32 Amazing Michael Keaton Quotes From His Best Movies (original) (raw)

Michael Keaton in The Founder

(Image credit: The Weinstein Company)

Michael Keaton (whose real name is Michael Douglas, by the way) is known as one of the most versatile actors of his generation (if not all time), in part for his nearly unfailing talent of performing dialogue with pitch-perfect delivery. In fact, we cannot imagine that our favorite quotes from the best Michael Keaton movies would have been nearly as memorable if spoken by anyone else. Take a look at our picks for the best examples and see for yourself.

Michael Keaton in Beetlejuice

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

"Ah. Well, I Went To Julliard..." - Beetlejuice

In Beetlejuice, when Adam (Alex Baldwin) and Barbara Maitland (Geena Davis) ask the titular bio-exorcist (really spelled Betelgeuse) for his qualifications, his plea starts off promising, and even reflects Michael Keaton's real-life accolades, until it gets aggressively creepy. Bask in the full quote here: "Ah. Well, I attended Juilliard. I'm a graduate of Harvard business school. I travel quite extensively. I lived through the Black Plague and had a pretty good time during that. I've seen THE EXORCIST ABOUT A HUNDRED AND SIXTY-SEVEN TIMES, AND IT KEEPS GETTING FUNNIER EVERY SINGLE TIME I SEE IT! NOT TO MENTION THE FACT THAT YOU'RE TALKING TO A DEAD GUY! NOW WHAT DO YOU THINK? You think I'm qualified?"

Michael Keaton as Batman strong-arming a thug in Batman

(Image credit: Warner Bros. / DC)

"I’m Not Going To Kill You. I Want You To Do Me A Favor. I Want You To Tell All Your Friends About Me" - Batman

The first thing Michael Keaton's version of the Dark Knight says in Tim Burton's 1989 blockbuster might be the definitive cinematic Batman quote. It establishes his non-lethal policy (even though he breaks that rule often) and demonstrates how fear is an essential tool in his war against crime in Gotham City.

Michael Keaton as Bill Blazejowski speaking into his tape recorder in Night Shift

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

"Idea To Eliminate Garbage. Edible Paper" - Night Shift

Michael Keaton really shines in his first movie, director Ron Howard's Night Shift, in which he gives a star-making performance as the eccentric and highly energetic Bill Blazejowski (a character we would love to see him return as). One of his memorable quirks is making recordings of his innovative ideas, such as this one that actually sounds like it might do wonders for the environment.

Michael Keaton as Bob Jones scolding his doctor for taking away his hope in My Life

(Image credit: Columbia Pictures)

"You Think You Can Take Away My Hope Like That? Let Me Tell You Something: That's All I Have" - My Life

One of Michael Keaton's most moving dramatic performances is in 1993's My Life as Bob Jones, who is diagnosed with a terminal illness right as his wife (played by Nicole Kidman) becomes pregnant with their first child. After his doctor tells him his condition is not improving and that he cannot recommend further treatment, Bob barges back into his office with this heartbreaking rebuttal.

Michael Keaton's Adrian Toomes threatening Peter Parker in Spider-Man: Homecoming

(Image credit: Sony Pictures)

"Don't You Ever, Ever Interfere With My Business Again, Because If You Do, I'll Kill You, And Everyone That You Love. I'll Kill You Dead. That's What I'll Do To Protect My Family, Pete." - Spider-Man: Homecoming

In 2017's Spider-Man: Homecoming, after Peter Parker (Tom Holland) discovers that his crush is the daughter of Adrian "Vulture" Toomes (Michael Keaton), the weapons dealer realizes Peter is the titular vigilante right dropping them off at the homecoming. This moment right here, in which he threatens the struggling, is what cemented Toomes as one of the best Spider-Man movie villains ever.

Michael Keaton in The Other Guys

(Image credit: Columbia Pictures)

"Do Me A Favor, Don't Go Chasing Waterfalls" - The Other Guys

Michael Keaton steals the show from stars Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg in 2010's The Other Guys as Capt. Gene Mauch. One of his most hilarious moments is when he unwittingly quotes the song "Waterfalls," which ends up being one of a few TLC hits he references without realizing it.

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The main character of Porco Rosso.

(Image credit: Studio Ghibli)

"I'd Rather Be A Pig Than A Fascist" - Porco Rosso

In the English-language dub of the 1992 Studio Ghibli favorite, Porco Rosso, Michael Keaton voices the titular 1930s-era pilot, who becomes cursed to resemble a swine. However, he demonstrates that his unfavorably animalistic appearance is a small price to pay compared to the stealing of civil rights, which he continues to fight against.

Michael Keaton as Doug 3 standing next to Michael Keaton as Doug 2 in Multiplicity

(Image credit: Columbia Pictures)

"You Know How When You Make A Copy Of A Copy, It's Not As Sharp As... Well... The Original" - Multiplicity

One of Michael Keaton's funniest comedies, 1996's Multiplicity sees him playing multiple roles, including overworked family man Doug Kinney and his duplicates. Doug later discovers that a third clone has been made from his second clone and boasts a helplessly infantile personality, which Doug #3 explains is a similar process to xeroxing a photo.

Michael Keaton in Birdman

(Image credit: Disney / Fox)

"This Play Is Kinda Starting To Feel Like A Major Deformed Version Of Myself That Just Keeps Following Me Around, Hitting Me In The Balls With A Tiny Little Hammer" - Birdman

Michael Keaton gives a wonderfully meta, Academy Award-nominated performance in Alejandro González Iñárritu's Best Picture Oscar winner, 2014's Birdman, as a former superhero movie star looking to make a comeback with a Broadway play. With this quote, he describes to his daughter, Sam (Emma Stone), the struggles he has faced writing, directing, producing, and leading this show, which also hints at the hallucinatory title character that has been taunting him through the whole process.

Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne threatening Jack Nicholson as the Joker in Batman

(Image credit: Warner Bros. / DC)

"You Wanna Get Nuts? C'Mon, Let's Get Nuts!" - Batman

One of the things that makes Michael Keaton one of the best live-action Batman actors is his courage to be more unhinged as Bruce Wayne than when in the cape and cowl. No scene in 1989's Batman demonstrates this better than when he threatens Jack Nicholson's Joker with a fire poker in Vicki Vale's (Kim Basinger) apartment

Michael Keaton in The Paper

(Image credit: Universal)

"It's a Marx Brothers movie every time I step in my office" - The Paper

More than two decades before he starred in Spotlight, Michael Keaton reunited with director Ron Howard to play a newspaper editor in the 1995 dramedy, The Paper. This quote is his way of describing the comical insanity that he faces at work on a daily basis.

Michael Keaton in Beetlejuice

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

"It’s Showtime" - Beetlejuice

With a few exceptions, there may not be a more definitive Beetlejuice quote than Betelgeuse's declarative quip after Lydia resurrects him. It is a line on par with _The Shining_’s “Here’s Johnny!” in terms of, not only its iconography, but the authority in Michael Keaton's voice as he delivers it.

Michael Keaton as Billy Caulfield sporting a stare in The Dream Team

(Image credit: Universal)

"I'm An Escaped Mental Patient With A History Of Violence" - The Dream Team

In 1989's The Dream Team, Michael Keaton plays one of four men who run wild in New York City when their doctor goes missing on the way to catch a baseball game. At one point they stop at a restaurant where Keaton's character, Billy, notices some patrons harassing a server and he threatens them with this bluntly honest remark.

Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne sipping soup in Batman

(Image credit: Warner Bros. / DC)

"You Know, In Truth, I Don't Think I've Been In This Room Before" - Batman

One of the funniest Batman movie scenes comes from the 1989 flick, when Vicki Vale, on a date with Bruce Wayne in his manor, asks if he likes eating in his very large dining room. At first he replies affirmatively, before joking that the room is unfamiliar to him, which has the photojournalist cackling.

Michael Keaton as Ray Kroc on the phone with the McDonald brothers in The Founder

(Image credit: The Weinstein Company)

"If My Competitor Were Drowning, I'd Walk Over And Put A Hose Right In His Mouth" - The Founder

The Founder from 2016 tells the story of how struggling salesman Ray Kroc (Michael Keaton) turned a local burger joint into a corporate fast food empire we know today as McDonald's by morally questionable methods. One pivotal scene sees him on the phone with the McDonald Brothers, Dick (Nick Offerman) and Mac (John Carroll Lynch), explaining his brutal, "dog-eat-dog" business philosophy.

Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne dancing with Michelle Pfeiffer as Selina Kyle in Batman Returns

(Image credit: Warner Bros. / DC)

"...But A Kiss Can Be Even Deadlier If You Mean It" - Batman Returns

One of Michael Keaton's definitive Batman movie moments is when Bruce Wayne realizes while dancing with her at Max Schreck's holiday ball, that Selina Kyle (Michelle Pfeiffer) is Catwoman. What tips him off is when, after noticing the mistletoe above them, she quotes the Dark Knight's claim that, "it can be deadly if you eat it," and he replies by quoting the feline-esque thief.

Michael Keaton in Beetlejuice

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

“I’m The Ghost With The Most, Babe” - Beetlejuice

Without counting, say, Casper or Patrick Swayze's Sam in Ghost, we cannot think of a more iconic and beloved ghostly character in cinematic history than Betelgeuse. Therefore, the reply Michael Keaton's titular villain gives Lydia Deetz (Beetlejuice cast member Winona Ryder) when she asks if he is a ghost is far from one of his tricks but, just about, the most honest thing he has ever said.

Michael Keaton in Game 6

(Image credit: Gravitas Ventures)

"I Coulda Been Happy. I Coulda Been A Yankees Fan" - Game 6

One of Michael Keaton's most underrated films, and one of the most unconventional sports movies ever, is 2005's Game 6, in which he stars as a playwright named Nicky Rogan, who is more preoccupied with the sixth game of the 1986 World Series than his latest show. The reason is that he is a Red Sox fan, which, given the Boston baseball team's unfortunate history, has caused him much disappointment in life.

Michael Keaton in Mr. Mom

(Image credit: Disney / Fox)

"My Brain Is Like Oatmeal..." - Mr. Mom

In 1983's John Hughes-penned Mr. Mom, Michael Keaton plays Jack Butler, who, after losing his job, decides to take on household responsibilities while his wife, Caroline (Teri Garr), re-enters the workforce. However, there comes a point when he feels he is starting to lose his mind after yelling at his son for coloring outside the lines and enjoying the same soapy TV series as a woman named Megan.

Christopher Lloyd, Peter Boyle, and Michael Keaton in The Dream Team

(Image credit: Universal)

"What Kind Of Bonehead Cop Would Send Four Confessed Mental Patients Back Out In The Streets?" - The Dream Team

In one funny scene from The Dream Team, Billy (Michael Keaton) and others head to a police station to report their missing doctor but only end up annoying police sergeant Vincente (Brad Sullivan). He orders the foursome to leave the station or he will put them in jail, which prompts this reply from Billy.

Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne standing next to Christopher Walken as Max Schreck in Batman Returns

(Image credit: Warner Bros. / DC)

"You Know What, I Mistook Me For Someone Else" - Batman Returns

When Michael Keaton's Bruce Wayne first meets Selina Kyle in Batman Returns, he very nearly lets it slip out that he previously met her when he saved her from one of Penguin's goons as the Caped Crusaders. He tries to cover it up by saying he mistook her for someone else, but instead lets out a flub that is actually more accurate.

Michael Keaton as Captain Gene Mauch holding up some paperwork in The Other Guys

(Image credit: Columbia Pictures)

"This Paperwork Is Like Bob's Wife Here. It's Thick, Ugly, And Has Danson's Fingerprints All Over It" - The Other Guys

In The Other Guys, Capt. Gene Mauch (Michael Keaton) briefs his staff about some very irritating paperwork they have to fill out by comparing it to an officer's spouse. However, Bob (Michael Delaney) does not seem to take any offense to the insulting comment, but we imagine his wife certainly would.

Michael Keaton as Doug Kinney #4 telling Andie MacDowall as Laura Kinney he wants pizza in Multiplicity

(Image credit: Columbia Pictures)

"I Want Pizza. Give Me Some Pizza" - Multiplicity

In one funny moment from Multiplicity, Laura (Andie MacDowall) is pouring her heart out to whom she believes is her husband, Doug (Michael Keaton), but it is really his third and least intelligent clone. When she asks him what she wants from their relationship, he responds by requesting the one thing he loves more than anything.

Michael Keaton as Batman strong-arming a thug in Batman

(Image credit: Warner Bros. / DC)

"I'm Batman" - Batman

In the original script for 1989's Batman, a costumed Bruce Wayne was supposed to answer the Gotham City goon's question ("What are you?") with "I am the night." That might have sounded pretty cool, but we do prefer Keaton's idea to matter-o-factly call himself Batman, which has since been repeated in other live-action Batman movies, like by Christian Bale in Batman Begins.

Michael Keaton as Nicky Rogan sitting at a bar discussing the Red Sox in Game 6

(Image credit: Gravitas Ventures)

"Now The Red Sox, Now, Here, We Have A Rich History Of Really Fascinating Ways To Lose A Crucial Game" - Game 6

As Nicky Rogan, Michael Keaton delivers a really passionate monologue representing the sad life of a Red Sox fan in Game 6. The full quote is, "When the Mets lose, they just lose. It's a flat feeling; there's nothing there. Now the Red Sox, now, here, we have a rich history of really fascinating ways to lose a crucial game. You know what I mean? Defeats that just keep you awake at night. They pound in your head like the hammer of fate. Yeah, you can analyze a Red Sox game day and night for a month and still uncover really complex layers of feelings. Feelings you didn't even know you were capable of having. Yeah. That kind of pain has a memory all of its own."

Michael Keaton as Batman in The Flash

(Image credit: DC/WB)

"You Already Did" - The Flash

One of the best things about 2023's The Flash is Michael Keaton's return as Batman, which leads to quite a few fun Easter Eggs referencing his previous adventures in the Cape and Cowl, but his most memorable and important scene from the DC Multiverse-spanning adventure is at the moment of Bruce Wayne's death. As he is about to succumb to injuries from battling a large Kryptonian, Barry Allen (Ezra Millers) asks, "We can't bring you back, can we?" but Wayne assures that goal was already achieved when the young speedster inspired the wealthy recluse to put the suit back on.

Michael Keaton as Robbie Robinson looking intensely in Spotlight

(Image credit: Open Road Films)

"We've Got Two Stories Here: A Story About Degenerate Clergy, And A Story About A bunch Of Lawyers Turning Child Abuse Into A Cottage Industry. Now, Which Story Do You Want Us To Write? Because We're Writing One Of Them" - Spotlight

In another Best Picture Oscar-winning Michael Keaton movie, 2015's Spotlight, Boston Globe investigative reporter Walter "Robby" Robinson (Keaton) leans on lawyer Eric Macleish (Billy Crudup) to help him finish a story about child abuse cover-ups in the Catholic Church. As the fact-based film details, the article would go on to inspire stronger awareness of the topic in America and win The Pulitzer Prize.

Amy Ryan as Sylvia talking to Michael Keaton as Riggan in his backstage dressing room in Birdman

(Image credit: Searchlight)

"The Plane Started To Rattle And Shake, And Everyone On Board Was Crying And Praying. And I Just Sat There. Sat There Thinking That When Sam Opened That Paper It Was Going To Be Clooney's Face On The Front Page. Not Mine" - Birdman

A scene that definitively demonstrates the personality of Michael Keaton's Birdman character, Riggan Thomson, sees him recalling a time when he thought he was going to die on a plane he shared with George Clooney, knowing that the former ER actor would have gotten more attention. What makes this already darkly comic moment even funnier is how Clooney was one of Keaton's successors in the role of Batman.

Beetlejuice with a guitar in Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

"Long-distance Relationships Can Be Difficult, Especially When One Of You Is Dead And The Other Is Ignoring You For Thirty Years" - Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

The ending of 1988's Beetlejuice sees Michael Keaton's mischievous ghost attempt to marry Lydia Deetz in an effort to escape the Afterlife. Well, it appears Betelgeuse still has a thing for Winona Ryder's character decades later, as he implies in the 2024 sequel, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.

Michael Keaton as Johnny Dangerously wearing a tuxedo in Johnny Dangerously

(Image credit: Twentieth Century Fox)

"Actually, I Was Just Counting On A Lot Of Missing" - Johnny Dangerously

Michael Keaton stars in the title role of a funny spoof movie (let alone one of the most underrated) from 1984 called Johnny Dangerously, in which he plays a mobster who tries to go legit when his brother, Tommy (Griffin Dunne) becomes the local D.A. At one point, after acting like a human shield to save Tommy, he admits to him that it was never truly a sacrificial act.

Henry Winkler and Michael Keaton in Night Shift

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

"Is This A Great Country, Or What?" - Night Shift

In Night Shift, Henry Winkler's Chuck Lumley and Michael Keaton's Bill Blazejowski team up to use their morgue as a safe space for local ladies of the night. Chuck reflects on the insanity of this new gig as "love brokers," but Bill's remark implies he has no reservations about it whatsoever.

Michael Keaton in Beetlejuice

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

“Go Ahead. Make My Millennium" - Beetlejuice

Betelgeuse makes numerous pop culture references in Beetlejuice, such as when he paraphrases Clint Eastwood's famous catchphrase from the fourth Dirty Harry movie, 1983's Sudden Impact. The quip occurs when he and the Maitlands come to odds over how to handle scaring the Deetzes out of their home.

Jason Wiese writes feature stories for CinemaBlend. His occupation results from years dreaming of a filmmaking career, settling on a "professional film fan" career, studying journalism at Lindenwood University in St. Charles, MO (where he served as Culture Editor for its student-run print and online publications), and a brief stint of reviewing movies for fun. He would later continue that side-hustle of film criticism on TikTok (@wiesewisdom), where he posts videos on a semi-weekly basis. Look for his name in almost any article about Batman.