Now misslane38 is gonna write another essay thanks to you TeeKay.![]()

The original trauma was his parents' deaths, but it's the Black Zero event that is a new trauma that triggers Batman. It's the association with Superman that's important, which is why it only bothers Batman when Superman says Martha's name. Superman is who he has projected his sense of powerlessness -- the feeling he had when his parents' were murdered -- onto. His single-minded and reckless pursuit of Superman is Batman's fight (part of the fight or flight response) response; in fighting Superman he feels he is fighting the man who killed his parents and made him feel such impotence and loss as a boy. Finally, the absence of a thing isn't evidence. Unless someone associated with the making of BvS has explicitly denied that Bruce was experiencing PTSD, then what is non-existent is evidence that it was not the filmmakers' intention to portray Bruce as experiencing PTSD symptoms.
Nolan said it best. It all comes down to intellectual compromise.And this would be relevant if we were talking about a superhero picture. This IP is the antithesis of that and it's probably why Mel was approached, because this is the only type of genre pic I could imagine him doing.
Easier said than done. There are studio pics which succeeded because the studio intervened, or because the auteur fought for every decision and managed to win out.
The decisions which are deemed good/bad are only easy to identify after-the-fact. If it were so binary, there would be no studio production out there who would dare put out junk. Trash films generally affect their bottom line.
The original trauma was his parents' deaths, but it's the Black Zero event that is a new trauma that triggers Batman. It's the association with Superman that's important, which is why it only bothers Batman when Superman says Martha's name. Superman is who he has projected his sense of powerlessness -- the feeling he had when his parents' were murdered -- onto. His single-minded and reckless pursuit of Superman is Batman's fight (part of the fight or flight response) response; in fighting Superman he feels he is fighting the man who killed his parents and made him feel such impotence and loss as a boy. Finally, the absence of a thing isn't evidence. Unless someone associated with the making of BvS has explicitly denied that Bruce was experiencing PTSD, then what is non-existent is evidence that it was not the filmmakers' intention to portray Bruce as experiencing PTSD symptoms.
I disagree. I think Bruce always practiced safe sex and discussed sexual history with any potential partner.
That's a gigantic assumption to make which, granted I only saw the film once, is not backed by anything in the film
I actually agree with this. But I repeated it many times - Batman's arc is the least problematic part of the film. Outside Batman going for murders without any justified reason and him accidentally snapping out of the rage trance - it makes sense, as an idea.Not a gigantic assumption. The two scenes, Bruce feeling powerless with his parents death, Bruce feeling powerless after Superman arrives, both are shown consequetively in the movie. Bruce's feeling powerless is mentioned many times :
"Thats how it starts...the feeling of powerlessness, that turns good men cruel"
"Criminals are like weeds, take one out, another one takes its place. This is about the future of the world, its my legacy"
Also the fact that when Bruce saved that girl in the BZ event, but couldnt save her mother, he was feeling the same powerlessness when he couldnt save his parents...
And in the end he became powerful again by saving someone else's parent, another Martha. Its all there in the movie. I dont think its a gigantic assumption.
The amount of excuses you have to come up with to justify nearly everything in BvS...
The original trauma was his parents' deaths, but it's the Black Zero event that is a new trauma that triggers Batman.
The original trauma was his parents' deaths, but it's the Black Zero event that is a new trauma that triggers Batman. It's the association with Superman that's important, which is why it only bothers Batman when Superman says Martha's name. Superman is who he has projected his sense of powerlessness -- the feeling he had when his parents' were murdered -- onto. His single-minded and reckless pursuit of Superman is Batman's fight (part of the fight or flight response) response; in fighting Superman he feels he is fighting the man who killed his parents and made him feel such impotence and loss as a boy. Finally, the absence of a thing isn't evidence. Unless someone associated with the making of BvS has explicitly denied that Bruce was experiencing PTSD, then what is non-existent is evidence that it was not the filmmakers' intention to portray Bruce as experiencing PTSD symptoms.
Not a gigantic assumption. The two scenes, Bruce feeling powerless with his parents death, Bruce feeling powerless after Superman arrives, both are shown consequetively in the movie. Bruce's feeling powerless is mentioned many times :
"Thats how it starts...the feeling of powerlessness, that turns good men cruel"
"Criminals are like weeds, take one out, another one takes its place. This is about the future of the world, its my legacy"
Also the fact that when Bruce saved that girl in the BZ event, but couldnt save her mother, he was feeling the same powerlessness when he couldnt save his parents...
And in the end he became powerful again by saving someone else's parent, another Martha. Its all there in the movie. I dont think its a gigantic assumption.
Answer me this... why would Bruce Wayne be so traumatised by the Black Zero Event?
Yeah. To be fair, this ain't an issue. If anything it's actually one of the most Batman things he does in the flick - ensuring he has a back up plan should he lose the truck for whatever reason.
Now, Superman stopping Batman from chasing the truck full of armed terrorists, just to tell him to stop being Batman - instead of actually stopping the truck full of armed terrorists... now that's ****ing stupid.
Because it was a tragedy he could do nothing to stop. Batman could never have stopped Zod. Bruce was put right back into the same place he was as a child: the time before Batman. The reason why the BZE was so significant was because it wasn't just one trauma; it was a trauma linked to a childhood trauma. It was also within the context of existing grief for Robin and two decades of stressful crimefighting. These are all compounding risk factors for a complex PTSD episode.
But, as I stated, that isn't realistic. Your argument is that Black Zero is the final catalyst for Batman essentially losing his mind - because he was powerless to stop Zod trashing the city.
But what about the twenty years or so beforehand, when he was crime fighting? What about all of Joker's victims he was unable to save? Penguin's? Riddler's? He would have felt powerless then as well, wouldn't he? Why didn't they 'break' him?
You attach so much significance to Black Zero, because without its significance your argument falls to pieces, but you fail to adequately underline why that series of events would be more traumatic to Bruce Wayne than any of his previous experiences as Batman... other than 'because aliens'.
Sorry, dog won't hunt.
...and besides all of that, at no stage in that entire crappy movie is there any indication given that Batman is suffering from PTSD. You, and all others who subscribe to the theory, have pulled it out of thin air.
Batman V Superman plainly states that Batman wants to kill Superman because he felt powerless to stop Black Zero, and doesn't want to risk feeling powerless again if Superman turns evil at some point, for some reason - so he decides killing him the best thing to do now.
THAT'S IT.
Thousands of words have been wasted trying to justify that creative character choice. It's a stupid, stupid motivation that makes no sense within the confines of the narrative. Bring up all the complex psychological arguments you like, but none of them are present in the movie itself.
Not I want to get into another tireless BvS discussion, but these are 2 great posts. Its why I get baffled when people say Snyder's movies are all style and bo substance. I have always found plenty of substance in his movies. And it's why I have always found re-watched of his movies rewarding.
I have no issues with how Batman's condition is established in BvS (PTSD or whatever, I'm not a doctor), I just think it's a bad choice to start a cinematic universe. And Batman seeing Superman as a potentially the greatest threat to humanity? Not too convincing. I have issues with how it was resolved. Martha scene is a happy accident, that snaps Batman out of his rage trance, so he can think straight again. It's not a remotely satisfying finale of barely established conflict between Batman and Superman... And overall, the way the whole film is staged: it RIDES on absence of rational thinking of it's key characters.How is discussing Bruce's characterization through the lens of PTSD an excuse? I find one has to employ more excuses to reject this reading than one needs to consider or at least entertain the interpretation. The PTSD reading isn't a fix for the film. It is an interpretation based on an understanding of the condition and its diagnostic criteria. It enriches one's understanding of Batman while at the same time does not exonerate or excuse his failures and mistakes. The film doesn't paint Batman as anything other than a broken man who has lost his way. The only thing PTSD affects is how one relates to and understands Bruce as a character. One can empathize with his pain and struggle while hating how that pain has perverted his heroism. One can see his mistakes and flaws of reasoning with the understanding that those things are a manifestation of psychological trauma rather than intellectual deficiency. PTSD contentextualizes Batman in the film; PTSD is not something that can make that which is fallen not fallen. Batman did still fight, kill, and betray his fellow man. But he can still be good because he can rebuild what was broken.
Oh I wouldn't say that. Substance is there, it's just stuck in imho badly written overstuffed movie. You shouldn't have to do mental gymnastics and project tons of assumption to make the plot work and justify scenes.
Still whatever problems BvS have were seem smaller by what Suicide Squad turned out to be. BvS is at least rewatchable in entirety.