Katsuro
Superhero
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2005
- Messages
- 5,616
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 31
lujho said:But the cowl never neccessarily had to be solid. It never HAD to be armoured. Its main purpose was always just as a mask, not a helmet.
I'll admit, in the context of this series, going from solid to not solid would be odd, but that wouldn't have been a problem had the cowl not explicitly been shown to be graphite in the film. Besides, it's can be solid in some parts and not in others.
I've said it before... if realism and practicality stop you from doing something visually cool, then bend reality a bit. You don't have to apply "realism" completely rigidly to *everything*. If you did, you'd have to get rid of the cape gliding and grapple gun, for a start.
But the cape glider and grapple gun are at least believable to the average person. while the actual technology for some of Batman's gadgets may not exist, to the average person it's believable that they might, at least someday. However, when we see either a hard, solid cowl, or even a leather cowl of some sort, that moves as if it was a part of his face, people are gonna notice somethings wrong. It's not about realism, it's just about not making any sense.
As for lenses.. I find that whole white eye look explanation about as annoying as the yellow oval explanation (you know, that crap about it being a target and extra protection and what not. That symbol was just easier to copyright than the single black bat.). Look, when Kane originally drew The Bat-Man, he had regular eyes. Finger came along, and suggested he have white slits for eyes. He didn't say "he needs protective lenses!" he just thought it would look cool. It was a comic book, and it looked cool with him in the shadows and you could just see the white eyes and whatnot. For some reason, they couldn't just leave it as a stylistic thing, and had to explain it by calling them white lenses. It's ridiculous. Why explain it? Do all anime characters have to explain how they were exposed to radiation that made their eyes insanely large, dyed their hair odd colors, and caused their legs to grow to 3/4 of their total height? No, it's just the way their drawn. If an anime was adapted to real life, would you see people demanding the actors have surgery to lengthen their legs? Or perhaps use some sort of CGI to give them giant eyes? Of course not! Things that work in forms of drawing/animation do not always translate to live-action.

