Michael Keaton can still fit into his original Batsuit.
After playing the caped crusader in the 1989 movie âBatmanâ and the 1992 follow-up âBatman Returns,â the 70-year-old actor revealed that the costume is surprisingly still in shape.
During an appearance on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert”, Michael opened up about the reprise of his iconic role in “The Flash” and said that not only had he already tried on his old costume, but that he didn’t. required no modification.
He said of testing the Batsuit: “I’ve done it before”, before insisting that no modification was necessary as its physique is “in the same dimension” as in 1992. .
Meanwhile, Michael recently said that the key to playing a real person onscreen is to present a “version of what they’re telling you.”
He currently plays the role of mediator Kenneth Feinberg in the Netflix drama “Worth”.
And Michael previously played journalist Walter âRobbyâ Robinson in the 2015 Oscar-winning film âSpotlightâ, as well as CNN producer Robert Weiner in the 2002 war drama âLive from Baghdadâ.
And he thinks the thing to avoid is making an âimpressionâ of who you represent.
Speaking to Collider, he said, âThese are three people that are really different from each other.
âYou have to do the basics, be really intrusive but be really respectful and hold back.
âPick the big parts of what they have to tell you and the less good parts, the dark parts of what they have to tell you.
“So at some point you have to be a version of what they’re telling you, at least I do!”
âOtherwise you’re trying to make an impression and you never want to make an impression.
âThey’re both the guys from the Boston area, Robbie and Ken.
âSo that helps get in the groove of what you’re asking of a real person, of a person who really existed. I had already done this with Robert Weiner when I did ‘Live in Baghdad’.
“He lives on a barge in Paris on the Seine so it’s pretty cool and I had to hang out with him for a while.
âIt helps when you do one of them because then you will know what questions to ask.
âAlmost everything surprised me!