Essentially you're saying it was different? Isn't this expected of any director that comes in to adapt?
No not at all, I'm saying that Nolan has retained the essence of Batman and the characters he has in the series, as a response to the criticism that he has deviated away from the source to tell his own tale. He does tell his own tale, but it still retains the essence of the character(s) in a way that hasn't been done in the past. That isn't to say the previous Bat-films didn't carry the
sine qua non of Batman.
Unless you mean the amount of essence being captured. In which case, then you are quantifying it.
There are more comic book adaptations that this can be applied to, than those that can't. The significant difference being quality of directing, writing, and acting.
Again, I am not speaking of the "amount" of essence, that's silly. It's like saying he has adapted such-and-such bat-books in his trilogy, thus making his a "better" film. That's something that most purists would want from an adaptation; my point is simply that Nolan's series does indeed have a strong fidelity to the comics, that he has retained the soul of the comics.
I understand what you mean by the quality of directing/writing being a much more important element for the film, and I agree, but my point is directed towards the suggestion that Nolan's films are not true to the source. They are.
That is a clash of terms. By having several instances of infidelity, by very definition it cannot be deemed faithful.
It isn't because depending on the audience you can interpret it either way you want to. One can easily create a case on the many elements Nolan didn't remain faithful to, while at the same time a counter case can be built to argue about the themes he maintained. Again, it isn't about the number of things, but rather the nature of things. If that makes any sense.
Not really. The fact is, the essence of Batman, Robin, and The Riddler were all quite present in Batman Forever. Their main goals, themes, nature of the characters were all in BF. But that didn't make it a good film.
I agree, but wouldn't you say that the essence of Batman was captured more profoundly with the story of his origin, his journey as Bruce Wayne, and eventual transformation into the Dark Knight?
Batman Forever has echoes with
The Dark Knight thematically, so it's a valid comparison, but I am not disputing the quality of the film(s), simply saying that Nolan's stories do not betray the essence of Batman.
All the fanboys want every director to stay as faithful to our biblical comics as possible but when it comes down to it, the film standing on its own merit as an entity is the most important value
This all stems from the comment that
Batman Begins and
The Dark Knight is not as faithful to Batman as they could be. I personally am not saying that, and I agree that the film's own merits matter more, but there can be fans who feel that way - there can be interpretations that hold our precious Nolan-series to be inferior to say, the Burton-series. It's a matter of taste. But to say that Nolan wasn't faithful is a misunderstanding. That's the entirety of my sermon.