Michael Caine’s full-circle moment entering Christopher Nolan’s Batcave
(Credits: Far Out / YouTube Still)
Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy is highly regarded among both fans of superhero fare and moviegoers in general due to the director’s typical attention to detail and commitment to creating a truly immersive experience. That effort wasn’t lost on Michael Caine, who experienced a full-circle moment when he entered the Batcave for the first time on Batman Begins.
Revered for a wide variety of roles, Caine was a fixture of the trilogy and was praised for his work across all three individual movies, with the role of Bruce Wayne’s faithful butler Alfred Pennyworth leading to a fruitful partnership with Nolan that saw the veteran actor become known as his lucky charm.
Most actors would be well within their rights to find it surreal walking onto a soundstage that’s been transformed into an underground lair designed to house a billionaire who dedicates their life to dressing up as a flying mammal and pounding criminals into dust, but Caine was affected on a much deeper and more personal level.
“For me, it was when I walked into the Batcave for the first time, which was a set at Shepperton Studios on this big soundstage,” he told Black Film of his moment of surrealism. “Which, coincidentally, was the first place I ever played a scene anywhere in any movie. It was the same place. It was so weird.”
For Caine, this moment of continuity marked a great milestone for his progression, returning to where he’d made his feature debut as a two-time Academy Award-winning legend working on a superhero blockbuster with one of the most promising new auteurs of the 21st century.
His original experience on the same set came with “a tiny little film called A Hill in Korea, a British Army picture when I was very young, and I had eight lines in the picture, and I screwed up six of them.” To go from such modest beginnings to being a part of such a huge production put everything into perspective, with Caine having seen and done it all in the interim.
From the tiny set that he began on, he described the wonder in looking up and learning that what he thought were “great false bats in the ceiling” were actually real before he was warned, “Don’t wake them up, whatever you do.”
That definitely wasn’t something he needed to contend with when A Hill in Korea was shot in the mid-1950s, and it was indicative of just how extensive Caine’s journey had been. Half a century previously, he was starring in his first film about a conflict he’d served in, and by the time he returned to the same place, he was acting royalty and one of British cinema’s greatest-ever exports.
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