Yeah, even Man Of Steel. I mean, with the Krypton stuff aside in the first 20 minutes, it's the same thing. If you act like that's a seperate prologue of sorts and start the film from the boat when they introduce Clark. It's as if the first half is a journey story then the last half we're in some alien invasion, comic booky plot.
Im personally growing tired of "the origin story". It's way too formulaic for my tastes. Of course Nolan was giving people the first ever detailed origin story for Batman so it was fresh as hell when it came out. They tied Scarecrow in there well and Murphy was awesome in the role but i still feel like it was added in later by a studio suggestion. Which Goyer probably took as a challenge to find the right villain. Im thinking WB might have even suggested Scarecrow because he was supposed to be the main villain in Batman #5. Just like Katie Holmes was most likely a studio suggestion. I doubt Nolan's pitch to Warner's folks had to do with anything but the setup. The childhood flashbacks, the training across the world, the creation of the materials, the serious tone and what Bruce feels inside. It sound to me like he pitched the first act of the movie then started building layers with Goyer to make it more of a comic book movie. Hence the batmobile chases and fear gas/microwave emitter plot. Ras Al Ghul/Ducard fits in live a glove with that first act but Scarecrow seems like an addition to give Batman somebody to go after instead of common criminals (probably boring to the studio).
Just like Amazing Spider-Man and Raimi's origin where i feel they could have left out Lizard/Green Goblin. Just doing a film where Peter becomes who he is and it's stretched out. He takes down muggers, he develops a crush on Gwen/MJ, he meets Conners or the Osborns and there's your movie. But it's the movie business. It's a different medium as i like to preach. So the heads will force the filmmakers to have certain elements for entertainment value.
It works for Begins don't get me wrong. Id probably freak out if i woke up and a good chunk of act 2 & 3 of Begins had just vanished. Because im so familiar with it now. But i strongly believe it could have been a more concise, to the point, grittier, odd film that deals with his childhood, college years. Heck even teenage years which weren't explored. The time spent in prison and training with the league of shadows would be extended quite a bit. We'd still see Rachel but limited. Still see the creation of his suit and batmobile but more mystery with that vehicle. The Batman moments could have been him taking down the mob like we see but also going after random criminals like how they do it with Spider-Man.
I like the train sequence but the whole "Gotham is in trouble" plot could have been changed to something more intimate. Leaving Rises to be the big disaster film that centers around a device, which fits more because of the scope of that particular story.
Hey, im content but i guess i don't get the "Batman Begins is the best batman movie of all time and ****s all over Rises". Some of these people even think it's better than Knight. I understand the charm, but i just dont get that point of view. That first 40 minutes to an hour is about the only thing that's relevant to the rest of the trilogy. I bet it's because Nolan knew it was the most powerful stuff.
I even heard about Goyer saying something about Gotham's look in BB. How they would have changed it and it was the studios idea to make it more extreme. I still haven't seen that source though.