javonstokess
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- Joined
- Dec 13, 2015
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You don't hear what I'm saying. Whatever.
Or I just don't agree with what you're saying.
You don't hear what I'm saying. Whatever.
Uh, no, it's not like that at all. To my knowledge, Bruce's stategy wasn't to commit mass genocide in order to neutralize a singular perceived threat, which wasn't Cheney's strategy either.
And I'm not defending the Bush administration here, btw.
That's the thing. There is no "broken Batman" in the comics. The characterization Snyder offered up was nearly everything Batman is not.
Anything he took from DKR was just shallow visual stuff. Nothing meaty from the story.
How is it the same Batman, if Snyder's Batman didn't quit after Robin's death and fought crime for 10 more years (it's not stated in the film, but that's what Snyder said)? How is he a broken Bat, if he follows his code? Quitting isn't being broken.Of course the "TDKR" version is broken. He essentially broke and quit when Jason Todd died! That's the whole point of the book is that Batman rebuilds himself and comes out of retirement.
Forget homages when the director literally says that that's the Batman he was using.
So, so true. To 'break' Batman is to destroy him. The cape, the cowl and the car don't matter.
It's who he is underneath that defines him.
If you make Batman a broken killer, twisted by grief and rage, making bad decisions, and acting without forethought and planning...HE ISN'T BATMAN ANYMORE.
How is it the same Batman, if Snyder's Batman didn't quit after Robin's death and fought crime for 10 more years (it's not stated in the film, but that's what Snyder said)? How is he a broken Bat, if he follows his code? Quitting isn't being broken.
OK. He did jump onto the truck and indeed risked to lose the transmitter. Not the smartest move, but the chase was quite brutal. It doesn't change the fact, that placing the transmitter on the truck and engage into chasing the convoy was a bad idea.well, Batman could get the rock under heavy security in the end so i don't see the point of arguing over that either...
In what form? There are similarities, Snyder's Batman is clearly inspired by old Batman of Miller. But stories are entirely different, character arcs are entirely different.I'm only going off what Snyder says. His characterization is supposed to be based off the TDKR version of Batman.
It's not 1-for-1 but the director is going to come out of his mouth and say it, then that's what I'm going to believe.
I'm OK with that. What works for me not always works for everyone else.Or I just don't agree with what you're saying.
OK. He did jump onto the truck and indeed risked to lose the transmitter. Not the smartest move, but the chase was quite brutal. It doesn't change the fact, that placing the transmitter on the truck and engage into chasing the convoy was a bad idea.
In what form? There are similarities, Snyder's Batman is clearly inspired by old Batman of Miller. But stories are entirely different, character arcs are entirely different.
He doesn't whip it onto the truck. He whips it onto another similar car. Dude, you need to watch the film again, before accusing it in all kinds of sins you made up in your head.Not even counting when he spears a car, drags it for miles and then whips it into the truck.
Transmitter should hold though...lol
He doesn't whip it onto the truck. He whips it onto another similar car. Dude, you need to watch the film again, before accusing it in all kinds of sins you made up in your head.
So what? That page is quite controversial itself. Because it's not clear if Batman gunned down that female mutant, or just scared her off and said "I believe you", because he knew she was bluffing.When he's questioned about his Batman killing, he makes the point (after talking about other film versions of Batman) to say that he used the Batman shooting the criminal with a gun scene in TDKR. Now add in that he has a Batman using identical armor as TDKR, is old and broken, lost a Robin that changes his mindset and literally hold the same philosophical issue with Superman...
How can you not say they aren't essentially one and the same.
It indeed proven. it proves you didn't understand the film, but you have enough of sneering for it. Clueless hate is clueless hate. I'm not gonna waste no more time on you.My bad, instead of killing the guys in the truck, he kills the guys in the car.
Point proven.
It indeed proven. it proves you didn't understand the film, but you have enough of sneering for it. Clueless hate is clueless hate. I'm not gonna waste no more time on you.
it proves you didn't understand the film
Well, if you tracked what he was saying, he clearly didn't pay attention to film and made up some false claims about it.The classic "it's not that the film is bad, you just didn't understand it"
I never said it's too smart for people. I said he didn't get it. He claimed Superman is accused of killing people in Africa, but it's stupid, because they were killed by bullets. He did get it? No. False claim. He claimed Batman destroyed truck by whipping another car on it. It's also false claim."you just didn't get it" is just a more polite way of saying "you're stupid" imo.
If you like the film, then great. But stop saying "You didn't get it" or "BvS is too smart for people".
It's corny, it's lazy, it's rude, and it doesn't help anything.
I never said it's too smart for people. I said he didn't get it. He claimed Superman is accused of killing people in Africa, but it's stupid, because they were killed by bullets. He did get it? No. False claim. He claimed Batman destroyed truck by whipping another car on it. It's also false claim.
You keep saying this, but what is so level-headed about blowing up a gas tank with Martha in the same room? Or training Robin to kill (yes, there seems to be proof of this now)? It sounds to me like he was never really level-headed. And we don't know if he ever was, for sure. The only thing we know is that he stopped himself from branding one criminal (Lex), and thinks that humanity has some good left in them. That's all.Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying, and that was the point -- that he was wrong and not acting like the Batman we know and love.
I'd be completely against this if there hadn't been a pretty clearly displayed character arc for Batman in the film which showed that he was wrong and needed to realize the error in his ways, change, somehow leave this dark, misguided period behind him, and go back to being the more hopeful, heroic, and level-headed person he should be.
You keep saying this, but what is so level-headed about blowing up a gas tank with Martha in the same room? Or training Robin to kill (yes, there seems to be proof of this now)? It sounds to me like he was never really level-headed. And we don't know if he ever was, for sure. The only thing we know is that he stopped himself from branding one criminal (Lex), and thinks that humanity has some good left in them. That's all.