Sir, I must respectfully disagree.
Yeah, maybe this time Scarecrow can be defeated by a squirrel. Some worthy villiain.
To begin with, as I have argued with
The Guard many times, I have never thought of Scarecrow as a particularly physical villain. His fear gas helps him level the playing field, because he's not a fighter, not a tough guy. With his fear gas he can incapacitate people and do whatever he wants to with him.
Traditionally if you can overcome the feargas, Scarecrow goes down easily enough. And, well, Rachel had been innoculated against the toxin, which means that she wasn't incapacitated. She had her tazer. And Scarecrow, believing himself to have the edge, was monologuing. So she zapped him.
Is it a chumpish way to go out? Absolutely. But that's what I expect of Scarecrow.
Also, it's not Murphy's decision that he went out that way. Blame Nolan and Goyer for that one, if blame you must place.
But like Speech says, "the man who points his finger at anyone else, has got four other fingers pointing back to his self."
I can't think of Crane as a affeminate pretty face, whose scary side resides just in wide open eyes and sissy gestures, and who can be defeated by a girl in a scene that I still can't tell whether it was intended as comedy or... whatever it was.[/quote]
So you're accustomed to Crane being ugly and moody, I understand that. But being an effeminate little man has to be quite emasculating, which can jus as easily lead to an interest in fear. No doubt a guy like that has been bullied most of his life by larger, hairier men...