The 8 year gap was brilliant but the retirement vs no retirement angle could have went either way. Both made sense and both honored the ending to TDK which is why that ending was such a great cliffhanger. The third was left to the imagination, the only thing that had to be there was Batman on the run as a fugitive and depressed from the deaths of Dent and Rachel. But retirement versus no retirement? Was all up to Nolan.
I disagree. I don't think the retirement honored the ending of TDK or Batman's character arc in that film. I also don't think it made a lot of sense based on certain events in BB and TDK. However, this is a discussion we've had multiple times by now. You already know what I'm going to say and I know what you're going to say so I won't repeat myself.
I think the problem with making Bruce stay as Batman (and no Dent Act either) for 8 years or even half of that time.....is that WB would FOREVER be making prequels to Rises. And I do mean FOREVER. Nolan would have no control because he would have dug his own grave if he was against it.
WB would have never rebooted for the longest time and just made a trilogy or more movies that show Batman in his prime like the comics taking out villain after villain.
I totally see the appeal Shika. But I see Nolan's point of wanting a tight trilogy with an ending.
You can bet ur ass WB would have re-cast Bale and the others, done prequels and fit Justice League and everything.
Don't you hate that you have to think so politically though?
I do agree with you. Had it not been for the retirement gap, they would have done just that. However, I wouldn't have had a problem with sequels to TDKR had the gap not been there and the ending would've been different. But assuming that Nolan would have done the 8 year gap without retiring Batman, yes that would have been the case.
It is a really shame that we have to think of things so politically. It would have been nice for Nolan if he could have just walked away without having to worry about that. But then again, he shouldn't have been building a universe in the first place if he didn't want WB to continue his franchise. That's the interesting thing about BB and TDK. If you look at the way BB and TDK are set up, they are set up from the standpoint of building a massive universe. You have a lot of villains being kept alive, tons of references to other Batman characters (there is a Riddler reference in TDK), the timeline from BB to TDK moves slow, there is the whole theme of "freaks" being set up so that any character could come in, there are side villains like Scarecrow and Zsasz on the side, and the list goes on. On top of the interviews with Nolan and the production crew pre-TDKR, this is also partly why I don't buy Nolan having planned this to be a trilogy from the beginning and if he did, then he did a pretty bad job of building it into trilogy. The first 2 films had the foundation of an expanded universe.
I think an active yet still hunted Batman was what most people expected when they heard about the gap. I almost feel like Nolan and Goyer set up the 8-year "retirement" simply as a way of giving us something we didn't expect. Which I think the movie suffered for
I find the 8-year retirement gap and the ending to be just plot contrivances so that Nolan would have an excuse to not come back. BB and TDK were originally considered the first two films in the current Batman
franchise, not in a trilogy. BB was not considered the first part in a trilogy much like MOS is not considered the first part in a trilogy at the moment. That was one of the things that annoyed me about TDKR - how it tries to act as if, in context, this was
always meant to be a trilogy from the start when it is in fact not a natural trilogy. In a franchise that established and hinted that this Batman would be Batman for a
long time, Nolan had to contrive a story that would have closed all doors even if it didn't make sense when aligned with the first two films (which it doesn't IMO). He knew he couldn't just end things with Bruce being Batman with a bit over a year without WB touching his universe.