He doesn't need his over the top rogues to make a great story.
Which just makes it sad that all too often his rogues ARE the ones stealing the show, when it should really be about him.
He doesn't need his over the top rogues to make a great story.
Not really. At the end of the story Batman can be static. He is still Batman.
Not really. At the end of the story Batman can be static. He is still Batman.
Which is what I would expect.I mean, look at the 1989 movie and Dark Knight. Those films are basically "Joker, featuring Batman".
True. Yet we all have our personal preferences as to how we like to see the character portrayed. For me, when it becomes more and more grim, dark and brutal, then watching it is a joyless experience. I like to actually have fun when I watch movies.I don't understand all this 'Batman needs to be this' or 'he can't be like that'.
He's fictional character, that's been re-invented in the comics countless times. He can be anything the current version of the character is. Some people will like it, others won't. I don't see a problem.
True. Yet we all have our personal preferences as to how we like to see the character portrayed. For me, when it becomes more and more grim, dark and brutal, then watching it is a joyless experience. I like to actually have fun when I watch movies.
Kor
Batman is a product of violent trauma--murder. Few who witnessed murder up close (especially as a child) will see the world through grim lenses, as its the effect of a brutal culture/energy which encourages / conditions one to be grim, not only as an acknowledgement of reality, but as a natural coping mechanism (for that category of people who try to cope). That's who Batman/Wayne is (certainly in the best Batman stories ever published and adapted productions), not some guy who is always sitting on what would be a psychological fence of grim and hopefully optimistic behavior. There are other superheroes who are less traumatized (and/or not the product of murder, so they can find their way into lighter behavior, but that's not Batman--certainly not the character at his best.
As a character and an emotion, Batman is grim--yes--but the best stories are not. They are dark, gritty and suspenseful. For me, grim is brutal and bleak.
The O'Neil styled stories of the 70s and 80s, and more recently the Snyder run on the character, are the style I'm referring to. I also really liked Morrison's run before the New 52. Miller's version, which was never meant to be a definitive version, has carried too long a shadow over the character.
Sleek, fast black car with lots of toys, the voice of a British gentleman (Alfred) talking to Bruce inside, and now with a distinctive glowing rectangular red light at the front? Ha ha, I see what you did there Reeves...
After all the crazy over the top Batmobiles in the other movies, it's kinda weird seeing one that's so grounded and down to Earth.Some cool new pics of Pattison's Batmobile, displayed at the WB Hotel in Abu Dhabi.
Sleek, fast black car with lots of toys, the voice of a British gentleman (Alfred) talking to Bruce inside, and now with a distinctive glowing rectangular red light at the front? Ha ha, I see what you did there Reeves...
Looks like KITT and the VIPER car had a baby.After all the crazy over the top Batmobiles in the other movies, it's kinda weird seeing one that's so grounded and down to Earth.
Looks like KITT and the VIPER car had a baby.
Reminds me of the Seventies when for a brief time the Batmobile was a blue sports car.Looks like KITT and the VIPER car had a baby.
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