The very fact that we're having this debate illustrates the problem with this movie. If a significant portion of your audience doesn't buy the motives you've laid out for why your villain does the things that he does, then it means you've failed as a writer. Now I'm sure some people will say "no, it just means that some of your viewers are dumb." But that's kind of like me hanging a toilet seat on the wall and calling it art, you showing up and saying "I don't get it", and me responding with "it's beyond your comprehension." In other words, all I'm doing is deflecting blame onto you instead of owning up to my own failures.
There will always be people who defend bad writing. And apparently, if you point out the flaws in their arguments, you'll be accused of making personal attacks, which I find astounding, If someone finds fault in my argument or if they accuse me of inferring too much, I don't take that personally. Instead I take it for what it is, a challenge to do a better job making my case. But moving on...
When I first saw this movie, my immediate impression was that the writers worked backwards. They started off with a villain, decided what they wanted him to do, and then they had to figure out why he does those things. Answer? Let's make him insane. That solves everything. Now, we don't actually have to worry about any of it being plausible or making sense. The moment someone raises that issue, we can pull out the "he's insane" card. How convenient.
There will always be people who defend bad writing. And apparently, if you point out the flaws in their arguments, you'll be accused of making personal attacks, which I find astounding, If someone finds fault in my argument or if they accuse me of inferring too much, I don't take that personally. Instead I take it for what it is, a challenge to do a better job making my case. But moving on...
When I first saw this movie, my immediate impression was that the writers worked backwards. They started off with a villain, decided what they wanted him to do, and then they had to figure out why he does those things. Answer? Let's make him insane. That solves everything. Now, we don't actually have to worry about any of it being plausible or making sense. The moment someone raises that issue, we can pull out the "he's insane" card. How convenient.