All the changes and questions attributed to Bruce Wayne, it all leads back to the same single-minded pursuit of justice the character is attributed with.
Agreed, but that common end has different paths and Bruce changes some of his opinions as we gain more experiences. Ra's and Two-Face, for example, also go back to their quests for justice, but Batman is more willing to adapt than they. He is still quite stubborn and determined, I give you taht, but there a level of change and growth inherent to that quest that the Joker lacks. I never meant Batman was a mutable character, but it is more evolving than the Joker.
For all your claims about Batman ending in new paths than he originally chose, the only ones you mention are those early in his career (Dark KNight, Long Halloween) and at the end of his career THe Dark Knight REturens.
Don't look at me, you were the one who said that Bruce had no changes after he became Batman, which is simply not true. In between those stories, for example, we have all the years with the complete bat-family and his different and evolving reactions for it.
all these questions and doubts Wayne occasionally has ALWAYS simply reinforce his singular will and purpose.
They do not reinforce it. They cannot bring down his will to keep going, but they do not reinforce it. That's why he almost killed the Joker in Hush, for instance. The doubts are just that, elements that weaken him. And they must be treated as so. That's why Nolan understood that Batman decides to go from being a symbol of hope for the people to JUST being a symbol of fear for the criminals. Batman is constantly perfecting himself and that is expressed through change and nothing else.
Yes, the villians are catalysts to theese questions and doubts, and serve the point of challenging the hero, welome to drama 101, that doesnt change the fact that Batman consistently acts as Batman does. But you already knew that. You're simply questioning me to affirm it. Yes, it's affirmed.
Batman doesn't act
consistently. He almost resigned to his position in TDK. He treated the Robins in different manners. He trusted Catwoman through al HUsh until is paranoia makes her go away. There are changes. You may think they are minor changes, but are superior to those experienced by the Joker, which are almost nil.
As for the Joker never being a misguided hero, that's your opinion, and in the eye of the beholder.
No, I guess it all depends on your concept of hero. But it all comes down to his motivations. In TDK, they were revealed to be similar to the motivations in The Killing Joke, which were only to turn those around him like him and prove taht he wasn't very different from the rest. Those weren't altruistic motives at all, but completely egotistical. Where lies the hero there?
To say he doesnt consistently reivent himself is being ignorant, it's verging on ******ed.
Wait, isn't he always a flamboyant, murderous, psychopatic clown obsessed about Batman, trying to create havoc there where he goes? It seems it is easier for you to call me ******ed than just explaining how does the Joker
consistently reinvent himself.
Sure, there are limits to what the comic book writers can do with the charater as in the comics Batman is almost always the avatar of good will in the city, and the Joker his main adversary. But if you dont agree with Batman's mission, and see him as a fascist lunatic, then the Joker, with his free chaos, by virtue, is the hero.
Go to The Dark Knight boards and look for a thread started by Dankalel called "Batman Is The Grand Inquisitor". My first post in the first page explain why I believe the Joker has a lot to do with "chaos" nothing to do with "free". It also talks about the motives and the rationale behind Batman's actions. It all comes down to the intentions and the results. Of course, your concept of heroism can be completely different from mine, but mine is close the the actual concept of the word.
Someone sure has lost their marbles, and i suggest you schedule new appointments with those medical doctors you know-they didnt do their job the first time around. Money not well spent, i'd say you should sue.
Personal attacks and no arguments along.... it seems that I'm winning.
As for Brad Pitt, we can agree to disagree.
Okay. I really don't agree with you but I'm not interested in the Pitt topic. however, I have to point this out...
However, if you can discern acting the way i can...
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA..... lol, I'm literally laughing out loud. This certainly has made my day.
And how do you know acid doesnt do that? Are you familiar with all kinds of acidic chemicals, and know how each one acts on physical properties, such as makeup and flesh.
Yes, I know about acids. I know enough to tell you that acid doesn't bleach skin. Have you ever heard about acid burns?
How do you know it wouldnt affect the Joker futher. Would it please him, and thuse cause him to be more psychotically fearsome and malevolent.
More psychotically fearsome and malevolent? Listen to yourself. You think he was holding back all this time?
What is he going to do now, skin someone alive and/or rape a girl? (<-- pun intended)
He seemed to pride himself on the scars in the dark knight, if his 'war paint' became his permanent face, how much more terrible might he become?
Not more terrible. He would just have new stories. "You know how I got thise beautiful skin tone? I was worked in a lab..." pffff. Nolan dismissed the perhmawhite once and he will dismiss it again.
Joker attacked the mob and the police in the first film b/c he did not affliliate with either side, to show that both those who follow rules and dont could both be affected by chaos and anarchy. To kill the police who hunt Batman means quite a different agenda in the next film-it means he's preserving his greater opposite, where in the first film he was challenging Batman.
First of all, I'm opposed to this idea for three reasons: 1. because he already did that with Reese. 2. because, in a realist setting, there's only so much he can accomplish locked away in Arkahm 3. because having him save Batman's back more than once, defeating all odds, would turn him into some kind of
deus ex machina, taking away the audience fear of the threats on Batman's life. The same cartoonish deux ex machina that dini used in
Mad Love. If the Joker can always leave Arkham, move through Gotham and kill the bad guys who are about to kill/expose Batman, what's the worry? He'll save him again next time. That's not a wise writing choice.
Howevery, i digress. This isnt about your opinion on the Joker being in the next film, it's about your attitude about taking things to the next level. You're a been there, done that type of guy-you lack vision, just as pitt lacks wit and depth. I could go on, but we both know this is getting trite, and it's because you simply wont or are incapable of seeing the big picture and and cant express yourself with any tangible reasoning.
You're wrong here, and I don't think I can add anything else without producing more miss-the-mark responses from you. Do as you will, but know that you go away holding on to a wrong opinion.
You're full of hyperbole, and that is your downfall.
hahahaha, and this comes from the guy who wrote the instant classics about Brad Pitt's acting skills. Re-read them

you redefined "hyperbole" there.
Curious, though: what are the 3 villlians you'd most like to see in lieu of joker, and what would your casting choices be?
I guess you haven't really looked at my signature. It's not so explicit, actually. My three main choices for villains are Riddler, Catwoman and the Penguin. I would also love to have Mr. Freeze, but I can't figure out a way to go around the sci-fi aspect. My casting choices are:
Riddler: Andy Serkis... chamaleonic, quirky actor with the right physique, has work experience with Nolan. I'm not adamant about this one because there are simply too many talented actors suitable for the Riddler out there that to imagine a perfect cast would be exhausting. But I do love my Andy Serkis pick.
Catwoman: Marion Cotillard. (Runner up: all the runner-ups are too far behind)
Penguin: Michael Emerson, hands down. He would be a great Riddler, but si more than capable of pulling a perfect Cobblepot and it would be a little more unpredictable and interesting, with all the right mannerisms and such. (Runner up: Phillip Seymour Hoffman; the most perfect Cobblepot I can think of, but he has already played several characters similar to the Penguin - "
MI3", "Capote", "Before The Devil Knows You're Dead" - and his performance would be expected and slightly predictable, that's why I prefer to run off with Emerson, who is also a fantastic actor.
Honorable mention:
Mr. Freeze: Ben Kingsley (No runner ups. Just watch "
House of Sand and Fog". This is Victor Fries.)