For gritty violence and exaggerated characters, how about Sin City? I think the two can coexist, in fact it might just give the series its own voice and not make it overly beholden to canon...
Bullock was great this week. Poor Jim has got himself into a real pickle with the waring mobs. Would a mob boss really sit by himself in a park feeding pigeons? The catgirl appearance was not needed at all. Bruce and Alfred very good this week as we keep building on who Bruce will become in a comic book reasonable way.
I don't see how there's any mutual exclusivity between the gritty violence and the exaggerated characters, but maybe that's just me.
I guess if this is aimed for Frank Miller Batman -type of fans?
In some comic version, wasn't there a social worker was a substitute mom for Bruce?
Leslie Thompkins, created by Denny O'Neill in the same story that introduced Crime Alley. She was also featured in Batman: TAS. And I think I read somewhere that she may appear in Gotham.
It's what SHIELD does. I wouldn't draw too close a comparison between the two, but on this point they are working the same street.[And as I said, if they wanted a broad, exaggerated world of supercrime, why base the show around ordinary cops instead of superheroes? There just seems to be a mismatch between the premise and the approach..
It's what SHIELD does. I wouldn't draw too close a comparison between the two, but on this point they are working the same street.[And as I said, if they wanted a broad, exaggerated world of supercrime, why base the show around ordinary cops instead of superheroes? There just seems to be a mismatch between the premise and the approach..
Naturally they'll hate each to start withLove interest for Alfred?
Following her acclaimed performance on Homeland, which earned her an Emmy nomination, Morena Baccarin is returning to her genre roots with a role on Fox’s Gotham. She has joined the cast of the Batman universe drama as a recurring this season and is slated to become a regular in Season 2.
She will play Dr. Leslie Thompkins, a gifted and dedicated physician who was a friend of Bruce Wayne’s parents, Thomas and Martha.
That depends. If you mean Frank Miller Batman as in The Dark Knight Returns and Year One, then I don't see it, since those were pretty much deconstructions and repudiations of the campier side of DC comics in the past. If you mean Frank Miller Batman as in The Dark Knight Strikes Again or All-Star Batman and Robin, The Boy Wonder... well, the show is nowhere near those levels of insanity, ineptness, or misogyny, and hopefully never will be.
Honestly, I wish people would just forget about Frank Miller and his take on Batman. He's largely responsible for the "ruthless vigilante" take on the character as opposed to the cunning master-detective who resorts to violence only when he really has to and pulls it off with skill and technique rather than pummeling people into a coma.
I'm not sure the responsibility lies with Miller so much as with later creators who missed the point of what he was trying to do. The Dark Knight Returns was meant to be an alternate future that exaggerated everything to a satirically dystopian extreme, with the aged Bruce/Batman being far more damaged, unstable, and violent than he ever was in his prime. It was never meant to be a template for a typical Batman story, but a whole generation of Batman writers (including, unfortunately, the makers of the upcoming Batman/Superman movie) have approached it as exactly that.
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