Tacit Ronin
Avenger
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2009
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- 20,527
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Making a serious Batman movie with a chibi Robin would raise some serious questions. I can see why they have stayed away from that can of worms.
Making a serious Batman movie with a chibi Robin would raise some serious questions. I can see why they have stayed away from that can of worms.
I've never exactly been a big Robin or Bat-family guy, but I think if they brought him in, he should be about 14/15. Somewhere around the Tom Holland Spidey range.
I can't imagine Nolan as a director who would direct any movie he had no personal desire to do.
Yeah, I've always found that to be a bogus claim. If anything, Nolan did a third film because he knew WB was going to make a sequel to TDK no matter what and he wanted to be able to close out his Bat-universe his way, rather than let someone else tamper with his baby. Which shows how much his heart was in it, if anything.
I definitely do think holding out on a third film gave him leverage when making Inception though, where the studio was willing to throw that kind of money at a script they didn't quite get on paper.
It's amazing just how much of Nolan feels channelled into Bruce: A guy who's been out of the game for a while, is exhausted but everyone wants him to come back. He comes back for "one last mission", then passes the "mantle" to another guy who will do his own thing with it. Bruce's arc is more-or-less how Nolan comes off to me when watching the movie.
Wouldn't that still count as him not wanting to make it? If ideally you don't wanna make another one but feel obligated to so someone doesn't "tamper with your baby", by definition your heart's not fully in it. At that point we're just arguing over semantics.
Apparently they took a break halfway through the script due to feeling they couldn't come up with anything (good).
I could buy the argument if it felt like there was less effort was put into TDKR, but it was the most ambitious and complex of the trilogy just from a technical standpoint and up to that point in his career it was his most ambitious film to date. You can't say Nolan didn't challenge himself and his crew with the film. That's the mark of someone who isn't just slumming it.
Given how rich the source material is, it's mind blowing how they couldn't come up with anything. No wonder they went with something as rote as a bigger, louder LOS rehash. I can't believe someone who was so keenly aware of Return of the Jedi's mistakes would repeat it.
I also think it's pretty reductive to say the story was just a LOS rehash. The villains' plans were very different from Ra's'. If it were just an entirely different organization headed by Bane, would that have made it more original? I think connecting it to the LOS just helped tie the trilogy together and also added some consequences for Bruce's decision to kill Ra's. It also worked with the legacy themes in the film. I certainly don't think it was a case of, "Welp, we can't think of anything, guess we'll just redo Batman Begins". It clearly suited the story they chose to tell on a number of fronts.