Doctor Baywatch
Civilian
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2007
- Messages
- 640
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 11
im not sure i want toRead: "Spider-Man: The Other"![]()
I swear to you, most people on this board dont know anything about batman...IMO, of course...
Batman doesn't fit into any universe...thus is the beauty of Batman...he is in a league of his own in everyway.
If Marvel owned Batman.........I don't even want to imagine the horror
Batman fit well into the DC universe, before the "mature thinking" started and took the magic away![]()
so batman should be for "mature thinking" people? or did i misunderstand?
No, he should be an all-ages character and not be viewed with realistic, "mature" eyes.
i agree with you...but at the same time i dont. i grew up with batmanTAS which was largley catered to kids....and i think all kids deserve that. but now ive grown up and want to see a darker more gritty realistic batman. should i, a loyal bat-fan, be denied that simply because im not a child anymore? no.
finding mediums between the two will only make EVERYONE mad. so their either has to be a way to sell two different kids of batman, or someone has to go without what they want....
the things is: Years ago comic audience was a different thing. Young people started reading and a few years later they quit. They moved on. Every 5 years or so the "reader generation" changed. So no one complained about repeating stories, static situations like "The Joker escaped again!!!!", because to them it was new. But today comics are read by a small and remaining crowd who can even influence the makers of the comics books through internet. And so superhero comics became darker and darker, so the readers could feel more "mature" and not be embarrassed by the childish "funny books" they loved and could say to "civilians": "It's not kid stuff it's violent and not for kids!". Simple characters became edge-y, things that worked for decades were changed because grown-ups considered these things "stupid". New readers find it very hard to get into "comics" these days. Because we have a heavy-connected universe with complex character relationships which leads to new questions like "Why didn't Batman simply call Bane to stop him?".
I think it is a bad thing. Comics have lost the magic, I enjoy the old stuff quite more, without uber-psychological approaches ("Oh, teh Batman is teh psycho because he dresses up like a bat"). Heroes were just heroes and didn't have to have dark stains.
But hey, perhaps this is not my world anymore![]()
I can still read my old "treasures".![]()
Batman and his related characters really do not fit in the DCU. He sticks out in the JL like a sore thumb. He would fit in so much better at Marvel because so many of their characters are much more human and not as cheesy/invincible.
If they bought the rights to batman, I'd would be an exclusive marvel reader.
Unfortunately Batman is my favorite superhero by far so I have to continue buying all the DCU books that have important batman events included in them.
Yeah, Marvel needs to buy the rights to Batman.
I dunno about you, but I'm looking forward to seeing Bruce Wayne reveal himself to be Batman to the public, and seeing Oracle get brainwashed into killing Nightwing, and even seeing Catwoman turn out to be a Skrull.
Sorry, but Marvel's no better. IMO the fact that Batman doesn't "fit in" with the rest of the DCU means that he ABSOLUTELY should remain a part of it. That's part of the beauty of the character.