The role of the Batman movie roster arrived in 1943.

Since that time, there have been a wide array of actors who have taken on the role of Batman in different movies and shows, with many of them making drastic changes to turn the Caped Crusader into their own. Over the years, the many actors who have played Batman have seen the hero characterized in live-action performances as everything from a gritty action star to the light-hearted protagonist of kid-friendly television, showing just how much of a range the superhero has pulled off in his illustrious on-screen history.

1 Lewis G. Wilson (1943)

Batman (1943)

Lewis G Wilson posing as Batman.

Lewis Wilson was the first actor to play Batman in live-action. The movie he starred in was simply called Batman, and was released in 1943. This predated the introduction of iconic DC supervillains like the Riddler and Bane, although some villains like the Joker were around then. However, the Dark Knight primarily fought basic mobsters and criminals.

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The Batman movie was a 15-chapter serial where Batman and Robin fought a villain called Dr. Daka, a secret agent from Japan in the days of World War II who had little to no backstory. While Wilson was an actor for 30 years, his role as Batman was still his most famous, though it is now one of the lesser known versions of the character several decades later.

2 Robert Lowery (1949)

Batman & Robin (1949)

Robert Lowery in action as Batman.

Batman was back in 1949 with Batman and Robin. This was another 15-chapter serial and was a sequel to Batman, but the production replaced the actors, with Robert Lowery replacing Wilson as Batman. This time around, Batman and Robin battled a villain known as The Wizard. Lowery started acting in 1936, and even appeared in the movie, The Mask of Zorro, in 1940 - which is notable since Bob Kane and Bill Finger called Zorro an inspiration when they created Batman himself.

Much like Wilson's turn as the character, Robert Lowery has essentially been forgotten as Batman, overshadowed by a number of actors since his time in the late 1940s. Still, he is part of Batman history as one of the few to portray one of DC's most iconic characters.

3 Adam West (1966)

Batman (1966-1968) & Batman: The Movie (1966)

Batman didn't return until 1966, when ABC brought Batman to the small screen, creating one of the most long-lasting depictions of the character in pop culture. In this series, Adam West played Batman, while Burt Ward played Robin. The show was a campy look at the crime-fighting duo, and ended up making way for Batman: The Movie in 1966. Adam West became inextricably associated with Batman from this point onward, and capitalized on this popularity by taking on voice roles as Batman in animated series, bringing his rendition of the hero to even more viewers.

Adam West remained the definitive Batman for over two decades, and his more light-hearted take on the character stands out among most that have had much more serious takes on Batman. Before the modern takes on Batman came to dominate the discourse around the character, he was really fun, and that was in large part thanks to Adam West.

4 Michael Keaton (1989)

Batman (1989) & Batman Returns (1992)

Michael Keaton in the shadows as Batman.

In 1989, the biggest budget version of Batman to date at the time came to the big screen. Tim Burton directed Batman, casting Michael Keaton in the role of the Caped Crusader. Many fans at the time hated the casting because he was best known for comedies. Keaton remains one of the most beloved Batman actors to this day. Keaton appeared in two Batman movies, with Batman Returns arriving three years later. It was the first portrayal of the character in live-action that was meant to be a much more serious take on the character.

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More than three decades after that, he would reprise his role in The Flash - and while the movie itself did not perform as well, the reaction to seeing the character once more remains a testament to just how long-lived Keaton's popularity in the role has been. He was slated for another appearance in Batgirl, but that movie was unfortunately written-off, meaning his journey as the Dark Knight is most likely officially over.

5 Val Kilmer (1995)

Batman Forever (1995)

Val Kilmer talking to someone as Batman.

After Tim Burton left the Batman franchise, Warner Bros. hired director Joel Schumacher to take his place. Michael Keaton also left, with Val Kilmer replacing him in the lead role of Batman Forever. However, Kilmer himself only lasted one movie, and went on to new franchises afterward, having already been a successful actor already at this point with fan-favorite roles in movies like Tombstone, Top Gun, and The Doors.

Kilmer and Schumacher didn't reunite for the next movie, and the director went looking for a new Batman. Despite only being in one film, Val Kilmer did an irable job as the character and really dove deeper into Bruce's psyche outside of being Batman. Batman: Forever wasn't the best received film in the series, which is a shame given it features some interesting ideas revolving around Kilmer's Batman.

6 George Clooney (1997)

Batman & Robin (1997)

George Clooney in the Batcave as Batman.

George Clooney entered the iconic role of the Dark Knight in 1997, taking on the lead role in the cast of Batman & Robin. The movie saw Schumacher create a more light-hearted version of Batman - one that was largely intended to sell more toys, but which consequently drew ire for the major ways it changed the overall franchise. Clooney's take on Batman and Bruce Wayne is typically viewed as one of the weaker portrayals of the character in live action.

It was similar in tone to something like Adam West's Batman but existed in the same continuity as Batman Returns, making it the odd film out in that franchise. In the years since the movie, Clooney has apologized for his portrayal as Batman, in part because the movie's controversial reception marked the end of Batman on the big screen for eight years.

7 Christian Bale (2005)

Batman Begins (2005), The Dark Knight (2008), & Batman: The Dark Knight Rises (2012)

In 2005, Christopher Nolan brought his version of Batman to the big screen and revitalized the entire franchise. Nolan cast Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne/Batman, and took the character back to the start, showing how Bruce Wayne became Batman in Batman Begins. Bale ended up playing Batman in three different movies, with The Dark Knight still considered one of the best Batman movies of all time, as well as one of the best comic book movies in history.

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Christian Bale is still considered by many to be the best Batman to appear in live-action and for good reason. He was fortunate enough to play the character for an entire trilogy, allowing him to further explore the character and give him a proper conclusion that many of the other iterations just never had. Following in Clooney's footsteps, Christian Bale was a breath of fresh air and the portrayal that most everyone else after is tasked to stand out against.

8 David Mazouz (2014)

Gotham (2014-2019)

David Mazouz looking up as a young Bruce Wayne.

One version of Batman that gets less recognition is that of David Mazouz's role in Gotham on Fox. This is likely because he was not Batman for most of the series, and wasn't the lead character in the show itself, which focused more on James Gordon working as a cop while showing Batman villains like the Penguin rising in the background. Mazouz was a teenage Bruce Wayne, watching the city around him and planning his mission to one day try to save the city - with actor Mikhai Mudrik showcasing what the older superhero version of the Dark Knight looked like in the future of this universe.

An interesting aspect of Mazouz's role as Bruce Wayne, pre Batman, is that many of his villains appeared in the show despite him being a child. It creates an interesting situation where many of them would be much older than him by the time he embraces being Batman. Still, Gotham was more about Gordon and how the villains affected the city rather than focusing on the character of Batman.

9 Ben Affleck (2016)

Batman V. Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016), Suicide Squad (2016), Justice League (2017), Zack Snyder's Justice League (2021), & The Flash (2023)

In 2016, Ben Affleck signed on with DC and took over the role of Batman for Zack Snyder's launching of the DCEU. He made his debut in Batman V. Superman: Dawn of Justice, where Affleck played Batman as a veteran crimefighter who had lost a lot in his life, including his young ward, as the DCEU's version of Robin dies before the period the movies are set in. One of the biggest points of contention about Affleck's version of the character is his willingness to kill those who get in the way of his mission.

Though his time in the franchise was marked by the behind the scenes complicated the DCEU faced as a whole, Affleck's rendition of the Dark Knight itself was overall received fairly well once he moved on from killing people, especially as the franchise made him the brains behind the creation of the Justice League. His last role as Batman came in The Flash, and although Keaton also portrayed Batman in that film, the two never got to share a scene together despite the multiverse-focused narrative.

10 Kevin Conroy (2019)

Crisis On Infinite Earths (2019)

Kate Kane and Bruce Wayne in a mechanised suit face to face with a Batman suit in Crisis on Infinite Earths

While Kevin Conroy is best known for providing the voice of Batman in various animated and video game properties, the actor did play a live-action version of Bruce Wayne in the Arrowverse's mega-crossover event, Crisis on Infinite Earths. In this version, Conroy plays the Bruce Wayne/Batman of Earth-99, who had been so broken by his work that he became a serial killer instead.

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Conroy, for many viewers, remains one of the most definite actors to play Batman, having also voiced him in over 500 appearances. The fact that he was able to portray the character once in live-action was a huge draw of the crossover, and adds extra dimension to both the Arrowverse and DC more broadly. Though it was a short-lived cameo, it was a delight to see Conroy portray Bruce Wayne in live-action.