I don't think you need to do the origin to create an emotional connection. For me the lack of emotional connection had to do with Reeves' and Pattinson's approach to Bruce, which felt so repressed and grey and interior that I struggled to connect to him on a human level and it made his arc not really work that well in my opinion. It's not that I wanted him to smile more or something. It's just that there are so many different tones that work with Batman and I think interpretations thrive when they can successfully balance multiple colors. I was expecting him to be angrier honestly. But I understand where they were coming from with those creative decisions and I don't want to knock them per se. I just don't think it was for me.
My relationship with TB has so far been kind of strange because on paper I should be head over heels in love with it. A rain-soaked, gritty, noir detective story modeled after Fincher's Se7en is exactly the kind of Batman movie I've always wanted. And it is an impeccably well crafted piece of work. I love a lot of it truly but I can't shake the feeling of overfamiliarity, like so much of it I've seen before in other Batman films or cape flicks in general. Outside of some aspects a lot of it felt rote, redundant, like it wasn't moving the needle forward. That combined with the storytelling issues it has has softened my enthusiasm for it. But having said all that I am glad Reeves is in charge of the franchise now and I'm eager to explore his Gotham through the sequels and tie-in shows.
This encapsulates my feelings 100% perfectly. I think my biggest issue is that it did feel like it was covering ground that had been already covered a long time ago, and frankly was already done better in my opinion. The Batman is a great movie, but my lack of a connection to Bruce, it the assumption that we already knew who these characters were based on past iterations was kind of a mistake in my mind. It's taken me a while to fully put into words why something feels slightly off about it to me, and I guess that's it. It's too cold of a movie to me, and despite it being gorgeous with great performances and atmosphere, it at times felt like it was using it's style as a way to make it appear different and new, when in reality a lot of the themes in the movie have been presented to us before. I know context is key, but film is a different medium than comics.
If a lack of emotional pull is there, everything else can feel detached to me. The Nolan movies managed to give us just enough to care about all the characters involved. From Bruce's beginnings, to Alfred and even Gordon, who we see at the beginning of BB comforting a traumatized Bruce Wayne. That doesn't mean we need to see the origins of each character to connect, but I need a reason to care other than "that's Batman and Gordon".
despite Pattinson's great performance, it's not a good idea to make Bruce Wayne so unlikeable. I still can't get on board with how badly they made him treat Alfred or the emo style in general. I get that it's part of his arc, but it just didn't connect with me as well as I'd hoped. Doesn't help that Serkis Alfred was reduced to scenes where he's being scolded by Bruce too.
I still think the movie is great on its own though. I'm really just hoping at this point that whatever Reeves has planned for a sequel, it's bolder and more original. Whether people want to admit it or not, Nolan set the bar incredibly high and I do think it's created a challenge for filmmakers to do something entirely new with Batman, especially in a grounded setting. I don't want to say Nolan can't be topped, but I'm doubting more than ever that a filmmaker will ever create an adaption that resonates with audiences as well TDKT did. And there's nothing wrong with that.