The Guard
Avenger
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2002
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Bruce did plenty of detective work in this film. He researched, engaged in surveillance, followed up on various leads, put the pieces together and learned things.
Those things are the essence of detective work. Real detective work is not flashy, nor is it all that difficult if you know the procedures (former Special Investigator here). "Detective work" is a fancy term for investigating the details of something. People just want to see the Sherlock Holmes-style deductive reasoning that is so popular with the character. And that's fine, but that sort of story is more suited to say, his Arkham villains.
Someone said it took Bruce a while to figure out that the White Portuguese wasn't a man, but a ship. But I'm pretty sure Bruce knew for a while. He also knew that the cargo it was carrying wasn't a dirty bomb for a while, which is why he went after it in the first place. He was lying to Alfred about what the "WP" was and what it was carrying in order to throw him off the scent of his investigation, which was going on under Alfred's nose, and the film makes that apparent in a sequence between the two of them. When Alfred finally calls him out on lying, Bruce flat out comes right out and says "The White Portuguese isn't a man. It's a ship." He knew for some time. He just didn't know where it was coming from and where it's cargo would be.
As for the end, I question whether people understand that the "Martha" moment is less about Bruce realizing that Clark is more human than he thought and reacting because of that, and more about Bruce himself realizing how broken he has become, and how far gone he is, that he is about to kill someone just for potentially being a threat.
While Superman's plea to save his mother is obviously intended to show his humanity, the lion's share of Batman's reaction is about recognizing his OWN inhumanity.
I don't think it's a question of Bruce thinking Superman is absolutely no threat; this is solved later by proxy and when he sees how far Superman is willing to go for humanity. It's a question of Bruce realizing that he himself has gone too far into his sort of mad rage.
Those things are the essence of detective work. Real detective work is not flashy, nor is it all that difficult if you know the procedures (former Special Investigator here). "Detective work" is a fancy term for investigating the details of something. People just want to see the Sherlock Holmes-style deductive reasoning that is so popular with the character. And that's fine, but that sort of story is more suited to say, his Arkham villains.
Someone said it took Bruce a while to figure out that the White Portuguese wasn't a man, but a ship. But I'm pretty sure Bruce knew for a while. He also knew that the cargo it was carrying wasn't a dirty bomb for a while, which is why he went after it in the first place. He was lying to Alfred about what the "WP" was and what it was carrying in order to throw him off the scent of his investigation, which was going on under Alfred's nose, and the film makes that apparent in a sequence between the two of them. When Alfred finally calls him out on lying, Bruce flat out comes right out and says "The White Portuguese isn't a man. It's a ship." He knew for some time. He just didn't know where it was coming from and where it's cargo would be.
As for the end, I question whether people understand that the "Martha" moment is less about Bruce realizing that Clark is more human than he thought and reacting because of that, and more about Bruce himself realizing how broken he has become, and how far gone he is, that he is about to kill someone just for potentially being a threat.
While Superman's plea to save his mother is obviously intended to show his humanity, the lion's share of Batman's reaction is about recognizing his OWN inhumanity.
I don't think it's a question of Bruce thinking Superman is absolutely no threat; this is solved later by proxy and when he sees how far Superman is willing to go for humanity. It's a question of Bruce realizing that he himself has gone too far into his sort of mad rage.
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