Mr. Earle
Avenger
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2008
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Being Batman is a superpower in itself. Batman is the most hax superhero of them all.Thats the point though adding robin does make it more absurd. Batman is not just like every other superhero the fact he doesn't have superpowers speaks volumes alone of that.
Of course batman is not realistic but he has that human element that grounds him to earth more than a superman or green lantern and i think that's what attracts so many people. I'll say in the comics robin can work better because things in general are very hightened where a young boy can be made to look like he can kick huge thug ass.
However in a non stylized (i.e. frank miller/zack snyder) film as we have with Nolan, the visual absurdity of introducing robin would far overshadow any other unrealistic thing you would notice in the film. It would be a huge distraction.
I get the feeling that half of the people in here would discard half of the mythos as "cheesy", "inappropriate" or "over the top". If people are looking for a strictly gritty and realistic superhero, they should look somewhere else. Batman is a lot more than that and he doesnt need justifications like "he's a dude in a batsuit, what's wrong with Robin". Robin is an integral part of the mythos, take it or leave it.Exactly.
Batman's implausibility has nothing to do. It is what you put next to an implausibility that you want to look plausible what can ruin anything.
I could go and defend bat-myte because of Batman being already absurd (or whatever the word you want to use).
Robin is absurd (next to Batman) and Batman is implausible (by itself). Fiction doesn't automatically equal absurd.
I wouldn't mind to see a teenager human superhero called Robin. But a colorful sidekick kid next to what Batman is not convincing at all. No, not even if Batman looks implausible.



