That's kind of a backhanded comment m8.I commend Nolan and Bale for being adamant on his 3 and done stance, because now we can finally get the Batman I've waited years to see
The funny thing about the people criticizing Nolan/Bale's TDKT are the same ones who would be calling for a more "grounded" interpretation if they got a fantastic Batgod iteration first. If we got Affleck/Snyder Batman first, which is probably going to be a lot more open to bending what he's physically capable of, people would be yearning for a more realistic approach. Batman fans are pretty lucky that they've got numerous renditions of the character so far, not just one cinematic representation.
Especially in Batman Begins.
The funny thing about the people criticizing Nolan/Bale's TDKT are the same ones who would be calling for a more "grounded" interpretation if they got a fantastic Batgod iteration first. If we got Affleck/Snyder Batman first, which is probably going to be a lot more open to bending what he's physically capable of, people would be yearning for a more realistic approach. Batman fans are pretty lucky that they've got numerous renditions of the character so far, not just one cinematic representation.
eh, i've never been one to ask for realism in comic book movies, just good movies overall.
i don't read comic books/watch CBM's for realism.
What you watch them for is up to you, but speaking with a moderate knowledge of the Batman comics a more grounded take is quite accurate to comic source material. A lot of the DKT haters claim "Batman is stronger, Batman fights better, Batman is more X, Y, Z" when Nolan actually depicted how Batman and Bruce are in comics like Year One, The Long Halloween and some of the older story lines. Now that we've had a trilogy of grounded Batman everyone is crawling out of the woodwork saying a more supernatural take is "the real Batman".
Now they want him to be able to keep up with Clayface and Solomon Grundy while dodging freeze rays and being flung through buildings by Man-Bat. Weirdly, the people complaining about Batgod invading BvS are probably the same ones that say Nolan's Batman wasn't strong/smart/powerful enough. My point is just that people won't appreciate TDKT properly until quite some time has gone by, and they're clamoring for a less restrained take because of the recency of TDKT. Not because a less grounded take is somehow more faithful to the mythos, despite what they say to rationalize it.
These aren't mutually exclusive.What you watch them for is up to you, but speaking with a moderate knowledge of the Batman comics a more grounded take is quite accurate to comic source material. A lot of the DKT haters claim "Batman is stronger, Batman fights better, Batman is more X, Y, Z" when Nolan actually depicted how Batman and Bruce are in comics like Year One, The Long Halloween and some of the older story lines. Now that we've had a trilogy of grounded Batman everyone is crawling out of the woodwork saying a more supernatural take is "the real Batman".
I'm fine with them having those far fetch villains, just make it look like they're in a real world. Just like Aliens coming to Earth in MoS.
These aren't mutually exclusive.
I don't think so at all. B&R territory is a result of merchandising taking precedent over genuine storytelling. And it's a prime example of throwing crap on the wall to see what sticks.That's a little different. If you bring aliens into it you can say "Oh, they're from a different planet, they can just do amazing things we don't have to explain it". How does one explain Clayface, Man-Bat, Poison Ivy and Solomon Grundy without descending into B&R territory? It's a fine line. It's a line I think Snyder can walk, but people disregard the Nolan trilogy now like it was an inconvenient necessity to get to "the real Batman", which makes me wonder how much of the history they know about outside the Arkham Games a few BTAS episodes.
Batman definitely is one of the more flexible fictional icons in recent memory, though I do think the advent of the lighter tone popularised in the 50s and 60s allowed the character to go on the other end of that spectrum. Thus the return to the darker roots make it come around full circle and gives the impression Batman can be as dark or as light as we want it to be.I agree, but a few people seem to think the real Batman is the one that survives Grundy's punches whereas a Batman that has to adhere to inconveniences like the rules of physics is a "watered down impostor". My point is there is no "real" Batman, just different versions. Nolan's TDKT was a good iteration of a certain view on Batman, we're about to get a different one. I just look at some people's responses to TDKT and shake my head at how entitled they can be that they somehow "deserve" all the different versions of Batman to be brought on screen.
Which other CB character has had 3 different conceptualizations of his universe brought to the silver screen? Batman fans have to be some of the most needy people I've ever seen articulate their thoughts.
What you watch them for is up to you, but speaking with a moderate knowledge of the Batman comics a more grounded take is quite accurate to comic source material. A lot of the DKT haters claim "Batman is stronger, Batman fights better, Batman is more X, Y, Z" when Nolan actually depicted how Batman and Bruce are in comics like Year One, The Long Halloween and some of the older story lines. Now that we've had a trilogy of grounded Batman everyone is crawling out of the woodwork saying a more supernatural take is "the real Batman".
It's going to be extremely hard for Batfleck to top Bale, aside from the aesthetics.
His Batman was good in BB. Not a bad Bruce Wayne, though.
you're right, there is no one true batman.
I just prefer the one who shares a universe with other superheroes.
I don't think so at all. B&R territory is a result of merchandising taking precedent over genuine storytelling. And it's a prime example of throwing crap on the wall to see what sticks.
All those characters you've named have done just fine in "serious" stories. Fantasy has its place, regardless of tone.
Take alien invasions and compare the likes of Signs, with that of Mars Attacks, and to Transformers. Generally the same overall premise for the antagonists, but worlds apart in execution.
Batman definitely is one of the more flexible fictional icons in recent memory, though I do think the advent of the lighter tone popularised in the 50s and 60s allowed the character to go on the other end of that spectrum. Thus the return to the darker roots make it come around full circle and gives the impression Batman can be as dark or as light as we want it to be.
Moving forward, I don't think the brand will have that luxury. I find it hard to fathom the fanbase would allow the property to dip its toes into that territory again, long-term.