Flint Marko
Bring me Thanos 🦉
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2006
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- 103
I 100% understand the "deeper layers" of that scene and still find it laughable.
Maybe just willfully ignorant. Lot of folk seem to have gone into that movie having already decided they were not going to like it, and then just looked for things to justify the opinion.I don't understand how those Internet "bro's" fail to get that simple scene and the meaning behind it. All they retained from that was that Bruce stopped because Superman said Martha. You have to be extremely daft to completely miss the point and then blame it on bad storyline/filmmaking because you didn't get the deeper layers of that scene.
I 100% understand the "deeper layers" of that scene and still find it laughable.
Is this, in your opinion, because of execution?
I would agree it was not the best executed moment in the film. I've commented on the overly heavy handed nature of the execution before.
However, I do not find it to be anywhere near as egregious as people who mock it try to make it out to be.
I 100% understand the "deeper layers" of that scene and still find it laughable.
The execution is the most glaring reason why it doesn't work, but what no one ever talks about is how the Martha moment does nothing to usurp Bruce's previous motivation's to kill Superman. Let me know if I'm missing something here, but Bruce has just spent the entire movie hellbent on killing Superman based on the stupid "1%" idea, has a vision of a post-apocalyptic future wherein Superman is evil, and is visited by a time-traveler who tells him that he's right... and yet all of this is abandoned because Superman says "Save Martha".
The whole Batman v. Superman angle just never started off on the right foot for me personally.
Batman isn't stupid. He can understand that Superman in the 18 months since the Battle of Metropolis that he has performed multiple acts of heroism.
If you're going to go the path that he destroyed Wayne Tower in Metropolis which shows how powerful Superman is, allow that to be what sets him off on being prepared for an eventual showdown not the whole 1% thing.
The whole Batman v. Superman angle just never started off on the right foot for me personally.
Batman isn't stupid. He can understand that Superman in the 18 months since the Battle of Metropolis that he has performed multiple acts of heroism.
If you're going to go the path that he destroyed Wayne Tower in Metropolis which shows how powerful Superman is, allow that to be what sets him off on being prepared for an eventual showdown not the whole 1% thing.
I think the line: How many stayed that way" is the key. He is worried that even tho Superman is good now...he "could" change. Many wars are started from the belief that the enemy "might" do something. The "side of right then becomes the side of wrong which is the very heart and bases of the film. Nobody stays good in this world...
At least that's how I read it.
That's exactly how I read it as well.
How does the Martha moment change that? Everything he's saying there is still true. The fact that the character does an immediate 180 after hearing the name "Martha" shows how stupid that motivation was to begin with.
The execution is the most glaring reason why it doesn't work, but what no one ever talks about is how the Martha moment does nothing to usurp Bruce's previous motivation's to kill Superman. Let me know if I'm missing something here, but Bruce has just spent the entire movie hellbent on killing Superman based on the stupid "1%" idea, has a vision of a post-apocalyptic future wherein Superman is evil, and is visited by a time-traveler who tells him that he's right... and yet all of this is abandoned because Superman says "Save Martha".
Because it brought him to a point he was unable to cross. Killing in cold blood, even if he thinks the 1% still exists. He just wasn't able to do it because deep down that's not the person he is. It took that moment for him to realize that.
You have to understand the reasoning behind why he has said the "one percent" thing.Dont just take it as face value and go "oh thats why he hates superman,because he thinks superman can go rogue".
Thats not it.Bruce's psyche after 20 years as Batman has made him jaded,cynical and borderline mad.He feels so powerless at not being able to stop crime(criminals are like weed),save his allies,and finally(The last straw) not being able to do anything at the Battle of Metropolis...which made him feels so powerless that he projected his feelings of ineptness,at Superman.He blames Superman for everything,and takes it as his mission,his last good thing he can do,his legacy,to take him down.Is he wrong and his reasoning flawed?Yes.Thats the point exactly.
He has this idea about Superman,as this cold/emotion less ALIEN....but when this alien's last dying breath was pleading to save the life of another plain mortal...when he realises that mortal is his adopted human mother,this snaps Bruce out of his frenzy...he realises how misguided he was,how much he had fallen.This common ground of feeling powerless to save their mothers(who coincidentally share the same name) even furthers Bruce's sympathy towards Clark(not an alien/superman).
Because it brought him to a point he was unable to cross. Killing in cold blood, even if he thinks the 1% still exists. He just wasn't able to do it because deep down that's not the person he is. It took that moment for him to realize that.
Except we see Batman kill numerous people in this movie.
Unless you mean actually thrusting a spear into Superman with his own hands, it's evident that Snyder has no issues saying Batman is a killer whether it's killing using the Batmobile or using a rifle on Knyazev's flame thrower. That just seems like a matter of semantics. He continues to kill even after sparing Clark's life.
In cold blood. Killing someone that was innocent.
But if there's even a 1% chance that this man is our enemy, then it must be taken as an absolute certainty.... unless this man has a mom named Martha, in which case, bring it in bro.
But Clark was always "innocent", the only difference was the mention of his mother's name. There's still the 1% regardless of that which was reinforced by the knightmares.
The execution is the most glaring reason why it doesn't work, but what no one ever talks about is how the Martha moment does nothing to usurp Bruce's previous motivation's to kill Superman. Let me know if I'm missing something here, but Bruce has just spent the entire movie hellbent on killing Superman based on the stupid "1%" idea, has a vision of a post-apocalyptic future wherein Superman is evil, and is visited by a time-traveler who tells him that he's right... and yet all of this is abandoned because Superman says "Save Martha".
To make this movie work, Batman, and a good deal of the other principal characters, have to be stupid.
Superman doesn't like Batman because he's operating "outside of the law" (as if Superman doesn't operate outside of the law), but only fights him because Lex Luthor manipulated him (by kidnapping Lois so he could tell him that he kidnapped his mom, so clunky), thereby rendering all his previous motivations (most of which, I believe we find out in the UC, are manipulated by Lex) moot.
Batman doesn't like Superman because he thinks that if he turns evil no one would be able to stop him, despite the fact that, as you mention, Superman has been regularly flying all over the planet and doing heroic things for the better part of two years. Okay, stupid logic, then we see two separate visions confirming Bruce's suspicions.... and then all of this is abandoned because Superman says Martha.
This screenplay gets an F.
That's exactly how I read it as well.
How does the Martha moment change that? Everything he's saying there is still true. The fact that the character does an immediate 180 after hearing the name "Martha" shows how stupid that motivation was to begin with.
Right, but he hadn't realized the monster he had become until he heard Martha. Once he realized the monster he had become and saw the innocent person in front of him he realized he couldn't go through with it.
I would love that poster framed on my wall![]()
So I'm supposed to ignore the 1% speech now?
By the way, saying that Bruce is "jaded" is incorrect - he's stupid. Saying that the reasoning is "flawed" is an understatement - it's flawed because it doesn't make any sense for someone to feel this way towards Superman, and it makes even less sense for him to go back on it after the Martha moment, so it's on the film makers for giving the character a stupid motivation.
And how does any of this negate the two visions he has of a post-apocalyptic future?