It is a conclusion I arrived at based on the observation of comments and opinions during my nearly daily participation in various forums related to the aesthetic of the TDK suit over the period from the very hour the first pic of the TDK was revealed through mid-2010 during which it was self-evident to anyone who was following along at the time that the general opinion regarding the look of the TDK suit tended to lean towards the unfavorable. Now keep in mind lean towards is a rough estimate of any actual numerical value but whether that stat was 60-40 or even 51-49 is inconsequential regardless of which side youre on; either number constitutes a many.
Fair enough, your perception is that the majority of fans dislike the suit. My perception is that a very vocal minority hate the suit, and a relatively silent majority either like it or have no strong opinion.
So what; its not like that makes the opinion any less valid.
Sorry, but I really think it does. Nothing against comic fans - I am one, after all - but they are notorious for valuing fidelity to the source material
way too much. Heck, in this very thread we have had people saying that Batman should be dressed in gray tights and black briefs.
On film.
In any case, Ive spoken with a lot of people who have no interest in comics and even less in comic book inspired films who nonetheless enjoyed BB and TDK and who said to me Whyd they change the suit, I liked the first one better. So there you go.
Hey, I liked the look of the Begins suit more than the look of the TDK suit too. But I think the difference in quality in the fight scenes between Begins and TDK speaks for itself. Even in-universe, the TDK suit was supposed to be a pragmatic solution to the more "artful" Begins suit's problems.
Fail? The only complaints Ive heard about the BB suit come from comic book fans, primarily those upset with yet another rubber suit. It is truein retrospectthat even the Nolanites (and in fact Hemmings herself) have come to the conclusion that the BB head wasnt quite as mobile as it was originally purported to be, but the BB suit was far from being restrictive and Bale could move his head and what limitations did exist were only noticeable on a few occasions. In short, both the general audience AND the majority of comic book fans were of the opinion the BB suit did in fact allow the actor/stuntperson wearing it a "decent range of motion". They might not give it an A+ but its not an F
Again, I liked the Begins suit a lot, but it was obviously extremely restrictive. Seriously, watch the ending with Bale awkwardly turning his entire body to tell Gordon "You'll never have to." Or watch the fight scenes, and compare them to similar scenes in TDK. Or heck, compare the in-costume fight scenes in Begins to the out-of-costume fight scenes in Begins. Why was Nolan able to shoot fluid, coherent fight scenes like the fight with Ducard on the ice or the fight with Ken Watanabe in the burning temple, but later was only able to shoot choppy, over-edited messes like Batman's fight with the ninjas in the Narrows or the finale on the train?
As for the Burton suits... Ill concede point 2, but only because of the construction material and processes available at the time and not the design.
Yes, that's right. Part of the reason the Burton suits are lacking is because of the technical limitations of the time. I'm not criticizing the folks who made the suits- they did the best they could with what they had. But they don't really hold up to a modern eye.
But youre wrong on point 3regardless of the fact that Burton did little to explain the technology of the suit within the narrative of the film the B89 suit nonetheless ESTABLISHED the believable technology look for Batman and if theres anyone who thinks the B89 and BR suits do not resemble body armor well I suspect theyre are so few of that opinion that the objection can be characterized as non-existent.
Meh. I would argue this, but within the stylized world of Burton's films, I could buy the B89 suit as body armour.
As for Dead End... I doubt anyone who could be characterized as being the mainstream audience has actually seen it and going any farther than that at present is going to take us way off the mark so Im just going to leave my comment at that.
It's a grown man trying to look tough and scary while wearing skin tight gray spandex and black briefs. I'm comfortable assuming that no one who isn't a die-hard comic fan would be able to watch that without laughing.