Tim Burton stays with the same setup in most of his movies. The Pudgy Weasel, The Flashback, The Monster, The Punky Rebellious Young Lady, and The Outcast. Tim Burton really demonstrates this format in the 1989 film of Batman. In the film The Pudgy Weasel is demonstrated by the infamous Joker. He is a smiling psychopath starts out as a seemingly normal person. Burton enhances the normality by having it to the point where Batman is actually the one that throws Mr. Napier (aka Joker) into the acid vats. This adds a sense of revenge on the Bat. This also adds weight onto the joker givinng him a motive. Whenever a motive is added you can take the buildup of the character even further. Throughout the movie he uses his dark, spooky lighting and a night time setting throughout to really capture the scary essence of Gotham. One thing I took notice of is when there is a day setting something bad happens and there is a tragedy. The dark scenes are used when the Joker is tormenting Gotham. Tim Burton uses dark lighting and music to compliment the Jokers transformation from man to monster. One flashback scene that really sets the foundation is one of the very first scenes in the movie. He shows Batmans parents dying and this really displays the pain and internal conflict that builds with this character throughout the movie. This also sets the feeling that Batman is an outcast. This flashback is astronomical as you delve into the movie as it builds up our man character. Our main character Bruce Wayne comes across as the monster and the outcast. Bruce Wayne is a calm collected guy that no-one even really knows who he actually is. He is rich so he has a lot of "friends". He also comes across as the monster as Batman because he almost seems like a villain. Burton expresses this during the eerie news hearing in the background and the police officers. They also call him "the bat" which sounds much more menacing than Batman. You see quick flashes of him in the night in these five second fight scenes and the next thing you see is the criminals being tied down. This provides this eery figure in the beginning that you arent sure what role he actually plays. The Punky Rebellious Young Lady is Vicky Veil. She works at a newspaper office and she is charming and witty and pretty. She's your typical mistress that the Superhero seems to fall in love with and it is demonstrated through the scene when Batman actually saves her from the Joker.