Kane52630
FOREVER⊙DILATING⊙EYE
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Didn't he order like a thousand cowls?
And a thousand tangerines.
Didn't he order like a thousand cowls?
And a thousand tangerines.
I love your attitude Shika. I think you and I are much more in the same boat when it comes to Batman vs. Superman. I barely even post in that section just because I already know what people are going to say to any given concern I might want to throw out there, so it's not really worth it for me at this stage.
. They try too hard to narrow down all negative criticisms to "you're just trying to not like the movie" or "you can't say anything till you've seen it", which leaves very little room for fun and more complex discussions.I'm glad TDKR can offer you some nostalgia and escape, even if it's nostalgia for criticizing/debating it.![]()
).You still know what I'm talking about. It's not hard to just recreate yourself as long as you don't get in trouble anymore . . . which is what Selina supposedly sought.
You defend this clean slate thing alot. It makes me wonder, how do you feel about the genetic codex in Man of Steel? Do you like that too?
I think you mistake me defending something occasionally for actively liking it.
Things like the clean slate and the codex are just MacGuffins. Nothing uncommon for genre films. Entire plots have been constructed around MacGuffins, but in TDKR (and MoS I suppose) they're subplots serving a larger story. That doesn't mean I think it's horrible or worth bashing. I'm neutral to the MacGuffins themselves. I defend something like the clean slate because I appreciate its role in moving the cogs and gears of the story engine. Also, I kind of like to think of it like Selina's in the middle of her own little noir/thriller film within TDKR and the clean slate is kind of like the central MacGuffin of her little movie.
The codex for me was just a little bizarre, but again nothing I see as inherently horrible. It's all about the story these plot devices are serving.
I still try to wrap my head around people picking on things like the clean slate in TDKR when just as much crap can be aimed at TDK....but that's forbidden.
There is nothing in TDK as preposterous as that, though I am open to examples. Preferably examples that play as much into the story of TDK as the clean slate thing in TDKR does.
I hated that whole DNA thing with Superman. It's like with these particular DC Warner Bros. movies that have the craziest plots going on.
It can't just be Superman being rocketed off from his dying planet with a succession led by Zod. Oh no, it's got to be this gigantic terraform device, PLUS the DNA codex and genetic source for all Kryptonians.
Personally, I prefer when the stakes are a little lower in a Batman story and more personal. That's why I love all the episodes in BTAS for the most part where it was simply the villains and characters mirroring Batman. Do we really need, "OMG, the city is going to blow" in every film? Do I need to see Penguins with missiles on their backs when the first born plot is much more interesting? Does the whole city need to be frozen by a giant telescope? Why can't it be more personal with Batman and Freeze? Is a microwave emitter really necessary? Did TDKR need a gigantic mega ton bomb? Hell, Batman is a detective and out of the 7 films about him, none of them are really these great case/detective films.
That's why I think I prefer the films with the Joker ('89, Phantasm, Dark Knight). He's not out to get everyone in the city, just a handful. He's there to mess with Batman, not take the entire city hostage. I'll take smylex gas or ferry boats rigged to blow to show how weak Gotham is as a whole as opposed to everyone getting blown away. I'd even take a character driven plot like Batman tracking down baby doll or trying to reach Freeze who has a personal thirst for vengeance and justice instead of, "I'M GOING TO TURN EVERYONE INTO MUTANTS" or "EVERYONE INTO A GIANT LIZARD".
It just seems so cliched, especially with all the options out there. That's why Batman vs. Superman concerns me. How are you going to top Gotham getting nuked or the whole world going extinct to make way for a new Krypton. The story should be geared towards the relationship between Batman and Superman (if that's what they're going), not this big, huge, dumb thing. Then all these "Justice League" characters makes the situation even worse.
Well, I definitely hear you there milost. I too love smaller-scale detective driven Batman stories, like I would assume any Bat-fan does. I'd love to see the next solo franchise get more intimate like that. I'd love to see a true detective Batman film. Shoot, you're making me want to watch some Animated Series right now.
That said, I also understand the urge to treat him more like an action hero too, especially when you're talking about taking him from the page/small-screen to the BIG screen. I do think Batman is malleable like that where he really can shift genres- from mystery to sci fi to action, etc. So, it's acceptable to me. However, you're right- it's been done a lot at this point now. I'd be absolutely delighted if I heard they were going to make a Batman movie for under 100 million and go smaller scale. I'm not sure it'll ever happen though.
And I too am concerned about how they're going to keep trying to increase the scales, how the next cinematic Batman is now inheriting a world with all-powerful aliens in it, who will no doubt have to contend with more all-powerful alien threats. At this point I can only hope that the eventual Batfleck spinoff film would be a prequel where maybe we do get something a little more scaled down.
Well, there's MacGuffins in TDK for sure...the mob's money and the sonar technology come to mind. I don't think those are preposterous though, but I don't think the clean slate is either. I put the sonar on about the same level as the clean slate in terms of "convenience" though.
By fresh you mean out of character.
That's the beauty of the character. He is trapped in an endless cycle of obsession, even when he's an aging man. He can never let go of it. Anyone can throw in the towel after they think they've done a decent job and run off into the sunset. That's not interesting.
Bruce Wayne is much more complex and interesting than that.
t:From the earliest days of developing the story for Batman Begins, Nolan and Goyer had talked, in general terms, about the arc of Bruce Wayne's life. The first film would be about his becoming Batman- but only temporarily, as an extreme but short-term means of setting Gotham on a better path. The second film would be about his being drawn deeper into the life of his alter ego. The third film, if it came to pass, would have to resolve that dilemma and close the Batman chapter of Bruce Wayne's life.
"Endings are very important," Nolan observed. "I don't embark on a project if I don't have a very strong sense of how things are going to end. That's been the case with all three films, and very much so with The Dark Knight Rises- because the entire story arc is ending with this film. And so, even as we started to develop the story, we had a strong sense of what the ending of the movie would be. We came up with it several years ago, in fact, and everything had been building toward that conclusion.
I don't care what your original intent is. You don't train and devote your 8 years of your life to something that you plan on wrapping up in a year. That would be like, "I'm going to school to be a doctor . . . only to quit after I inspire someone with my first surgery".




I've been thinking a bit about all the complaints that this movie committed sacrilege re: Batman's character and made him all of a sudden start acting out of character and such.
The conclusion I've come to is...yes, without a doubt the Bruce Wayne/Batman whose arc we see in this trilogy is notably different than his comics counterpart (not to say that there's only one definitive version in the comics either). It's been said a lot that these weren't Batman movies, but in fact Bruce Wayne movies. But the more I think about it, it's really so very true.
The purists will jump on that saying, "But Bruce Wayne IS Batman!" and "Bruce Wayne is just the mask, Batman is the more interesting character!". And in the comics, I'd agree. But because this was framed from the start as as a hero's journey, a man on a quest, our relationship with that character changes.
What part of Batman Begins was the more interesting part? The first hour or the second hour? Most fans tend to say the former, and I'd agree. So right from the get go, this series nixes the notion that Bruce Wayne is only interesting with the Batman persona.
It's just so clear now that this was never, never going to be a story wherein Bruce became more and more like his comics counterpart until he was a permanent fixture in this Gotham. It's an arc about a deeply wounded man, burdened by his wealth and unable to move on with his life finding an outlet for his rage while somehow trying to live up to his father's legacy. Along the way his battles change him, leading him astray from his original path and intentions. By the end, it's clear that this was all a big transitional stage and he's able to leave behind a worthy legacy as Batman while taking his first steps towards trying to finally, after 30 years, start living something resembling a life.
I know that last sentence makes some of you cringe, but I'm sorry, I love that. It rounds off the story in the purest way. I mentioned that at the start of Batman Begins, he's a man on a quest. I see the ending of TDKR as the culmination of that quest. Ra's tells him if he can carry the blue flower to the top of the mountain, he'll find what he was looking for in the first place. It may just sound like some Eastern kung fu mumbo jumbo, but I think it's very telling that Bruce, unsure, returns that with a question ("And what was I looking for?"). Ra's tells him that only he can know that. Of course, from that moment on, his quest is to "turn fear on those who prey on the fearful". His quest and his decision to become Batman are undoubtedly tied up with fear, but in my opinion, it's only when "the fear finds him again" in the pit that he truly finds what he was looking for in the first place: wholeness. His humanity. What was taken from him the moment his parents died. Like many hero's journey tales, the story we've been told here is a quest for wholeness. Only neither us nor Bruce really knew that until the end. Though it seems clear to me now that Christopher Nolan and David Goyer did.
I think what it comes down to is some people don't think Bruce Wayne/Batman actually fits the "hero's journey" model. They don't want him to be whole. They don't want the quest to end. They want him to be forever damaged. And I get that. Bruce's ultimate "quest" in the comics is to stand in the face of the impossible and punch criminals in their turkey necks (as Kevin Smith would say) forever. That's a quest that understandably doesn't end.
But I contend that the quest of Bruce Wayne, Christopher Nolan's cinematic hero, and the character we've come to know as Batman were never one and the same. Even his ultimate mission as Batman in the movies isn't the same, it's not as romanticized as it is in the comics. There's no childhood vow. There's no scene at the Waynes' grave. He wants to rid the city of corruption so it can start helping itself. Batman is designed an enabler in these movies rather than the be-all end-all solution. However, ridding the city of corruption ends up being something far more complex than he bargained for. And he does get lost in the monster. The events of The Dark Knight represent the "in his prime" Batman coming face to face with his greatest nemesis. In the end he has to tarnish the symbol he was trying to create just to put a band-aid on the damage that he himself helped usher into Gotham.
The fact that The Dark Knight Rises centers on themes of revolution and economic disparity seems so appropriate when you consider the fact that the murder of the Waynes' is a direct result of the tension that exists between the classes. What resulted in that is a lonely child who grows up isolated and sheltered, with his rage against the world festering, very much as a consequence of his wealth. Someone who chokes on his silver spoon. It asks the question, who would that guy become? So the story that results is very much one about this confused and troubled rich orphan finding his place in the world. And the story is, among many things, an exploration of the correlation between money and power. I think that's a fascinating way to approach the Batman mythos. And Rises offers a holistic conclusion to his journey by very much rooting the story in these themes and not taking Bruce Wayne's tremendous wealth for granted. It's a huge part of his character, and it's why Bruce Wayne on his own is a very interesting character even before he decides to put on a mask.
So I guess at the end of the day, if you weren't happy with Bruce's character in Rises, in my opinion this means you really weren't on board with what Nolan set out to do with the character from day 1. And that's okay, there's nothing wrong with preferring a different version. I just think we should call it what it is.
I'll conclude with this excerpt from The Art and Making Of The Dark Knight Trilogy:







best post ive read on all things rises!! hands down. this is not the comic batman, its a story about bruce who gets a definitive ending. the purists will always say that bruce would never quit. but he is a human man who is mentally and physically spent at the end of rises. there is no lazerus pit or magic like the comics to keep a man in his late thirtys to keep going on. i loved the end. and i loved rises. great post bro!I've been thinking a bit about all the complaints that this movie committed sacrilege re: Batman's character and made him all of a sudden start acting out of character and such.
The conclusion I've come to is...yes, without a doubt the Bruce Wayne/Batman whose arc we see in this trilogy is notably different than his comics counterpart (not to say that there's only one definitive version in the comics either). It's been said a lot that these weren't Batman movies, but in fact Bruce Wayne movies. But the more I think about it, it's really so very true.
The purists will jump on that saying, "But Bruce Wayne IS Batman!" and "Bruce Wayne is just the mask, Batman is the more interesting character!". And in the comics, I'd agree. But because this was framed from the start as as a hero's journey, a man on a quest, our relationship with that character changes.
What part of Batman Begins was the more interesting part? The first hour or the second hour? Most fans tend to say the former, and I'd agree. So right from the get go, this series nixes the notion that Bruce Wayne is only interesting with the Batman persona.
It's just so clear now that this was never, never going to be a story wherein Bruce became more and more like his comics counterpart until he was a permanent fixture in this Gotham. It's an arc about a deeply wounded man, burdened by his wealth and unable to move on with his life finding an outlet for his rage while somehow trying to live up to his father's legacy. Along the way his battles change him, leading him astray from his original path and intentions. By the end, it's clear that this was all a big transitional stage and he's able to leave behind a worthy legacy as Batman while taking his first steps towards trying to finally, after 30 years, start living something resembling a life.
I know that last sentence makes some of you cringe, but I'm sorry, I love that. It rounds off the story in the purest way. I mentioned that at the start of Batman Begins, he's a man on a quest. I see the ending of TDKR as the culmination of that quest. Ra's tells him if he can carry the blue flower to the top of the mountain, he'll find what he was looking for in the first place. It may just sound like some Eastern kung fu mumbo jumbo, but I think it's very telling that Bruce, unsure, returns that with a question ("And what was I looking for?"). Ra's tells him that only he can know that. Of course, from that moment on, his quest is to "turn fear on those who prey on the fearful". His quest and his decision to become Batman are undoubtedly tied up with fear, but in my opinion, it's only when "the fear finds him again" in the pit that he truly finds what he was looking for in the first place: wholeness. His humanity. What was taken from him the moment his parents died. Like many hero's journey tales, the story we've been told here is a quest for wholeness. Only neither us nor Bruce really knew that until the end. Though it seems clear to me now that Christopher Nolan and David Goyer did.
I think what it comes down to is some people don't think Bruce Wayne/Batman actually fits the "hero's journey" model. They don't want him to be whole. They don't want the quest to end. They want him to be forever damaged. And I get that. Bruce's ultimate "quest" in the comics is to stand in the face of the impossible and punch criminals in their turkey necks (as Kevin Smith would say) forever. That's a quest that understandably doesn't end.
But I contend that the quest of Bruce Wayne, Christopher Nolan's cinematic hero, and the character we've come to know as Batman were never one and the same. Even his ultimate mission as Batman in the movies isn't the same, it's not as romanticized as it is in the comics. There's no childhood vow. There's no scene at the Waynes' grave. He wants to rid the city of corruption so it can start helping itself. Batman is designed an enabler in these movies rather than the be-all end-all solution. However, ridding the city of corruption ends up being something far more complex than he bargained for. And he does get lost in the monster. The events of The Dark Knight represent the "in his prime" Batman coming face to face with his greatest nemesis. In the end he has to tarnish the symbol he was trying to create just to put a band-aid on the damage that he himself helped usher into Gotham.
The fact that The Dark Knight Rises centers on themes of revolution and economic disparity seems so appropriate when you consider the fact that the murder of the Waynes' is a direct result of the tension that exists between the classes. What resulted in that is a lonely child who grows up isolated and sheltered, with his rage against the world festering, very much as a consequence of his wealth. Someone who chokes on his silver spoon. It asks the question, who would that guy become? So the story that results is very much one about this confused and troubled rich orphan finding his place in the world. And the story is, among many things, an exploration of the correlation between money and power. I think that's a fascinating way to approach the Batman mythos. And Rises offers a holistic conclusion to his journey by very much rooting the story in these themes and not taking Bruce Wayne's tremendous wealth for granted. It's a huge part of his character, and it's why Bruce Wayne on his own is a very interesting character even before he decides to put on a mask.
So I guess at the end of the day, if you weren't happy with Bruce's character in Rises, in my opinion this means you really weren't on board with what Nolan set out to do with the character from day 1. And that's okay, there's nothing wrong with preferring a different version. I just think we should call it what it is.
I'll conclude with this excerpt from The Art and Making Of The Dark Knight Trilogy: