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inteprprestiation
rhutton125 said:
This conversation has led me to amend one of my earlier beefs, but it hasn't changed my opinion on the film as a whole. Some of the pieces still aren't quite adding up for me. Maybe y'all can help.
If we think of this as a revenge experiment, that (somewhat) resolves my complaint about Batman taking the mystery vial to beat that final criminal to a pulp, but then stop before crossing the line. Then he realizes that people need saving, and he needs to be more than vengeance, and he becomes the symbol of hope that we are accustomed to seeing.
But that still doesn't really sit well with me. He finds out that Falcone had his parents killed, but (as far as I remember) he doesn't really move to get vengeance on him - he just stops Catwoman from killing him, I think. Then when Falcone dies, he's not mad at Riddler for stealing his chance at revenge.
At the outset of the movie, Bruce's/Batman's goal is basically a general aim to clean up the streets/enact vengeance; just a vague "scare/beat criminals to a pulp" mandate of sorts. He's not actively looking for whoever killed his parents, given their murders occurred 20 years ago. He's merely taking his anger/depression out on anyone he deems a criminal. So, when he finds out it's Falcone who did it, I think his hesitance, if you want to call it that, is two fold: 1) he was never looking for his parents' killer, so like a dog chasing a car, he's doesn't know what to do when finally faced with the source of all his pain, and 2) the revelation that his parents weren't the perfect angels he'd always thought, only adds to that hesitance/disillusionment. That, and more importantly, his no guns/no kills rule is already fully in effect. So what else did you expect him to do with Falcone other than hand him over to the cops? I'm having trouble understand your confusion/complaint.
(He also lets the Penguin go, which is a little weird because he's totally going back to a life of crime.)
The Penguin is almost certainly arrested, and then likely gets off on bail. Regardless, again, what was Batman supposed to do with him otherwise?
And even if he beat that final criminal to death, was he going to let all those people die or something? I think he would have saved them anyway - it cost him nothing, after all. That fall didn't seem that deadly.
It's not so much the what as the WHY. He's saving them FOR THE RIGHT REASON NOW. Not to sooth his own soul/conquer his own demons, but because Gotham needs a hero.
Maybe that's what's felt off about that finale. It's not really like he repents and does a 180, or something dramatic and effective like that. It feels like he just amends his ways just slightly. It's not like he's been after Falcone (or the Riddler, or whoever) this whole time and decides he's going to make them face justice for their crimes, rather than revenge and a quick death. He just decides not to beat a guy as badly as he would normally beat a guy, and then help some folks who were pretty clearly innocent bystanders to this whole thing.
The *realization* is ALL that matters. It's more about his inner journey/psyche than anything else. That, and any "bigger" change would mean that he would have had to start from a much worse, much more "assh*le" mindset before that final realization. The "slight amendment" is the key from the previous version of Batman, throughout the duration of the movie, who, for movie reasons, still needed to be doing the right thing. He still needed to be fighting crime. He was just fighting crime for the wrong reasons. Now? He can be an inspiration to people like the girl on the roof of GSG rather than the scary guy in a batsuit to the guy in the beginning, getting beat up by the gang in the subway.
Surely I missed something though, so I look forward to the feedback.
helloimustbegoing said:
Is it just "Year 2" because he has only recently had the idea of being Batman or is it because he's come of age / into the fortune? I mean clearly Cedric Diggory is into his 30s at this point. In the modern Batman mythos, what is he doing in his teen years and his early 20s?
I'd assume something similar to how it was covered in Batman Begins, off training in various disciplines. There's a variety of stories that have covered this in the comics, the Zero Year run is an intriguing take on Bruce's very first time back in Gotham and other stories have flashbacks to some of the people he trained with (who sometimes show up again in later stories).helloimustbegoing said:
Is it just "Year 2" because he has only recently had the idea of being Batman or is it because he's come of age / into the fortune? I mean clearly Cedric Diggory is into his 30s at this point. In the modern Batman mythos, what is he doing in his teen years and his early 20s?
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This GIF is awesome.Brian Earl Spilner said: