Explain to me why Dick Grayson can't be Robin at 18?If he's an adult, he's basically Nightwing anyway, and it cuts out the whole "adopted" thing anyway.
Nothing magic happens when somebody turns 18 that totally alters somebody's physical appearance. The biggest thing is that guys are seen as adult by the law.
I wrote about this already in my previous response:
I must ask you JubJub86: How much physical difference is there between 17 and 18 in your eyes?Change 17 to 18 then. It's only a one year difference but it will make Dick Grayson a legal adult. Can you accept him as Robin then?
And WHY does Grayson HAVE to become Nightwing the day he becomes 18?
It's sad that several suitable actors might never get the chance to play Robin. The most suggested ones here (Jupe, Levi, Martell, Schnapp) are simply too old.The third movie is the earliest point in time where I can believe this Bruce Wayne as some father figure teaching somebody else. But by then, all of our fancasts are thrown out the window (maybe even my pick Noah Jupe).
It's because it will be such a long time before we get Robin on the screen again.
We have to look at some of the youngest in the film industry today to find those who will be in the running for Dick Grayson when the character is finally introduced in a film again.
At the moment, they're actual kids and way too young. We don’t think about them as a possible Robin.
The thing is, with Warner Brothers’ slow pace, these kids will be ready to play the role 5+ years from now.
We probably won’t get Robin before 2026 anyway.
So we can expect Jackson Robert Scott (IT, The Prodigy, Locke & Key) and Christopher Convery (Brahms: The Boy II) to be possible choices when the time comes. No matter how weird it seems right now.
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