Personally I took changes like that as intentional to better align with the fact that Watchmen as a film was drawing from the existing superhero film canon of today the way that Watchmen the comic drew from superhero comics. Trying to create Watchmen the comic as a film was doomed to failure (or at least marginalization) because the audience lacks the context of the comics, much less those in the day it was created. Drawing those parallels to the familiar films inspired by those comics instead just makes sense.I read somewhere (can't remember where, though) that the increase in violence was executive meddling. Not sure if that's true, but there you go.Might be simply the angle/quality of footage but that doesn't seem to have the gun turret, so maybe I am right about the deployed footage.
As for Synder not making Batman a killer, I don't know about that - In Watchmen, I was surprised that in the alley scene he made the decision to ramp up the violence and make Dan a killer.
It never made much sense to me because how was Dan suppose to be the contrast when he was happy to stick a knife in a guy's throat?
I don't think I've ever seen Bruce portrayed as that young when he started being Batman. I'd put him in his early to mid 20's at the earliest.Most stories have Batman beginning his career at 17-18-19.
I'm pretty sure Bruce and Barbara only dated in the DCAU...
I don't think I've ever seen Bruce portrayed as that young when he started being Batman. I'd put him in his early to mid 20's at the earliest.Most stories have Batman beginning his career at 17-18-19.
I don't think I've ever seen Bruce portrayed as that young when he started being Batman. I'd put him in his early to mid 20's at the earliest.Most stories have Batman beginning his career at 17-18-19.
I guess my time frames are wonky. In Frank Miller's Batman year one comic, I get the feeling that Bruce is still a teenager/ in his early 20's but no older than 22. I consider the time Bruce spent training to be Batman as a teenage apart of his career. You know before he worked out all the particulars of the Batman costume.
<<They did?! I remember an instance of Babs daydreaming of making out with Batman, and in "Mystery of the Batwoman" she plays the jealous girlfriend (emphasis on "plays"), but I don't think there was anything more serious than a teenagers crush.>>
It was established in Batman Beyond. "Mystery of Batwoman" was a bit of retroactive foreshadowing for that.
I guess my time frames are wonky. In Frank Miller's Batman year one comic, I get the feeling that Bruce is still a teenager/ in his early 20's but no older than 22.
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