to this section.
The result of the move request was: No Consensus. While there is a guideline in this case that supports the move, several editors have pointed out valid reasons why that guideline might be better off ignored in this case. No consensus has developed one way or the other. Several editors have also suggested that this article may be a content fork and should be merged into
Batman in film, but that discussion is beyond the scope of this RM and should take place as a separate discussion. (
non-admin closure) â InsertCleverPhraseHere02:17, 8 May 2017 (UTC)reply
Support per nomination rationale. There are two reasons why WP:NCF insists on only using a single year in the disambiguator and not two years:
In the case of an ongoing series it will always be known which year the series started but not when it ended. Such a scenario makes it impossible to implement WP:CONSISTENCY.
An end year is not needed. Disambiguators should assume enough familiarity with the subject such that a reader can select the correct topic from a list. Is a reader any more likely to confuse "Batman (1989 film series)" with "The Dark Knight trilogy" than if the page title is "Batman (1989â1997 film series)"? In that sense the page is sufficiently disambiguated by "Batman (1989 film series)" which means it satisfies WP:PRECISION too.
I don't have a strong view on the italicisation, although I concur with Rob that at the time the series was simply known as "Batman". "Batman" was included in all the film titles and sequels were often announced as Batman 2, 3, 4, 5 etc. Retrospectively this has changed slightly because of the reboots but only because further clarification is generally required to distinguish it. Generally titles for "subject" articles are formulated as "XXXX in film", such as
Batman in film or
Middle-earth in film rather than as "XXXX (film series)".
Betty Logan (
talk)
17:57, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Comment: This RM should be considered alongside the one just a few weeks ago, which found clear consensus against the proposed title. It may be a good idea to ping previous participants. There's also a good point above that the article is just a fork of the (far superior) article
Batman in film.--
CĂșchullaint/
c19:30, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
To be fair, there was a clear consensus against using "Batman film series (1989)". While there was a clear preference for "Batman (1989â1997 film series)" I don't think that directly translates to a consensus against "Batman (1989 film series)" because some of the comments solely addressed the original proposal and not the revised version.
WP:CONSISTENCY was incorrectly applied at the previous discussion too, since film series articles that require disambiguation currently use just a single year to disambiguate.
Betty Logan (
talk)
19:52, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
I honestly don't think comments such as "we normally start with the first film in the series, but BD2412 suggestion is also acceptable" really amount to a consensus against "Batman (1989 film series)". I am not criticising your closeâthere was a clear preference for "Batman (1989â1997 film series)" so I understand why it was closed that wayâbut I think the "opposes" are commenting more on the original proposal than the original title. Given that WP:CONSISTENCY was misapplied and NCF wasn't considered I think there are solid grounds for reviewing the move. If the discussion draws to the same conclusion we will porbbaly have to review NCF and other titles that adopted the "XXXX film series" format.
Betty Logan (
talk)
20:17, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
What I'm saying is that there was no support for the former title, and there was substantial support for the present title; even the people who opposed the original proposal were amenable to it. As for CONSISTENCY To be honest, I don't think it was misapplied, as there are very few examples of film series articles that use dates at all. Certainly not enough to base a convention on, regardless of what's been added to
WP:NCFILM.
The Hills Have Eyes (2006 film series) may be the only other example, and it doesn't appear to have ever been through a discussion, either via RM or at
WP:NCF. In fact, the RMs here are easily the most substantive discussions of the topic, and that ought to be what drives the language at NCF.--
CĂșchullaint/
c20:24, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Making it official that I oppose this move. (1989 film series) could easily be taken to mean all Batman films after that date, which isn't what the article discusses. There's only one similar article, and its title hasn't ever been discussed, so there's no practical reason to stick with the requirement on either
WP:CONSISTENCY or
WP:NCF grounds. The wording at
WP:NCF should be updated per the decision here, the only substantive discussions ever to address the matter.--
CĂșchullaint/
c18:56, 26 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Oppose and suggest that
WP:NCFILM#Film series be updated to change the guideline for the extremely rare "film series requiring a date" case. Using start year is fine if the series is ongoing, but it's misleading and weird in this case. Per Cuchullain, it's not even clear that this "guideline" exists for anything other than two articles, and guidelines reflect editor discussions like the above RM, not the other way around. It seems like only this article and The Hills Have Eyes are in
Category:Film series , and honestly, The Hills Have Eyes is ripe to move to "Franchise" or the like and have one unified article on the movies & comics.
SnowFire (
talk)
21:17, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Oppose the nomâs rationaleâlittle-discussed segments of guidelines ought to be determined by the consensus of cases like this one, not the other way around; and we have too few such titles to have any real established precedent. To the concern that we donât know when an ongoing series will end: after it ends, we know when it ended. There is an argument to be made about
WP:PRECISION, but I think
WP:NATURALNESS is better served by a range than by just giving the start date, without making it clear that it is only the start date and doesnât apply to the entire series. Also:
Strongly oppose any implication that the film series is called "Batman" and thus should be italicised, per
WP:NATURALNESS, unless it can be found that reliable sources called the series by that standalone name (rather than using the [character or film] name as a modifier, such as âthe Batman moviesâ). From past discussion, though various box sets and collections of course have their own names, the series itself appears to lack a proper name, so we shouldnât attribute one to it in favor of a descriptive title. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
23:19, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
NATURALNESS does not apply to disambiguated titles. Readers aren't going to search for either title because it is a title invented by Wikipedia. A natural title would be somthing like Batman - The Motion Picture Anthology 1989-1997, but the main argument against that it is unique to just one home video release.
Betty Logan (
talk)
23:37, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
No, there is no such exception; the natural name is what gets disambiguated. âFilm seriesâ here should not be considered disambiguation, because there is no film series called âBatman.â Itâs called things like âthe Batman film seriesâ (which would be an example of a natural title). Your suggested title seems rather unnatural, unless referring to a particular DVD release. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
00:00, 20 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Have you even read the guideline? This is what it says: The title is one that readers are likely to look or search for...'. Readers cannot be expected to search for a disambigugated title because they are invented by Wikipedia. Unless you are familiar with the naming conventions you would not search for the title. Disambiguated titles are by definition not natural titles. Neither "Batman (1989 film series)" or "Batman (1989â1997 film series)" are natural titles. The guideline simply does not apply to this scenario because we are determining are disambiguator.
Betty Logan (
talk)
00:06, 20 April 2017 (UTC)reply
WP:AT is a policy, not guideline. Probably not how you meant it, but the terminology might be misleading. Anyway. The non-disambiguated title you are talking about is Batman. If you believe this name to be in use, by itself, to refer to any series of films, please show me where. I believe it is not, so Iâm simply saying it is not suitable for the non-disambiguating portion of the title, any more so than if we called it Batperson (1989 film series). â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
00:19, 20 April 2017 (UTC)reply
This is a complete non-sequitur to the point I am making. You have opposed moving the article from "Batman (1989â1997 film series)" to "Batman (1989 film series)" on the grounds it fails the naturalness criterion. My point is that the naturalness criterion does not apply to disambiguators because they are invented by us, the editors. By definition disambiguators are not part of the natural title, otherwise they would not be disambiguators. Neither title under consideration is more "natural" than the other by virtue of the disambiguator.
Betty Logan (
talk)
00:28, 20 April 2017 (UTC)reply
@
Betty Logan: You indented your initial reply
under my second bullet point, the one discussing the undisambiguated part of the title, so I assumed that was the point we were talking about. If you were reacting to my first point, but positioning it as a reply to the second, then noâthe non sequitur was yours. Context is important, and indentation changes context. From my read, our naming criteria apply to all of our article titles in whole, no matter how novel they may be (in fact: When deciding on which disambiguation method(s) to use, all article titling criteria are weighed in), and I donât recall ever reading anything in P&Gs that indicates otherwise. It just seems common sense to me: the rest of the world, readers, search engines, etc. see our title disambiguatorsâeven parenthetical onesâas part of the article title, because thatâs what they are. Maybe you consider one criterion more important here than another, and thatâs a valid view, but it seems fundamentally flawed to say it just doesnât apply at all. Was this exception something you read on a project page, or a result of interpreting various discussions, or more a matter of preference? By the way, do you think we should move this thread out of the survey area? â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
23:16, 21 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Lean oppose. It is often the case that two different film series for a rebooted franchise are far apart in time, like the Hills Have Eyes films, the Planet of the Apes films (though we don't have articles for the distinct series for those), so that there is a distinct gap between the series. Here, the new series started eight years after the end of the previous series, so it would not be so obvious to the casual reader that the new films did in fact constitute a new creative direction.
bd2412T23:25, 19 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Comment. Another policy that the current title is also in breach of is
WP:CONCISE. "Batman (1989â1997 film series)" does not help identify the topic to any greater degree than "Batman (1989 film series)" does. Sorry I omitted that from my original nom. --
Rob Sinden (
talk)
10:27, 20 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Of course it helps identify the topic. To a casual viewer, it would be very easy to assume an article that only said "1989" was about Batman-in-film and include
The Dark Knight Trilogy (but not the Adam West film). Or, perhaps, they might think it was the "Burton" batman series and only include the first two movies. For a somewhat arbitrary cutoff like this article has on a topic that does not have a well-known name or descriptor, it certainly does aid understanding to spell out exactly what is included.
SnowFire (
talk)
17:46, 20 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Iâll note that conciceness is an ideal (
the use of the word âbalanceâ is a good hint), and ideals are not necessarily attainable. The present title is certainly more concise than (1989 film series spanning up to and not including The Dark Knight Trilogy); the simple inclusion of the end year (denoting the final Batman movie before Batman Begins) effectively communicates that same information. Leaving it open-ended lacks that information, tipping the conciseness balance. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
23:38, 21 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Support per nom. Please do not pretend to speak for the "casual viewer/reader" unless you can provide empirical evidence to support the statement. Without a substantive
WP:RS the only thing you are saying is
I like it.
MarnetteD|
Talk14:20, 24 April 2017 (UTC)reply
@
MarnetteD: I think thereâs a difference between saying
WP:ILIKEIT and pointing out advantages and disadvantages, potential problems and misreadings. Or are there RSes that use the first year and omit the last when discussing the series?. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
03:21, 25 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Mild Oppose. I realise that
WP:NCF is fairly unambiguous, but my impression is that this might be an exception and that
WP:PRECISION should take precedence. I think that if you asked an average reader (or me come to that), "Is Batman Begins part of a series of Batman films?" they would say yes it is. Which is to say, the Dark Knight Trilogy is a subset of the Batman film series. Which is why, if we have an article that groups this set of Batman films together, and it is called Batman films, in order to be precise enough to accurately define its scope, we need to have an end date too, because there are other films that could commonly considered to be part of the Batman film series that were made after 1997. (Personally I always think of 'the Tim Burton series', 'the Christopher Nolan series', 'the Adam West one' and try to forget everything else, but unfortunately I'm not an RS). However, I think that we'd probably be best off not having this article at all and just sticking with
Batman in film.
Scribolt (
talk)
12:23, 25 April 2017 (UTC)reply
It has occurred to me that I didn't really back up my opinion with much evidence from sources to support my opinion that Precision is not met by the revised title. So, when googling 'Batman Film Series' (which didn't return much, and very little with that exact phrase):
I also googled 'Batman films', 'Batman movies', 'Batman series' which returned similar results. Looking in individual reviews and coverage of the Dark Knight Triology there are numerous references to them being 'a Batman film'
1,
2,
3. The sources therefore seem to regard at least all of the mainstream batman films as part of the series of batman films. If this is the case, the revised title does not meet Precision because Batman Begins is commonly regarded as both a film in the Dark Knight Trilogy and also a film in the Batman series. This means the revised article title does not unambiguously define the topical scope because the scope is actually 'Films in the Batman series after 1989, but not films in the Batman series after 1997'. So the revised title is not PRECISE enough.
Scribolt (
talk)
06:15, 27 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Support, I guess. Either is OK really. Of the
Five Virtues of article titles, the suggested move is certainly supported by Conciseness, and also I think by Consistency. However, the existing title has maybe just a tiny bit more Recognizability I think, since it contains a little bit more info. But Precision says titles "should be precise enough to unambiguously define the topical scope of the article, but no more precise than that" (emphasis added). Naturalness is more a less a wash here I think. So three Virtues (Conciseness, Precision, and maybe Consistency) against maybe a bit of one, Recognizability. Q. E. D., support the move.
Herostratus (
talk)
18:28, 26 April 2017 (UTC)reply
Merge to
Batman in film. Besides the lack of a name for this series (and, per
Scribolt, the question of whether sources even treat it as a distinct series), thereâs little need for it to have its own article. Nearly all the information here is included in that article, and of course we have the individual film articles. â
67.14.236.50 (
talk)
17:05, 28 April 2017 (UTC)reply
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a
requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page or in a
move review. No further edits should be made to this section.