You jumped to a lot of conclusions there. I would rather that the Wayne foundation "adopt" Dick and yet Bruce would remain as much a stranger to Dick in the beginning as anyone else. Maybe the Wayne foundation would put Dick through school. Dick then has a hard time adjusting to "normal life"... Troubled, he's sent to Wayne Manor, where I see Alfred more as the father than Bruce. Just one way to look at it.
Yeah, well. I can see Wayne as a philantropist who could do that for EVERY child in need. With the rate of crime I doubt Dick Grayson is the only child out there who needs guidance and help. But Bruce personally choosing him and taking care of him parallel to his career...
Ok, I understand your point perfectly, but how do these examples show that a well written Robin would not work well on the screen?
A very well designed building will be all the more easier to build for real. A very well planned surgery will be all the more easier to perform.
Those examples only prove that writing Robin well does not mean that there won't be additional challenges when adapting him to the screen, and I think it's pretty clear that we have different opinions as to whether or not those challenges can be overcome.
Two things : Robin doesn't have to be a child. As in a 12 year old child. Why could he not be 17 for instance? I know I would certainly go for an older Robin, not a 10 year old one.
Ah, a very well designed building is different from a very well drawn building.
In comics, Robin is written and drawn this or that way. And thus, it could work fine. But that's miles and miles away from designing a Robin for the big screen. Same with the script. Sure you can write a story that sounds cool. Doesn't mean that Robin will look good or act good or even feel good next to Batman on screen.
Now I'm all for changes. In Robin's case I have always thought that the less Robin Robin is on screen, the better. Remove the elf shoes and becomes better, remove the yellow and it becomes better, remove that he's a 12 year old child and it becomes better. I always get to the point where I remove Robin completely and it can't be any better.
As for the father figure thing, I understand that your conception of Batman is a lonely figure that should stay lonely, and if that's your thing, well, whatever floats your boat, but let me just ask you this question : Are you a fan of the 90s animated series and if you are what did you like (or dislike) about the way they handled Robin in it?
Personally I liked it. I think Dick was and older child from the get-go, and even a 20-something guy in the later episodes. We didn't see him every night patrolling with Batman. He was also a student that very often was doing just this : studying. But he had his great moments under the suit as well.
I never completely liked the 90's BTAS, but not because of the stories but the design.
But then again, it is another example very similar to comic books. What works there doesn't work on screen so smoothly. That's why comics and cartoons can have a blue/grey spandex Batman alright, but it has to be black armoured for the screen.
Now, if you check my original post about the subject I actually liked what they did with Dick Grayson in BF, go figure. Problem is, same as in the cartoons, you need the right tone for it and that always demand some dose of camo and cheese.
I'm one of those who think that Robin is necessary to the development of Batman. Batman is on a desperate crusade to end crime, and we all know he won't. There are those who think this darkly ironic fact should be what defines Batman : a desperate man fighting a desperate war without hope of turning the tide. I'm of those who think Robin is the one fight Batman has won (in the case of Dick Grayson), and has made Batman a better man. And I think it's always necessary to have some kind of evolution (positive or negative) in a character. If Batman's this dark, brooding figure from the start and stays that way, he becomes hopeless and therefore bland, in a way.
Just my opinion of course.
Well, Nolan is proving that you can describe Batman's crimefighting career without Robin as a developmental cogwheel. A child or teenage figure next to the man would look just odd.
I mean, you'd have to come up with some really acting genius that could portray Robin as a force of nature or something like that.
I don't think becoming a fatherly figure is what Batman needs, nor is becoming "a better man."