Nave 'Torment'
Vigilante Detective
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It is indeed fun to guess and speculate away.
I wouldn't actually mind some of those themes that were raised in Batman Forever being referenced here, purely because I think that they were only ever acknowledged in that film in the flimsiest of terms. It does sound as though they're going to be brought up given that Nolan and Bale have both discussed the nature of how long you let pain define you when describing Bruce's journey in TDKR.
Another point to raise with this is that if it has been other freaks and large scale threats that Bruce has been dealing with in the 8 year gap (with the possibility of a couple of Joker jail breaks thrown in too) his mission still has purpose in as much that he is averting major threats and catastrophe breaking loose throughout Gotham. If all he's been doing is dealing with petty criminals (self-indulgence is a perfect way to describe this) then his purpose is merely to avoid dealing with his own loss in any honest way. Nolan has described Bruce as hitting a brick wall in TDKR; emotionally and psychologically this brick wall may be better represented if his mission and the standards he set himself in BB have been lost. On a metaphorical level it puts Bruce back in that prison at the start of BB, locked inside, fighting them one at a time for no real reason except anger.
Arkham Asylum? Or perhaps Gotham at large? A city can easily become a prison. So yeah, it really does work that way on a metaphorical level. I guess if Bruce begins to realise that he would know that it's time to call it quits.
I'd love to see it that way though. And I think with the "brick-wall" and "frozen-in-time" analogy what they mean is a repetition of freaks vs. batman over and over again. Like TDK playing on an endless loop, with climatic encounter following climatic encounter like we see in the comics, until TDKR when that vicious cycle has to come to an end.

... Seriously?