Is he Batman or The Punisher? You decide.![]()
In a lot of ways I've always felt that Batman and the Punisher are essentially the same character. Punisher is just Batman if he would decide to start killing.
Is he Batman or The Punisher? You decide.![]()
In a lot of ways I've always felt that Batman and the Punisher are essentially the same character. Punisher is just Batman if he would decide to start killing.
Is he Batman or The Punisher? You decide.![]()
In a lot of ways I've always felt that Batman and the Punisher are essentially the same character. Punisher is just Batman if he would decide to start killing.
Sounds like this Batman is a lot like the Batman from The Dark Knight Returns.
In a lot of ways I've always felt that Batman and the Punisher are essentially the same character. Punisher is just Batman if he would decide to start killing.
I don't see that, unless you limit yourself strictly to the Batman of the 1939 comics or the Burton movies. Batman isn't just a vigilante, he's the World's Greatest Detective. He's a supergenius crimesolver and forensic scientist. He's essentially Sherlock Holmes as a two-fisted pulp detective. The Punisher is basically an obsessed ex-Marine. He has a wide range of specialties, but they're all military -- combat, infiltration, espionage. He has a similar mental discipline to Batman, I suppose, but he's no master detective.
Batman is just a comic book version of pulp vigilantes like the Shadow, anyway (but sans guns after 1939).
Forget Frank Miller...Jan & Dean captured the true spirit of Batman:
[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=otMJtADp5qs[/yt]
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Saw this today. Do you think armored Lex will appear in the film, or just made for the toys? I wished it would have Wonder Woman instead of Lex.
I'm not reading the spoiler, but I thought the The Dark Knight Returns reasoning for an even crueler Batman was merely the fact he's been doing it for so long, seen his basically adopted family be killed in various ways, and is in many ways at his moral endpoint, or close to it.
Plus there's the fact that it was meant to be a satirical deconstruction of superhero comics, which is why everything was pushed to an almost farcical extreme. Superman was the unthinking lap dog for an eternal Reagan administration, Batman was the kind of deranged, violent figure that might realistically be more likely to be a costumed vigilante, etc. The problem is, comics creators since have missed the point that it was a deliberate exaggeration and critique of mainstream comics and have used it as a template for mainstream comics.
What, in your mind, is the biggest misunderstanding that people have about The Dark Knight Returns?
Oh, I'm very glad you asked that question, because it's one I've been dying to answer. What I feel was misinterpreted most was that people thought I'd cast Batman as an anti-hero, when, in fact, I'd intended him as the purest of heroes.
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Saw this today. Do you think armored Lex will appear in the film, or just made for the toys? I wished it would have Wonder Woman instead of Lex.
I think that he's going to. Some of the people who have seen early previews of the film have said that there's a lot more to Lex than what the promos have shown.
Well, either it's satire, or Frank Miller is out of his mind. The latter is pretty much a given these days, but I was trying to give his younger self the benefit of the doubt. Either way, the end result is too extreme to be a particularly good model for how to approach Batman as a character.
I'm not reading the spoiler, but I thought the The Dark Knight Returns reasoning for an even crueler Batman was merely the fact he's been doing it for so long, seen his basically adopted family be killed in various ways, and is in many ways at his moral endpoint, or close to it.I'm really hoping there's something going on with the character to explain that, and that it isn't normal behavior. He's always been a dark character, but that's taking it to more of an extreme than we usually see.
Seems simple enough to me; it can't be easy being the Bat.
I'm hoping it is something along the lines of what you are guys are talking about here. I'm not against a darker, more violent Batman as long as he's given a good reason for being that way. The way they had Alfred acting in the one trailer and the fact that they are putting such an emphasis on what Bruce went through in Metropolis and Robin being dead, makes me think that will be the case.Yeah, I like it too. They've been talking about this Batman being in a very bad place, psychologically and emotionally, at the start of the movie. Makes sense to me that befriending Superman and Wonder Woman would start to bring Batman back from that dark place a bit.They're probably trying to draw as sharp of a contrast between Batman & Superman as possible. I actually like it. Just from the trailers Batfleck has already surpassed Bale's version in my eyes. Bale is ok, but he lacked a real intimidation factor with that goofy voice. This batman has a crippled batgirl & dead Robin, he's probably snapping spines like Bane at a dance party.What the review said about Batman does make me a little nervous. I'm really hoping there's something going on with the character to explain that, and that it isn't normal behavior. He's always been a dark character, but that's taking it to more of an extreme than we usually see.
That is hilarious. I didn't know it even existed. If they ever do a retro Batman & Robin movie, that has to be the theme song, or at least used in it somewhere.Forget Frank Miller...Jan & Dean captured the true spirit of Batman:
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