But Robin has been an important and crucial part of the Batman mythology in every medium and every generation.
???
Batman No. 1 - No. 37..... no Robin.
Batman Year One.... no Robin.
Batman: The Long Halloween.... no Robin.
The Killing Joker... no Robin.
Batman '89... no Robin.
Batman Returns... no Robin.
Mask Of The Phantasm.... no Robin.
Most part of the original BTAS... no Robin.
Batman Begins... no Robin (except taht poor little kid who the robin-fans wanted to desperately to be the wonder boy)
The Dark Knight.... guess what? No Robin.
Even works so dissimilar as "The Dark Knight Returns" and "Hush" only worked with Robin because they had to acknowledge continuity, needed to plot to keep going or wanted the current artist to portray them... because they don't even have important spots on the plot, only appearing a few pages, or in the last issues of the story.
And I don't need to remind you the titles of the only three (3) films that had Robin in them.... because that would be low.
Every medium? Every generation? Not really. Luckily, Nolan is working on that right now.
Its not as if Robin was some creation of the 50's and never seen again (like the other members of the Bat-family), Robin is a cornerstone to Batman's story and removing it would be on the same level as taking away Alfred, Gordon, The Joker, of Catwoman.
Hahahaha, this is a great one... members of the Bat-family never seen again? Who? Which members are you talking about? All of them are there... and do I need to remind you all the times Robin (or a form of Robin, like in Batman Beyond) has been RECYCLED? All the several Robin incarnations?
They remove him all the time my friend, and you don't even notice it.
Robin is simply not a poor element. Read Dark Victory, watching Batman The Animated Series, check out the countless great Batman/Robin stories - it works.
If you take for granted Bruce's odd stance regarding his side-kicks and how their relationship is taken for granted... sure, it does work. However, they are far from being the cornerstones of the comics history. Like I said before, Robin does to Batman what sometimes Harley does to the Joker... they're excellent character themselves, but they weaken their respective partners because the association is way too forced upon the reader.
Which is why Dick has to be JUST as stubborn. Dick Grayson should be JUST as driven as Bruce was, JUST as determined.
Dick can be as stubborn as he wants, that doesn't mean he's going to 'soften' old Bruce. No matter the mertis of Dick as a character, that doesn't assure their relationship... in fact, I think you're just taking it for graned, just like it has been done in the comics for so many years.
Bruce would be forced to train Dick not to create a new weapon to unleash on the underworld but to prepare him for it.
Forced??? Thank your for making it so easy for me...
If written properly, Dick's path would not be in doubt - he would be fighting crime with Batman no matter if he is Robin or Batman's partner or not.
With this being the case, if Bruce actually wants to protect the kid he would have to train. Have to push him to his physical peak, make him ready for the crusade he is going through now.
How is Batman endangering a child's life if the child is going to do it anyway? If anything ignoring it and absolving himself of all responsibility (by not training Dick) would be far more dangerous.
Or.... Batman ties the kid up and delivers him to the police, so they can put him in some juvenile reformatory. Problem solved. He has to lock bigger threats in jail and the asylum all the time.
Here's a free lesson for you: There is no 'written properly' when the premise is flawed. It's like opening a locked vault with a crowbar... you can try and try, and it won't budge.
Now your being purposefully dense. The money is important to Bruce's creation (just helpful), where he trained doesn't matter (it just makes for a good story) - what does was a boy saw his parents killed in front of him and he's hurt and mad and dedicated to right that in any way he can, so he trains and he prepares and he unleashes himself on the criminals of Gotham.
Thats what Bruce did. Thats what Dick does. They are kindred spirits.
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Hhohoho, wow.... you have just redefined the term "Selective Argumentation"... bringing it to a level that not even the most heartless lawyers can.
The money, the training... everything it's as important to Bruce as everything else. It's what really sets him apart from Brian Douglass and his fake batmen gang. How many kids do you think have their parents killed every generation in front of their eyes? And how many turn into efficient vigilantes? How many?
Besides, his time in the League of Shadows was as integral to Bruce as anything else, because it formed his psychology into a man that was ready to become Batman. Without his training... not only physical, but also pyschological... Batman wouldn't have ever been.
Next time you don't know what to come up with, just ignore me and debate with someone else... because your selectiveness was so poor and obvious that it made my eyes hurt in the face of your poor understanding of the character.
Spare me the embarassment next time.
Alfred has already proven to be unable to stop Bruce or to make Bruce reconsider - Bruce was going to turn himself in no matter what Alfred said, he disregarded Alfred's fears in Batman Begins. Dick Grayson is needed in Bruce's life. Now if its this film or not, thats up for debate.
Up for debate? You may mean "up for someone to explain it to me, since I cannot see how obvious it is". But since not even Nolan could, I guess I can't do it myself.
Let me try, however... if Alfred doesn't have full powers of persuasion over Bruce, what makes you think a strange boy can?
....
...
I'll wait patiently for this answer too.
Again, this is based off the faulty and stupid idea that Bruce Wayne would force Dick into service.
Just granting him the training and the permission to work with him is enough to put Robin in harm's way. And not only Robin's life, but also the criminals that Robin would have to fight, because he's not skillful enough to save all of them, or tough enough to bear the guilt of their deaths on his soul.
Keep in mind the juvenile reformatory. Keep it in mind. It's the best way.