Man, people who keep saying the same thing over and over again every single day for months about a movie they hate ... could you please give me your spare time so at least I can do something productive with it?
On a different forum, I'd probably just ignore it as trolling or trying to get people riled up, but on here, I feel like everybody brings something valid to the table, because we all, or it seems most of us, have some kind of different experience or perspective, having grown up loving these characters. It's not like Game Of Thrones or Harry Potter, where there is basically one source material that we can all point to. There's 75+ years of stories, books, cartoons, films, TV Shows, and more, for not one, but TWO of the biggest characters in American (or World) literature, there's going to be a LOT of different expectations and examples to point to for why this film did or didn't work, I really enjoy reading the negative and positive opinions.
The T-Shirt photo is pretty lame, in my opinion. It's an easy and obvious joke, taken from the most famous scene in a Will Ferrell movie, that completely ignores every line of dialouge and scene leading up to that moment.
I feel like I always have to lead with the Disclaimer that I did like the film. Sometimes it seems people get so far to one side or the other that you can't accept anything good about the film, or you can't criticize a single thing, kinda like a political argument on Facebook.
But, I do think there is some validity to what one poster said (forgot who) a few pages back, that they basically said "Ooh, what if he fights Batman!" DING! And then they worked their way backwards from that, to contrive a scenario in which these two fight and reconcile (and they got a little heavy handed with Luthor's hyping the fight up "Day vs Night!" Which was obviously included just to use in the marketing (too bad the trailer announcer guy from 90's movies has gone out of style)).
Some of their ideas worked great, like showing how traumatic the Black Zero event was from Bruce Wayne's perspective, or starting out with a Batman that has 20 years worth of history to draw from. But they also had to rely a bit much on telling and not showing, unseen forces and events driving the character's motivations, acting irrationally, and the characters not having a chance to have a single conversation. Like, I buy that this is a Superman struggling and just starting out, but I don't really buy his initial, singular attempt to confront Batman by just bullying and intimidating him and flying off. How is that gonna work, dude? It's like that woman told him "A man like that only understands fists." And he was like "Okay, I agree!"
Having said that, I think that's one thing people gloss over when talking about Batman's motivations. Imagine you've been busting your ass for 20 years with an obsessive goal that's caused you to lose people you love, somebody comes around who makes all of your effort feel irrelevant, you already have an extreme complex about feeling powerless and loss of control, somebody younger with little experience, and he basically shows up and says "Look, it's cute that you wanna stay up past your bedtime, but it's time to put on your Jammies and go to to bed, before I put you to bed." Haha I mean, you're gonna be looking for whatever justification you can to wipe that disapproving scowl off his face and knock that d***splash off his high horse (hey, the horse motif!).
And maybe people don't wanna see their characters acting out of a sense of machismo, as Lois Lane would put it, "measuring d***s", but in a lot of ways, that's what the character of Batman boils down to, a complex of feeling powerless leads him to want to assert dominance and control. I think it's cool that they went there with the character, instead of just glossing over it and painting him as Mr. Perfect. As Debra Snyder says, people don't like to see their heroes deconstructed. Maybe that truly is the case, or maybe they just didn't do it quite right, idk, that seems to be what every argument boils down to.