Batman jr.
Proud Nolanite
- Joined
- May 2, 2004
- Messages
- 3,161
- Reaction score
- 30
- Points
- 58
The weird thing about BB, is that all of Ra's decoys looked more like Ra's than Ra's did.
Gee, I wonder why.
The weird thing about BB, is that all of Ra's decoys looked more like Ra's than Ra's did.
Yeah, I actually do. I don't think it would've been that hard to put Neeson in a green suit and a cape at the very end reveal, but oh well. It's bad enough he wasn't immortal, it's even worse he looked nothing like Ra's. Weakest portrayal of Ra's that I've seen thus far.Gee, I wonder why.
Bane in B&R was super lame. He looked silly and was an idiot. And I can't believe anyone would want Bane to wear a luchidore(sp?) mask in Nolans film. What looks neat in the comic would/could look incredibly lame live action.
I found DeVitos penguin to be far more interesting than his comic book counterpart.
It's a green cape. What's silly about it?I think the green cape because they thought it would've looked silly.
JAK®;23910479 said:It's a green cape. What's silly about it?
I like it when people explain their opinions, especially when their reasoning is not immediately obvious.Why do you always ask questions that are redundant at times?
JAK®;23910709 said:I like it when people explain their opinions, especially when their reasoning is not immediately obvious.
This isn't about whether things should be accurate, it's about whether an accurate costume would look silly if it were done.Decoy(S)?? Ra's had multiple decoys in BB? Also BB's Ra's was pitch perfect in my opinion. Costumes are meaningless. It's the characterization that makes the character and Neeson acted just like Ra's. Scarecrow wore a suit too and just had a burlap sack over his head yet he perfectly embodied everything that character's supposed to be too. This is what Nolan does. Visual re-invention but character accuracy.
Yeah, I actually do. I don't think it would've been that hard to put Neeson in a green suit and a cape at the very end reveal. . . .
"A green cape? I believed a guy dressing up as a bat, a microwave emitter, a fear toxin and unrealistic feats of strength, but a cape, a green cape no less, I just can't believe that!"and I feel it wouldn't have irked Nolan's filming sensibilities or required audiences to suspend their disbelief to execute it.
JAK®;23911607 said:"A green cape? I believed a guy dressing up as a bat, a microwave emitter, a fear toxin and unrealistic feats of strength, but a cape, a green cape no less, I just can't believe that!"
Yeah, unless people have never actually read a story about Henri Ducard, there's really not much of Henri Ducard to be found in Ra's Al Ghul's character in BATMAN BEGINS, other than the idea of him training Bruce in some fashion (but comic book Ducard had little to nothing to do with Bruce Wayne's martial arts abilities), and Bruce not wanting to kill people, which is also found in his relationship with Ra's over the years.
I always kind of figured he didn't wear a cape because that would have given away their silly twist, which didn't matter anyway, because it was Neeson's character Bruce had the relationship with and who he would have felt betrayed by anyway, not "Grunty mc Fake Ra's". Would have liked to have seen him wear a cape upon his return to Gotham, but his coat sufficed.
I really like the adaption of Ra's, with the exception of no Talia.
Though I'm kind of biased, because about four years before BEGINS, Liam Neeson became my fan choice for Ra's Al Ghul after I wrote a fanscript about him, oddly titled THE DARK KNIGHT.
Henri Ducard was a detective and manhunter who taught Bruce manhunting skills.
That is nowhere to be found in the film.
They used his name, and maybe a smidge from a storyline where Bruce and he part ways, and thats about it.
I respect and understand where you're coming from. But Ducard was a person who trained Bruce at the genesis of his path to becoming Batman after Bruce had traveled the world, and even acted in part as a kind of mentor. He taught him deception and cunning. Bruce later uses many of these skills as Batman to terrorize criminals successfully and effectively. These things aren't absent from Batman Begins. Look at comic Henri. Look at Liam Neeson's "Henri" in the First Act of Batman Begins. They look remarkably alike. In fact, all throughout the movie, if you take in Neeson's character one way, you immediately see a type of Ducard. If you look another way, Ra's Al Ghul jumps out at you. They can both be seen at any given moment, and I don't think that was unintentional.
The point mainly is, I don't think there is any denying that the spirit of both characters are there in the amalgamation of Batman Begins's Ra's Al Ghul.
I'm not at all saying Ducard was fully developed, or developed at all for that matter. It didn't matter, it wasn't his purpose for BB. The point mainly is, I don't think there is any denying that the spirit of both characters are there in the amalgamation of Batman Begins's Ra's Al Ghul. The peppering of Ducard likeness isn't blatant and showcased in the film, but the "comic-ness" of the things I've pointed out certainly aren't tenuous either.
I feel like there's a much longer cut to this film somewhere, and I believe it would improve it immensely.