Mycroft
One Too Many
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Daniel Riser said:There were elements of Batman Begins that were disappointing to me.
Alan Rickman's portrayal of Gordon was Ned Flanders in live-action form and Liam Neeson's performance was only different to Qui Gon Jin in that Batman Begins featured him with short hair...
Michael Cain was probably the most disappointing character. I have been a devoted fan of Cain for years and think of him as one of the greatest actors alive, however as Alfred he was simply "the Butler with an obligation." There was no strong relationship between the two of them like you see in Burton's Batman.
Also, as a writer, I was very disappointed in the script and small creative decisions. For instance: Burton's Batman features a man killing Bruce's parents for his mother's pearl necklace. (pearls are a symbol of purity) the necklace breaks apart (Bruce's purity shattering) and the husband defends his wife and is killed, then the wife is executed leaving Bruce with his dead parents and a murderer who doesn't even bother to pick up the pieces of "purity." He points the gun at young Bruce, is summoned by an un seen presence (his friend in the darkness) and walks away, purposely and ruthlessly leaving Bruce with his "shattered purity." The father is strong and protective (like Batman), the mother is pure and innocent (like the people Batman defends) and young Bruce witnesses his purity being shattered and the cold-bloodedness of Gotham.
Burton emphasized cold-blooded murder.
In Nolan's version this same scene featured a very weak husband who was shot while trying to pull out his wallet by a man who seems to be drunk or high (being under the influence of an external substance; therefore diminishing his cold-bloodedness) His wife was shot because the man panics then runs away leaving Bruce with two dead people. So we have: a weak husband who quickly gives in to oppression (not an example to Batman) a drugged up bum with a gun (a weak, demonized drunk not a cold-blooded Gothamite) and a little boy stuck with two corpses.
Burton emphasized the evil that is bread in Gotham far more effectively than Nolan. The scene with the Joker giving away money illustrating the intensity of greed in the city is a perfect definition of evil.
Nolan emphasized one bad guy and then showed that he isn't as powerful as the next guy who isn't as powerful as the next guy who isn't as powerful as Qui Gon... um Liam Neeson; who happens to be the "metaphorical" father of Batman ... yet he's evil, or is it that he's just misunderstood? Because he believes in destorying... evil. So is this a social commentary? or a $10 summer movie?
The real cold-blooded killer in the film was Scarecrow, briliantly portrayed and brilliantly written.
Now... Christian Bale's performance as Bruce Wayne and Batman are... hands down, a perfect performance by an underrated actor. He purposely sounded like a tough guy when he was Batman because he had never been a "super hero" before and that was brilliant. He made the film worth $10 to me, but that was the only strong element, of this blotchy summer flick, that stood out to me.
Regards,
Simon Cowell.... uh Daniel Riser
P.S. And Morgan Freeman was the token black guy. Very poorly written character, they robbed Morgan of a good opportunity.
I agree with you on the lack of symbolism, but Morgan's character in the comicbook is very important. Michael Cain was poorly cast (just for star power, if you catch my drift). The movie messes-up the whole point of the story of Batman: Year One, which enphisies Gordon over Batman and Gordon's problems and fight curruption in Gotham's finest.