Chasing "realism" in superhero movies, including Batman, is a fool's errand. The very concept of the costumed superhero has "absurdly unrealistic" baked into its DNA. A story about a billionaire ninja who dresses up like a bat to fight clowns has no resemblance to any reality experienced by anyone anywhere ever.
This is why Tim Burton's movies remain the best screen adaptations of Batman. Burton's sensibilities have nothing to do with realism, and no interest in it. His Batman films are playful, phantasmagorical fairy tales, reveling in their comic grotesquerie and extravagant UNreality.
(None of this, BTW, is a commentary on Reeves's film, since it's too early to know what approach he'll take or how successful he will be.)
This is why Tim Burton's movies remain the best screen adaptations of Batman. Burton's sensibilities have nothing to do with realism, and no interest in it. His Batman films are playful, phantasmagorical fairy tales, reveling in their comic grotesquerie and extravagant UNreality.
(None of this, BTW, is a commentary on Reeves's film, since it's too early to know what approach he'll take or how successful he will be.)
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