Sure, it is "writing" if you're meaning in a strictly literal sense. But like I said, no one will say the parts justifying the suit, the cowl, the tumbler are examples of "great writing" because that's not how they are referred to in the context of filmmaking. Which is why it is also inappropriate to do so.
No, they are writing--period. When the writer says "It would make sense if he had a radio in his cowl," or "It would make sense if the batmobile was a repurposed military prototype," that's writing.
Not always, just like how it isn't the other way around as well.
I can't figure out what this sentence means. If you're trying to say "Plausibility can be sometimes be an improvmenet," well, I never said otherwise.
At the same time, I don't see it as just coincidence that the list of greatest films ever made often includes movies that are more realistic, plausible and believable than the ones that are not.
If you define greatness as being the most popular among the greatest number, then your logic might be sound. I don't define it that way. The cowardice of studios that stifles the creation of truly great sci-fi and fantasy does not make the alternative genres "greater." The cowardice of studios that requires all sci-fi and fantasy films be mindless actions romps does not somehow make the "realistic" films "greater."
The problem is not the genere; it's idiot executives and idiot filmmakers.
Haven't read it so I wouldn't know.
Then your purpose in life should be to do so.
It's great that you mentioned LOTR, because I think it is, alongside Blade Runner, one of the more prominent examples of fantasy portrayed in a believable manner. A lot of the stylistic decisions in the LOTR films have a very natural, historical epic feel to them. The "world of men" in LOTR has obvious resemblances to early Medieval periods - from things like manner of dress to the shape and type of weapons, social hierarchy, the massive landscape etc. And I firmly believe no one can deny that it is these wide strokes of believability due to which, even when visually speaking, makes LOTR superior to an out-and-out fantasy like 300. Like I said before, it provides an entry point to the audience into the world of the film and by making it similar to our own in certain respects, it makes suspension of disbelief much, much easier - which is essentially the most important goal of any filmmaker: to completely immerse the audience into his world.
What you are taking about is
completeness, not plausibility. LOTR is not plausible, it is
complete. That means the world has been written in such away that it has rules, and the things inside it conform to those rules. It's realistic only within it's own confines, not within the real world. LOTR is not better because it is plausible or believable, but because it is complete and makes sense within itself.
This is what I mean when I say a film can be, as you described "intimately detailed' and "fully explained" without being realistic, believable, or plausible, relative the real world. Batman can be
complete in the same way that LOTR is
complete without being believable, realistic, or plausible. If you construct it properly, Batman can fight a man made out of clay and nobody will say "That's stupid" by the same token that nobody said "That giant flaming eye is stupid." You don't have to make it campy or over-the-top, either.
Similarly, the film that
doesn't have Batman fighting a clay monster is not better simply by virtue of being more closely aligned with the real world. Different, but not better.