A viral thread on Twitter has fans creating awesome movie ideas based simply on the concept of swapping a word in the name of a famous movie with "Batman."#BatmanAMovie started trending overnight during a conversation on Twitter between comic book writers Sean McKeever and Kurt Busiek. McKeever noted, "Instead of calling it THE BATMAN, what about A BATMAN," presumably pointing out just how many movie Batmen we have had over the years. Busiek replied to that with,

I, BATMAN

THAT DARN BATMAN

THE BATMAN AROUND THE CORNER.

When McKeever responded, "A BATMAN WITH A VIEW," Busiek put out the hashtag #BatmanAMovie and fans were off!

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Some of the most popular ones include The Princess Batman, comparing The Dread Pirate Roberts' love of wearing masks to Batman's famous cowl...

The comic book shop, Things From Another World, tweeted out My Neighbor Totoro as now My Neighbor Batman, using an excellent piece of art by Chris Thornley (otherwise known as Raid71).

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The Batman TV series was a particularly popular source of material for ideas, like the episode where Batman goes surfing an inspiration for Point Batman...

Or Batman's working relationship with Chief O'Hara inspiring An Officer and a Batman...

Or Batman and Robin simply wondering, Dude, Where's my Batmobile?

The work of Michael Keaton, the famous star of the first Tim Burton Batman movie in 1989, also lent itself well to these hashtags, like one enterprising fan went to Keaton's hit performance in 1983's Mr. Mom (and specifically the scene where Keaton's character operates a chainsaw) to go for Batmom, wondering "Where does he get those wonderful toys?"

Naturally, as the founder of the hashtag, the Eisner Award-winning Busiek had more than his fair share of ideas for possible new Batman movies, as he filled people's feeds with some really deep cuts, like a reference to the 1969 James Gardner comedic western hit, Support Your Local Sheriff...

or the 1951 romantic comedy, I Can Get It For You Wholesale (which was renamed Only the Best when it aired on television in 1962 following the release of a stage musical with the same name that was both Elliot Gould's first leading role on Broadway and his future wife, Barbra Streisand's, Broadway debut) became "I Can Get Batman For You Wholesale."

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Source: Twitter