Ra's goal wasn't single minded in Begins no but that still doesn't mean his ultimate goals weren't in tune with his comic book and animated series depiction.
I've thought that Mr. Freeze could be handled the same way... Via cameo. It would have been nice to see Batman taking down a guy with an altered hazmat suit and a homemade nitrogen/freezing gun. The whole scene could be about 5 minutes or so, but it would be a nice way to include Mr. Freeze. In fact, Mr. Freeze could really use a more realistic setting. His freezing weapon is deadly and that fact wasn't captured in the cartoonish Batman & Robin. Imagine the police and inocent bystanders losing limbs and whatnot. And imagine Batman facing this kind of danger himself.Even an "Oswald Cobblepot" cameo as a well-dressed Mafia boss would be fine in my mind. Just indicate he took over for Sal Maroni. Batman can use him for information at some point. Otherwise, you can always have two mob underlings do a little shoulder nudge and sarcastically call him a Penguin for a cheap laugh.
I feel Mr. Freeze is inextricably tied to his backstory. A cameo would undercut this too much.
Ra's goal wasn't single minded in Begins no but that still doesn't mean his ultimate goals weren't in tune with his comic book and animated series depiction.
I feel Mr. Freeze is inextricably tied to his backstory. A cameo would undercut this too much.
I agree. Freeze is nothing without his frozen wife.
Ra's motivations were clearly to reduce the human population in major cities across the world, why else cause the disasters over the centuries as much as he has?
Ra's al Ghul said:Only a cynical man would call what these people have "lives," Wayne. Crime. Despair. This is not how man was supposed to live. The League of Shadows has been a check against human corruption for thousands of years. We sacked Rome. Loaded trade ships with plague rats. Burned London to the ground. Every time a civilization reaches the pinnacle of its decadence, we return to restore the balance.
I feel Mr. Freeze is inextricably tied to his backstory. A cameo would undercut this too much.
I agree. Freeze is nothing without his frozen wife.
Which is why he was such a minor villain before Batman: The Animated Series introduced the frozen wife angle.
I have a personal belief that both the Jim Carrey Riddler and the Tim Burton/Danny DeVito Penguin could fit very easily into Christopher Nolan's 'quasi-realistic' interpretation of the Batman mythos with a few very minor tweaks to their characterization (toning down some of the over-the-top nature of the Carrey Riddler, and doing away with the 'raised by penguins' and 'eating raw fish' aspects of the Burton!Penguin).
Ra's motivations were clearly to reduce the human population in major cities across the world, why else cause the disasters over the centuries as much as he has?
Ra's al Ghul said:Only a cynical man would call what these people have "lives," Wayne. Crime. Despair. This is not how man was supposed to live. The League of Shadows has been a check against human corruption for thousands of years. We sacked Rome. Loaded trade ships with plague rats. Burned London to the ground. Every time a civilization reaches the pinnacle of its decadence, we return to restore the balance.
His stated goal isn't to reduce human population numbers. His stated goal is to fight decadence and corruption.
^ Theatrics and deception my friend![]()
What is with the obsession with turning the Riddler into a serial killer?
Which I never had a problem with. The great thing about Burton's Penguin is that he did have a great motivation -- which, as Alidar Jarok noted, he had not had before. Batman Returns might not have had the best plot, but Burton's Penguin was a fascinating character study on class, envy, and revenge.Doing that would be akin to what Burton did with the Penguin.
What is with the obsession with turning the Riddler into a serial killer?
He's just not that interesting of a character, frankly.
Which I never had a problem with. The great thing about Burton's Penguin is that he did have a great motivation -- which, as Alidar Jarok noted, he had not had before. Batman Returns might not have had the best plot, but Burton's Penguin was a fascinating character study on class, envy, and revenge.Doing that would be akin to what Burton did with the Penguin.
I just thought of the cameo as a way of getting him in there to show that it could be done.I agree. Freeze is nothing without his frozen wife.I feel Mr. Freeze is inextricably tied to his backstory. A cameo would undercut this too much.
This kind of villain would require significant tweaking, but I think it can be done. Have people around Gotham claim to see a large half man, half bat creature, similar to how people saw the Mothman in The Mothman Prophecies. The spirit of who and what the Man-Bat is supposed to be will play out through wild rumors and stories, but the ultimate reveal and explanation would be fairly grounded and mundane. Or maybe there won't be a reveal and the tale of the Man-Bat will live on, leaving the audience to decide if he's real or not. Oddly enough, this is probably how Batman himself should have been portrayed.Man-Bat probably wouldn't fit, being a friggin' monster.
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