If Ritchson does play a character in the new DCU, it'll be the third DC character he's played, he was Smallville's Aquaman, and Hawk in Titans.
Yeah, I just read that. I haven't seen anything with Ritchson in it, but I do think he has look and physicality to play Batman.Alan Ritchson says he's talked to James Gunn, doesn't think Batman is in his future but being in the DCU is in his future. Let the fan casting begin!
I saw some commentators criticizing Ritchson, though, for being too old. That's wrong, because Batman should be in his late 30s to 40s for the Batman and Son storyline that Gunn wants to bring to the screen. There's nothing wrong with making Batman older than Superman at all, more of a vet, more experienced. Remember that Nightwing is in this universe as well, there is already at least one Batman's foster sons in this universe too. Batman should be older than Superman in the DCU.
Well, nothing about Batman is remotely plausible to begin with, despite the strenuous efforts of some creators and fans to pretend otherwise. Having him still be active as a crime fighter in his forties would not even come close to topping the list of nonsense associated with the character and concept.
I don't think it's necessarily implausible. They've addressed Batman's aging in the books from time to time, most evidently in The Dark Knight Returns and Kingdom Come. He accumulates injuries, slows down, and is in more pain, but is still in the game. In the books, seeing as there have been 4 (5 if you count Stephanie) Robins, Batman has got to be in his 40s.Aside from the ages of various Robins, I find the idea of an older Batman implausible, because most pro athletes retire in their late 20s or 30s as cumulative injuries take their toll, and Batman takes a tougher pounding in the course of his job than any pro athlete. True, some athletes keep going into their 40s, like Serena Williams, but they don't spend their lives getting beaten up and shot and stabbed and burned and poisoned on a regular basis.
You're totally right. Within the context of the DCU, it's no problem.Well, nothing about Batman is remotely plausible to begin with, despite the strenuous efforts of some creators and fans to pretend otherwise. Having him still be active as a crime fighter in his forties would not even come close to topping the list of nonsense associated with the character and concept.
When Frank Miller had him return to action in The Dark Knight Returns in what was presumably his fifties (I don’t remember if it was ever specified), with just a few token nods to his physical limitations, I bought it readily for purposes of the story. This stuff is pure fantasy no matter how much self-serious grimdark you dress it up in, and an older Batman is not going to be the straw that breaks the back of its already nonexistent believability.
Tyler Hoechlin is still trying to pitch himself to be the DCU Batman. Supposedly he screen tested for the role a decade ago before they decided to go with an older Batman.
I like him as Reacher and other stuff I have seen him in but nothing in there suggests to me he would make a good Bruce Wayne who is born to the upper classes.Yeah, I just read that. I haven't seen anything with Ritchson in it, but I do think he has look and physicality to play Batman.
I read 90s books too and I get what you're saying. I'd remind you, though, that Batman was also in Grant Morrison's Justice League books, doing incredible things, alongside Superman, Wonderwoman, etc. There was a reason he was referred to by fans as uber-bat in those books, because that depiction wasn't exactly a gritty one. I mean, even in the batbooks of the time, Batman survived and healed of a vicious beating and back-breaking by Bane, who also dropped him from at least two stories. That's not very realistic at all.Relative to a universe inhabited by flying humanoid aliens and actual Greek gods, a peak athlete/genius using his skills and gadgetry to fight crime is quite plausible. When I first got into Batman comics in the '80s and '90s, the approach was to treat them as the most grounded and naturalistic of DC's series, which was the inspiration for Nolan's movies doing the same (since movie adaptations tend to lag a couple of decades behind their sources). So that still shapes my view of the character.
I don't think it's necessarily implausible. They've addressed Batman's aging in the books from time to time, most evidently in The Dark Knight Returns and Kingdom Come. He accumulates injuries, slows down, and is in more pain, but is still in the game.
He's not playing pro-sports, he's fighting crime
I'd remind you, though, that Batman was also in Grant Morrison's Justice League books, doing incredible things, alongside Superman, Wonderwoman, etc. There was a reason he was referred to by fans as uber-bat in those books, because that depiction wasn't exactly a gritty one.
I don't think it's necessarily implausible. They've addressed Batman's aging in the books from time to time, most evidently in The Dark Knight Returns and Kingdom Come. He accumulates injuries, slows down, and is in more pain, but is still in the game. In the books, seeing as there have been 4 (5 if you count Stephanie) Robins, Batman has got to be in his 40s.
He's not playing pro-sports, he's fighting crime and, more importantly, he's Batman.
They've even had a couple of stories where Batman was rejuvenated by taking a dip in Ra's Al Ghul's (Damien's grandfather) Lazarus Pit.
Thanks for the input!I like him as Reacher and other stuff I have seen him in but nothing in there suggests to me he would make a good Bruce Wayne who is born to the upper classes.
I'm with you. Given the ages of Dick, Jason, Tim, and Damien, Bruce has got to be in his, what, late 40s or early 50s? There is overlap, of course in those Robins.And if he's in his upper 30s, maybe early 40s tops, I can buy that. It's once he gets old enough to have five consecutive Robins, the first two of whom are now adults and the latest of whom is his teenage son, that it gets ridiculous. I think it was a manifestly stupid decision to reboot the timeline to keep Batman in his 30s yet also cram eight decades' worth of Robin history into an absurdly brief timespan.
John Byrne's Generations miniseries may not have been his greatest works, but I liked their conceit of depicting the characters aging realistically over the decades and passing the torch to their successors. There was a time when comics actually allowed that to happen to an extent, e.g. with the Justice League and the Teen Titans and the X-Men. But then fans started to become writers and editors and began resetting things to the status quo they'd liked when they were kids.
Weirdly, I really liked All Star Superman but really disliked Morrison's approach to Batman. Maybe that's partly because I prefer a more grounded Batman, at least in post-Silver Age contexts.
Yeah, Tim must be college age or right out of college now, right?Damien aside, the Robins are all aged within ten years of each other. The second generation of Supers would all have to be in their late thirties and early forties with the sidekicks generation being in their mid-twenties to early thirties. The new Teen Titans heroes are the ones from Damien's group with Tim's Teen Titans being in their early twenties.
BTW, seeing as how you got into Batman in the 80s and 90s, who were your favorite writers and artists from those eras?
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