I never said that they didn't care. I said that they themselves don't know any better about the characters they are expressing concerns over. Do you have a problem with proper reading comprehension, because this is the third time you read something I didn't say.
For some that is the case (not understanding the characters they are concerned about), but obviously not all. I suppose there was a slight muddle in comprehension of your post. It doesn't have to completely be my fault, you know.

All right. Moving on.
If you dismiss my argument on the basis of the length of The Killing Joke, then there's no use discussing this with you any further. Granted, it was not an exceptionally extensive story, but there was a lot of Joker in it and just flipping through the pages you can see there were a lot of times you expect him to break into laughter like we have stereotypically known the Joker to do so over the years but he didn't.
It came across like you thought it was a considerable length. 'The entire story...' isn't very long. Therefore if the Joker laughs like a maniac two times throughout that short length, it makes TKJ somewhat contradict your point. And your point was: use the laugh sparingly.
If I flip through the pages and suspect that Joker will laugh at a certain event (instead of grinning or whatnot), that is
totally subjective.
I'm not so sure that Alan Moore sat down and thought: "If we're too over-the-top, then the Joker will be cheesey... and readers won't take him seriously." What I believe Moore did was take adults into mind when creating his Joker interpretation. I seriously doubt he micro-managed when the Joker would laugh, and when the Joker wouldn't laugh. It simply turned out the way it did because of the demographic in mind.
Moving on.
I liked the B89 Joker, even though there was far more Jack Nicholson than Joker there. Nevertheless, I took it as a great Elseworlds interpretation and have no problem with it. As for being unreceptive of fans who prefer Burton over Nolan, it has a lot to do with their condescending mentality with which they brush away fans of Nolan's take as being somehow less 'cultured' and 'sophisticated' when it comes to appreciating cinema.
Glad that you enjoyed Nicholson's Joker. Also, yeah, there's no doubt he poured a lot of himself into the character. Nicholson turned on his crazy side and went to work.
Most of that superiority mentality from Burton-leaners, has to come from the fact that the
majority of Batfans love
Batman Begins. Tim Burton as a director has stood for individualism. He's apart from the crowd, and tried to make himself distinguishable in all possible fashions. Burtonites therefore tend to stray from being part of the majority when it's possible. I think some of that individualism rubs off on the people who watch the Burton films and take them to heart. They also feel (I included, perhaps regretably) that Burton is more of a director than Nolan could ever be, mainly because of the creative
chances taken when making
Batman'89 and
Batman Returns (
'89 made Joker the murderer of Bruce's parents.
Returns made Penguin into a deformed sewer freak). And then there is Burton's vision itself. Dark, gritty, fantastical, mystical, and sometimes twisted to the core. Some people are naturally in love with that artistic melancholy. I'm one of them.
These days I don't have the time nor the energy to sit down and have a concise discourse with them, otherwise it's not hard expose the fallacies in their slanted criticism of Nolan's film and its fans. Granted, neither Burton's nor Nolan's films are perfect by a long stretch and both have their share of thickheaded radicals, but the fact remains that most of these so-called 'Nolanites' are newbies who can barely compose a grammatically correct post that can be easily dismissed but a lot of the Burtonites are actually well-articulated posters, but with their heads too far up their own asses to realize that yes, 'smart' fans can also love Begins.
That's accurate. In all fairness, I do see a lot of sick ass-kissing from Nolan fans. Sometimes it's from the intellectual ones, too (which makes it so much more pathetic). Moving on.
My approach towards TDK can be summed up in two words - curious optimism. Ever since Nolan brought Jonathan on board for writing duties, I was ecstatic, especially with promise of going even darker. I can't imagine how Ledger would play the Joker despite what he has revealed in interviews, but he has the smile. And his recent maturity as an actor also gives me hope that he most probably won't play it half-assed or give some cheap knock-off performance. Not to mention the fact that I simply loved The Prestige and can't wait to see how much Nolan improves TDK over BB. Of course, if something looks and sounds too good to be true, then chances are it probably is that way. My reservations are simply a kind of reality-check to keep myself from being disappointed when a stinker eventually does rear it's ugly head and these boards drown in chaos. I know this is an adaptation and there are bound to be changes, compromises will be made and ultimately many 'purists' and 'over-hypers' will be disappointed regardless of how good the film turns out to be. I know that at the end of the day, there is no way myself (or anyone else for that matter) is going to be 100% satisfied with any film over which they already had truckload of preconceived notions, if only for the simple reason that it wasn't how they imagined it to be and will go so far as hating the film for it.
Very logical of you. Most won't take that extra step to be semi-detached from the production hype.
And as you know, there's a difference between optimism and being just plain delusional. If this hype continues to strengthen, then fans are just going to start expecting a great movie that's impossible to create. They're already expecting so much out of TDK. How is Nolan going to stop from disappointing them? He cannot, because he is only human, as are all the production team. TDK could very well be a decent movie. I'll be the first to admit if it is. But fans need to stop elevating the status of its greatness (alas, before it even comes out), or else there can only be let-downs. Though: some fans won't acknowledge if it turns out to be a poor movie, and most likely won't acknowledge their own disappointment, if it comes to that.
My advice? Keep an open mind...and enjoy the ride.
I will put forth the effort to do so.
And I think the Scarecrow was pretty much perfect in BB, would have loved to see more of him though. Concerning the cosmetics, his final outfit - mask+straitjacket was, in my opinion, actually a much better look for the villain than how we've seen him in the comics.
Personally, I liked the Scarecrow that... moreso resembled a scarecrow. That's one reason for his name. Going just by
Batman Begins, we could call him Sackhead. This is just me talking, man.
I said the Burtonites in the Batman Begins forum. If you are actually in agreement with the exaggerated critiques of Cyrusbales and DocLathropBrown about Begins being a 'travesty' and 'one big screwup', then you deserve to be slapped with the same label.
I love DocLathropBrown and his gang. That's not to say we're in agreement on everything. It's worth noting that he believes Begins to be a decent enough movie. By this time, at least.