cin0 said:
I dont see it working at all that way. If dick is going to appear in the movie at fourteen and not become robin until he's 21 there's no point in even adding the character in.
Dick was like 8 years old when bruce found him in the comicbooks. I say he meets Bruce when he's like 11 or twelve. He should end up helping Bruce in some way before he becomes robin, to show him he actually has potential. Bruce puts him through training and in the next movie, tim is like 14 or 15 as robin.
First: Dick or Tim?
Second: To me, this is fundamentally wrong, because the stubborn, "inmovable object" Bruce is, would not... would NOT... put an underage kid in danger to fight alongside him. It's a danger to the kid, it's a danger to himself, it's a danger to the criminals he's trying to aprehend without killing. Not to mention the assault on credibility that is a 14-year-old fighting crime. In Nolan's world Bruce trained for something close to 7 years. How could an underage kid need any less?
So, it's an assault on the series credibility, and a disgrace on a so far consistent portrayal of Bruce's character. And for what? To see a teenage Robin and please a section of the fan base? I'm no fan of the character, I'm no fan of the stories that present it, I believe it has a terribly bad effect on Batman (in the vein of Harley's effects on the Joker), and all that in Nolan's version more than any other. Like I said, I believe Robin is a free electron in the mythos, easy to dispose of to potentiate other characters that could do his job even better than him.
And despite all of that, I'm willing to concedde that he is quite important and dear to many fans and that he could be in the current series in the right moment with the proper adaptation... I repeat, with the proper adaptation. Is an 18-21 year old Robin too much for you? Well, a dilluted Batman with a side-kick is too much for me. Both sides should meet halfway to get some compromise.
cin0 said:
If Dick doesnt even become robin until he's 21 he might as well take over for bruce as batman. Robin shouldnt even be an adult character anyway that was one of my main problems with batman forever and batman and robin. It should be done the right way: fist Dick, then Jason, and then later Tim.
I'll just say this... Just because that's the way it is in the comics doesn't mean it is the
right way. Certainly not.
Jahu-Momus said:
Does anyone else think its weird to be saying that Selina should be a love interest and human contact for Bruce after Rachel's death? Cause I think it would in a way belittle Rachel's death to introduce a whole new love interest in the very next movie. I'm not saying you can't have her, but make her more persistent for Bruce but don't have him have feelings back just yet.
This is not the place to argue this, but well... I'm not sure Bruce was in love with Rachel at all. Compare the way Dent and Bruce related to her. Bruce seemed much more in love with the idea of being in a relationship, but they had severe irreconcilable differences and he was in denial. More to the point, he was totally cold about her. And he may grieve her now because they were close and he loved her, in a way, but Catwoman, being almost Rachel's COMPLETE opposite, can tap into Bruce's emotions much more effectively than Rachel. She wouldn't take her place, and it would be a very... VERY bumpy ride.
But Catwoman wouldn't be in the film BECAUSE Rachel's dead and wee need "the next love interest". No. She should be in, first and foremost, because she's a character that shakes Bruce. As an opponent, as someone with a different ideology, as someone who eludes him and sometimes helps him but hinders his efforts in others, as an important part of the mythos, and yes, as a love interest. Remember what Nolan did the Joker? How he used him to the max, playing most of the Joker's qualities in the film? That's what I want done with Catwoman, and since she's a very rich character, it shouldn't be difficult to do.