You can agree or disagree with this man's politics but it warms my heart to know we can all come together to say he did a terrible job reviewing this movie lol
I feel like people are assigning a lot more depth and worth to this film than it deserves. It was three hours. I felt fairly hollow in terms of getting what I wanted from these films having spent THREE HOURS in a theater.
Personally, I think that the lack of a distinction between Bruce Wayne and Batman is kind of the point. Bruce spends a lot of the movie so obsessed with Batman that he’s forgotten how to be Bruce Wayne.
it was year 2 of him being Batman. This is not 38 year old Bruce who knows what he is doing. The film clear shows he just started out when he fails to glide in the air and obviously the lack of equipment we know him to have
I get your standpoint but I cant help but disagree. It makes sense from the standpoint that he just started, but balancing batman and Bruce Wayne has always been a massive part of the comics
It’s also basically the point of Alfred’s lectures towards him. It would be one thing if the movie didn’t address it, but I feel like they did a great job in showing us
@happy little trees 239 I disagree. I think it was very in step with Batman as a character, especially considering how early into his career he was. He’s less mature, less balanced in mind, and less calm to his approach. He’s a new Batman, young, full of rage, and less likely to pull a punch. Anyone saying that he’s not in character in this movie must’ve never heard of character growth, especially when in the Batman comics, Batman time and time again shows growth. He isn’t the perfect Batman in every single story, in fact, in many modern Batman stories, even older and largely popular Batman stories, he shows flaws, and the story and events of each comic consist of story beats that help Bruce to develop more as a man and to overcome these flaws. The story of Bruce being more vengeful and angry in the beginning of this movie, and later finding the error of his ways and seeing that rather than being a symbol of fear, he needs to be a symbol of hope, is very in line with Batman as a character. As we’ve seen in many comics before in many different ways. That’s what makes him such a special character, he shows flaws, he makes mistakes, but in the end he always finds a way to better himself or to fix his mistakes, because deep down he’s a good person. Better than many. Anyone who says that this movie wasn’t in line with Batman’s character has a misunderstanding of Batman as a character. The whole argument of “Batman is perfect and does not show flaws” just suggests that the person making the argument has a very shallow understanding of Batman, and has read very little of his material. I’d also like to point out that the movie incorporated Batman’s internal dialogue, as we see and read countless times in his comics. He’s constantly speaking to himself, and it’s often about his current predicament or current internal strife. Just goes to show more so that this movie was supposed to show the growth of Bruce as a person, and of Batman as a symbol of hope. Bruce was not always perfect, and neither was Batman, and some of his best and most famous stories have shown this. Not to mention, in Batman’s most praised live action adaptation, being the dark knight, he shows flaws. He overcomes those flaws, and in the end makes a decision based on the experiences and the events he faces in the story. Now, I agree that the good characteristics of Batman, those being his understanding of right and wrong, and justice and so on, are what makes him Batman. BUT, in saying this, you would also have to acknowledge the fact that in order to reach such a level state of mind, Batman would’ve had to experience growth to get to those values. You can’t just ignore it and say that he was always perfect, because he wasn’t, and he even very often shows that he’s not perfect, thus creating the basis for a lot of Batman’s more emotional storylines out there. I’d also say that they incorporated the riddler perfectly into this emotional growth for Bruce as well. It was a very good Batman story. The writers showed a clear understanding of what makes a Batman story so special, the emotional depth and growth of the character, and how the story would need to tie into that. By the end of the movie he clearly grows into his new shoes as Batman seeing that he needs to be better, and do better. I don’t know what more you can ask for, that’s actually just Batman. All of those values that you said make Batman what he is, he is learning in this movie. He is going through the motions he needs to to become that “perfect Batman” that everyone knows and loves.
@@reekyfartin this batman is trash accept it, the whole point of batman is that he is vengeance, he is not superman, he is not supposed to represent hope, that is superman, barman is supposed to be dark, and many other videos habe shown , ben isnt a movie critic but he is right about some things, but watch different reviews that say its bad , you will realize its not judt hate, i liked the movie when i saw it but yes other than music and some action its bad, and yes, bruce is supposed to give charity, the whole point is he tries to help with both his money and justice, this batman just doesnt care, he aint batman
@happy little trees 239 Batman in many of his appearances in comic was a ruthless vigilante who beat up and even murdered criminals. You think there is something okay with someone who dresses as a bat vigilante? And besides, what was there to be done in this movie? The biggest outside corruption Maroni was already apprehended and all was left was petty crimes. Organised corruption was very secret and very lowkey, to the point all officials were involved with it. There was little Batman can do against this. Or even Bruce Wayne, all this goes beyond his field. You missed the entire point of the movie.
@@ericmagana3215 You wrote a whole nonsense essay of a comment and basically said nothing. Batman isn't vengeance. He's justice. You're ignorant. Accept it.
@@tiaaaron3278 the batman is trash, and im not gonna explain why to you, go watch the negative reviews and thr plot holes of the movie for yourself, and then come back and tell me its good, but research first, i day this because i researched and yeah those people have a point to their critiques, thr batman is overrated as fudge
After decades of Batman movies and shows, we don’t need to see his parents murder again. Personally I liked that they alluded to it and found a different way to spin the culprit. I also liked how this shows Bruce still brooding like he hasn’t dealt with the trauma enough to function. I think this is the jumping off point to see him become the man he is in the other movies.
Yeah, I think Ben was way off the mark with this review. He basically misinterpreted the entire thing. It’s not an origin story because who the heck doesn’t know Batman’s origin? Bruce Wayne is a shell of a character because he only cares about being Batman. The entire point of the film is to show Bruce going from the vigilante who literally everyone in Gotham fears, to becoming the beacon of hope. Obviously this is just the start of his character evolution. I think The Batman is 10x better than the crap DC has pushed out over the last ten years
Sure, but can we stop with this greater then life BS, symbols of this and that, can't batman just be batman? Leave that BS for the end or when he's passing the torch.
@@4Everlast This is an elseworld story were Batman is finding himself more than finding his purpose which is what I think the movie does badly at presenting in the end to be honest. The whole message of the movie is not "Batman is bad" or that Bruce Wayne is meaningless. It's all about hope, at the end of the movie Batman realizing his purpose is to inspire and be more than just a man fighting crime. It's sort of the same message that Batman begins has but different because clearly Batman has given up on the city that's what it starts out with. The whole movie is about him not doing anything else than feed his own ego, his own drive for Vengeance and not because of justice. That's the thing people are used to seeing Batman being fully aware of why he is doing what he is doing. In this version he is 2 years into this and have only done it because he likes to beat up people because he hasn't understood how to deal with his own pain. I think this was badly shown in the movie to be honest, it was less clear. I don't think Matt dislikes Batman but this is another take on him and not the prime universe Batman. The movie has great scenes and the filming and the city is just perfect for Batman. Do I think the movie could have been better? Yes but that goes for a lot of movies. Since it's getting a sequel I think they will explore Bruce wayne further and his Batman.
@@gustaf3811 Yeah... I got what it's about, it's not just clear it's spoon feeding you the message, not sure why, are they aiming for the kids? PG13, was it? You can't have a moody, dark horror-ish batman movie as you pander to kids, kids ain't watching this movie. Loved the atmosphere, the detective side of Bat's, love the director and many of his previous films, never doubted Pattinson, the black guy playing the comissioner was always on my list of underused actors, so it's good to see he's getting meatier roles, enjoyed Catwoman,the Penguin was GREAT, the freakin batmobile was something else, this movie did a LOT of good, felt slightly rushed at the end with all the action that came out of nowhere and cranking a slow procedural into a Batman flick, but hey, it was done very, very well. I'm excited to see more, but I hope they don't slip into magic-land territory, I need a palette cleanser after all the Z.Snyder cartoonish CGI as he calls it dark and gritty.
I would argue that Bruce Wayne isn't even in this movie. It's Batman the entire time even when he's not wearing the mask. I'm sure he'll adopt the Bruce Wayne "persona" in the next movie. This is just the beginning of his character journey.
Exactly, people miss the point when they mention Bruce Wayne barely being in the movie, that’s the whole point at this moment of him being Batman he is truly himself while being Batman not being Bruce
Well according to another CZcams comment the director did it intentionally for that reason. Apparently we are to see how Bruce Wayne is before he adopted the Bruce Wayne persona we all know.
11:14 By that logic, Batman should be perfectly fine killing criminals since they're criminals and he's not. But he doesn't. He has to be different than the man who killed his parents. That's whole the point of the ending. He has to get Gotham hope, not just punishment.
I think all of us apart from Ben understood that the ending was not about Batman not fighting crime, it was about continuing to fight crime for a different reason. To fight crime not as a horrifying monster to all, but as a beacon of hope for Gotham.
He never said that the movie was about Batman not fighting crime. He's speaking about the message as it's written to relate to irl. Batman in this movie is simply the idol for that message, representing the opposite of the marxist vision. To quote myself: "The fact that Ben's audience is too dumb to get the point of the movie is legitimately suprising me. So many folks are somehow missing the fact that Ben is talking about the marxist message that's being pushed, as it relates to irl, not about whether or not they're gonna make Batman stop being Batman. Batman in this movie is simply idol of the anti-marxist position. Both he and his dad (his dad usually being represented as a good guy who did a lot of philanthropy) are turned into evil cis white men billionare caricatures and then Batman's approach to crime is a caricature of the conservative view of dealing with crime. More importantly, this isn't the first time that this message has been pushed. I forget the name of the comic, maybe it was Batman: Black and White or something like that (I remember it being an anthology, essentially, that was drawn in black and white), but there was a comic written not too long in black and white where one of the stories was that Bruce could do more good with his money than as Batman. Batman was drawn as a useless zombie in many situations, but in those same situations Bruce was drawn as a vibrant living man whose money could solve the problems. That's the same thing that's going on in this film. It's like a specifically anti-Nolan version of Batman, but in general it's acting (as Ben said, hating) Batman as a character, in general. Even Nolan's version was doing this, but it still respected the character."
@@roughcutretrospect7235 Perhaps that's the point the movie is trying to make. Batman SHOULD care more about saving people than catching criminals, but throughout the movie that is clearly not the case, until the end when Bruce realizes that Batman has to be something more. He has to be the man who cares as much as the man who scares. I'm reminded of the Justice League Unlimited episode "Epilogue" which makes the really compelling case that what makes Batman a hero isn't his money or gadgets or intimidation, but his compassion.
I think its about intention. He realized he was doing it for the wrong reason, then he found the right reason. He still beats up the bad guys, but instead of doing it because he hates them, he does it because he loves Gotham.
And how does that explain everyone in Gotham calling him Vengeance? Did the gangbanger kid go to every door and tell them the Bat guy's name is Vengeance? 🤣
The point is that outside of 2 dialogues that were there to technically check off the ideas of that, it didn't show the emotional weight or value to that realization individually.
You honestly could not be more incorrect about the purpose of the film. The director does not hate Batman in any way shape or form, the movie and message behind it was brilliant. Batman went from doing what he was doing out of anger, revenge, and "vengeance" which by the end of the movie was able to grasp that he was sending the wrong message and had no chance to protect Gotham if he stayed the way he was. In no way was he saying that he would not still be fighting, targeting, or beating up criminals, he realized he had to be more intentional with it and focus on helping others not just brutally beating on criminals to ease his personal rage.
Spot on. I think Ben Shapiro just watches Batman movies to live vicarously through. TDK Rises was peak Batman for him in this sense. As far as Riddler's seemingly illogical motive to blow up Gotham? After shining a light on Gotham's injustices, deliberately being captured so he can be protected at Arkham while the city washes away and he can converse with Batman all the while inciting his legion to take over...it's not surprising he wants to get rid of Gotham completely. Self-righteous psychopaths seem to want to take down everyone not a part of their movement (think Timothy McVeigh). The logical intent would be that once Gotham falls into anarchy, he'd be freed by his followers and he and Batman can rule the city. The only thing I don't like about it was Riddler giving Batman hints in the Arkham scene like he's a Bond villain but I will give a slight pass in that psuedo-intellectuals like Riddler/Zodiac killer love being the smartest person in the room and his ego got the best of him. It's not a stretch to think Riddler has some...personality flaws to say the least.
Soooooo Shakespearean, sssssoooooo brilliant. Lol I dnt get why ppl give super hero movies more credit than it’s worth. It just dnt find anything entertaining about any of them. They all suck.
I actually really enjoyed this film. Granted, I see some woke points but I don't think it hurt the film so much that it was bad. Remember Batman is still devoted to stopping criminals at the end of the film. He monologues that crime will go up after the flood and he says he "has to be more." That idea of Batman learning he has to be more at the beginning of his career is compelling and not unreasonable. He's been at it for 2 years and while not insignificant, its still relatively early on in his career.
I think the director said himself this was suppose to have real life elements in the film so that people can relate to it. Whether it was for the people or more money is up for debate ig but this film is more dark and real life in a sense than any other batfilm. That's my viewpoint.
@@alexmaverick6647 thats the society we live in with everything woke in Hollywood feminist girlboss nature/Mary sue as a character or forced representation over story peoples view changes but this movie is the least woke outa other garbage like in msheu
yeah I'm in the same boat. Action was good, Soundtrack was kickass, liked all the characters. I'm willing to overlook that one cringe moment cause the rest of the movie sure as hell makes up for it
Ben makes many good points. If The Riddler's focus is to murder corrupt politicians who diverted funds from child assistance projects... why would his grand finale be a mass murder of thousands of innocents? It is hard to find logical scripts these days... Ben says "the writer hates Batman," which is what I thought about the Star Wars sequels & sad "Emo Kylo". They must've hated Luke Skywalker!
I think Ben actually complimented the movie without knowing. He said there was no Bruce Wayne, there was just Batman. At the end of the movie the Riddler says something similar and points out the fact that trying to find out who Batman was was meaningless because Batman IS his true identity.
Bens point is just that Bruce Wayne is the character and Batman is the true person and changing that so Batman can weirdly figure out that Bruce Wayne needs be more active in Gotham is super weird and a opposite from the comics
@@nickmcmillan2511 this is exactly how I felt during the movie and really my only problem with it! It is a pretty big problem I just say, every other Batman movie “and in comics” Bruce is eccentric and the city loves him and like they say in the movie “the prince of the city” yet he doesn’t act like it at all, he’s a complete awkward loner not flashy at all nor does it seem Wayne enterprise is a very major part of the city at all. The point of Batman “acting” Bruce Wayne is that it’s supposed to seem like he’s so busy being this busy guy essentially running the city how could he possibly be Batman. But it’s like why would everyone be talking about Pattinsons Bruce Wayne when he’s always hiding away, maybe because they know it’s rare to see him which is an odd but sensual take, it’s just not the norm and movie does kind of contradict itself in that sense
I think peoples issue is no dual personas. He is batman all the time. Batman traditionally puts on a Bruce Wayne mask to hide his identity to the public. But I think this version is still too angry to care and just hasn't figured the Bruce Wayne identity out yet. There were clues alluding to it though. The main one being Alfred handing him the cuff links saying, "you still have to learn how to be a Wayne too". So I beleive he will develop that identity in the sequels which im cool with. If he never does, I won't be a fan of that aspect either.
Yeah...disagree here. Batman literally says at the end he has to become "more" than vengeance. Not throw vengeance away altogether - but add to it, so it's not just vengeance for vengeance's sake. To that, I can totally get on board with it. He's still developing and finding himself, and still hasn't mastered the duality of being both Batman/Wayne without one taking over the other completely.
I don't think so the reason why bruce became batman. It was always because he wanted to be a beacon of hope. To prove that there is still good in this world and its worth saving.
3:21 how is having three black characters in a movie *wokeness*? I hate woke politics as much as the next guy, but it sounds like you're complaining about the fact that this movie has black people in it
He means there are no bad black characters and everyone in the city sees all the white characters as bad guys, catwoman hates bruce and they show white polititians as corrupt and bad but the promising black candidate as the hope for the city
Besides the review did anyone notice that Batman inserted a syringe into himself and gave himself a boost. The “medicine” was green and reminded me of Banes serum
Discovering Bruce Wayne is basically his character arch. By the end of the movie he realizes that what Gotham really needs is a figure of hope - and so I imagine in the next movie, he’ll be crafting that Bruce Wayne persona and utilizing his money and status more to help with his agendas. I love the idea of starting here to see an evolution (throughout this movie) and then expanded in eventual sequels. Really don’t understand that complaint at all.
@@akatoshmorgul9367 I mean we’ve already seen that man. Like… 7 times. Kinda cool seeing a different take for once. And there’s plenty of comic runs where Bruce is more recluse and isolated.
@@akatoshmorgul9367 oh great, you mean the same story arc that nolan’s batman went through in his first movie. that’s great, we need to keep rehashing the same concepts because they’re “comic accurate” and it should be the only way the stories are done. This batman’s journey reflects HIS own journey, serving this film’s unique take while also not steering away from what batman fundamentally is. jesus christ you guys are so strange in wanting the same film over and over again
You understood the Batman movie completely. Thank goodness I found your comment, one of the more recent comments on this video, to be spot on and understanding of what the Batman was all about.
I like the idea of him having to find his Bruce Wayne "persona", but it didn't really work in the film for me. He just felt like a brooding edgy teenager. When he talks about how he's "not afraid to die..." as he intensely stares at Alfred through his long black hair over his face with Nirvana playing in the background I felt like rolling my eyes. Loved his Batman, but some of the dialogue/scenes when he's himself as Bruce felt a bit odd and could've been done better imo.
It is really impressive how Ben came to the wrong conclusion on basically every single point he's making in this video and even had reasoning behind it that anyone who actually saw the movie could see right through.
Like when he said the Riddler had no reason to bomb Gotham? It was one explained in on sentence that was perfect it was to “Wash away the sins of this city”. Amazing review I love how wrong he is on everything lol
@@klaythompson663 well, i do simp for Robert Pattinson, that's a fact. But i'm just not in the mood to make a gigantic comment explaining my thoughts about the movie when there's so many people in here that disagree with him already
I thought it was the most Batman batman movie ever, too often the villain or villains have overshadowed Batman in his own movie, we got a celebration of the character in this movie
The ending isn't saying Batman shouldn't exist and be a shallow charity man, it's saying that Batman should look after the people he should protect after he brutally beats up their attackers, and not just disappear into the night. He should be MORE THAN VENGEANCE; he should inspire hope. Like every other superhero. This was shown throughout the movie where everyone around him is still scared shitless even after he dislocates every bone in some low life thug's body. But by the end he shows that he gives enough of a shit about Gotham by helping with rescues after he's done with his badass fight scenes.
At that point though when it’s just about helping, wouldn’t it be more beneficial to help with his resources as Bruce Wayne than as just one individual as Batman?
@@Ash-lf6to pretty sure he'll do both in the next movie But, the well is also already poisoned in a sense, gotham is so crime ridden that if he tried to donate anything it would just go to the corrupt politicians
@@Ash-lf6to because he does both. Batman/Bruce Wayne is more than just a violent vigilante. He’s the kindest human in the DC. He’s more human than any other character. It’s unfortunate that that side of him is often lost in media.
Very interesting take! I wonder though, isn't that Batman. The torn up bitter, tortured vigilanty who beats up criminals and makes them afraid to do what they do. He leaves the saved just that, saved because he can't give more than hurt the wrong doers. He's not good with care and compassion. Gotham doesn't need him to, it needs a pitbull not a love giving puppy. And where do they go from there? I think they started well, but are going in a direction to make Batman into Superman.
"The Batman is a needless collage of not only better movies, but more egregiously of better Batman movies as director/co-writer Matt Reeves and co-writer Peter Craig create an utterly inferior and infuriating vision of the Dark Knight."...SPOT ON!!!
@@EMPATICO4 Agreed. This film is pointless and I regret that I wasted 3 hours of my life sitting uncomfortably while checking my watch every 5 min like if you’re gonna do detective stuff at least make it more interesting and batmanny smh.
Also Ben Shapiro: _"I really enjoyed Disney's Star Whats The Rise of Palpatine."_ Ben: We don't know Bruce's motivation. Batman: IM VENGEANCE!! Me: I get Bruce is doing justice more for hate and anger because of his parents tragedy.
@@hermitcard4494 this film is criminal to the batman name. Just because your feelings for batman are heavy don't be jaded by justifying excuses for why the film is underdeveloped and lacking in fundamental values
It’s interesting that Ben is basing a lot of his opinion off of the comics when it’s a relatively common storyline that when Batman first started, he wasn’t as empathetic towards anyone. Especially if we look at comic Batman over the past 15 years, his dialogue is pretty spot on with Pattinson’s portrayal, and there have been a lot of self-realization moments, similar to what happened in the movie.
I personally thought Bruce’s motivation was very clear and makes this take very unique. He starts as vengeance. He’s taking revenge on criminals because it’s the only way he can cope with the trauma of losing his idolized parents. He learns that they were flawed, and that vengeance doesn’t make him better than villains who take a similar motivation like the riddler. So he starts redirecting this motivation to help others.
I loved the movie but in terms of motivation ONLY, I agree half heartedly with Ben. i understood his motivation BUT the movie never really sells it with any dialogue or visual scenes that show or discuss why he's doing what he's doing. You sorta have to assume "his parents are dead therefore Batman vigilante". The death of his parents motivate him, but he never quite gives any dialogue that explains why he wants to emulate them in any way. Batman begins was a beautiful example of how to show Bruce's parents as real humans not just being shot, they interacted with young bruise and taught him the value of Gotham City.
@@fallen4life080 The shooter at the end literally says “ I am vengeance”, and Batman gives him a clear as day look that he is no bette than him. That’s why he goes down to help everyone, he gradually overtime goes from vengeance to a symbol of hope. At the beginning that man getting jumped was scared of him and at the end the woman couldn’t let go of his hand. He’s changing gradually, that’s why Cat Woman said “You’re already taken for”. It’s not that hard to plot together
@@yourwrongimright101_69 exactly, I thought it was super obvious why they didn’t need to (yet again) explain who Batman was. But apparently Ben was utterly floored by this
@@Aces-qx9ln Thats not at all what I was talking about, i 100% agree with that. Bruce decides he can be better. What I'm saying is that his motivation to be Batman was only superficially teased and left to us to just already know because we know who Batman is But a movie needs to assume you don't know anything about a character and build them from scratch. Therea really only a few scenes with dialogue or visuals to show that he's making choices based on his parents deaths (vengeance) and leave it to you to hit assume that his parents motivate him. Like I get i, but the movie should sell it. Overall tho this move was A material. Great movie in my.book
I thought it was interesting how The Riddler was kind of a mix between Riddler and Red Hood. The way he targeted corrupt people as well was very similar to him and I thought way of him being almost an anti-hero was really cool. He obviously wasn't like Jason Todd, but he was similar to Red Hood as a crimefighter in the Under the Red Hood arc, especially when he targets Black Mask, who would be really cool to also see in this universe. Also, another fun Robin-related fact: at the beginning of the movie when there's the street gang about to beat up some old guy, there's a younger kid who seems to be pretty hesitant to beat him up. He's actually played by Jay Lycurgo, who also plays Tim Drake in the HBO show Titans and does it really well. But yeah if Ben Shapiro wants to see Frank Miller's Batman on-screen then he's just fundamentally, objectively wrong. Frank Miller's Batman in the Dark Knight Returns is supposed to be an anti-hero, which worked amazingly in that story, but also was supposed to be Batman coming out of retirement in a world where everything is absolutely awful. This gritty take on Batman ONLY works for Frank Miller, and only ever has, and why Snyder movies suck. So basically, it's a take equally as stupid as all of Ben Shapiro's others.
I think Ben missed the point of Batman’s revelation towards the end. The beginning of the movie shows Batman as a reclusive symbol of fear. He even mentions it at the beginning by saying when the bat signal comes out “it’s a warning”. During the first half of the movie, he almost feels a bit like a villain, a silent dark figure that comes out of the shadows engaging in brutal combat with his enemies. Even when he saves that one gentleman from the subway he begs Batman not to hurt him. Up until the asylum scene, the Riddler viewed Batman as a de facto partner. In fact, the Riddler becomes incredibly distraught when he realizes Batman is not on his side. While the Riddler obviously had a deranged perspective, in one of the first scenes, the police accuse Batman of potentially being involved in the mayor’s death so it’s clear this perspective of Batman as a villain was held by others in the city. There’s a similar feel with Bruce Wayne where’s he’s portrayed as this reclusive billionaire that does nothing to help the city even though it’s rapidly declining into chaos. Towards the end, he realizes that the city is deeply distrustful and scared of his Batman persona whereas his Wayne persona is viewed as just another (reclusive) member of the elite. He realizes that as Batman he has to be more than a symbol of fear and as Wayne, he must be more than an eccentric recluse. I imagine in the next movie we’ll see a version of Batman that has a more cooperative relationship with the police and a version of Wayne that is more of a public figure/philanthropist.
The truly breaking point is when one of the terrorists in the Garden answers to the question “who are you” by saying “vengeance”, the same term that Batman uses in the start of the movie to call himself. That’s when he realizes that with vengeance, hate and fear he won’t be able to change the city, because people need hope.
"I'm vengeance" Here's your reason, that's why Bruce became Batman. The plot of the movie is not about how "batman bad" but how this particular batman motives are pretty gray. He doesn't really fight to protect the innocents, he fights to avenge his parents. The whole talk about criminals and justice is mostly just makeup. Pattinson actually talked about this in an interview, how his interpretation of the character was deeply rooted not in justice but in the idea of vengeance, how he sees in every thug he beats up those that murdered his family. Matt Reeves' batman is driven by HATRED, frustration and agression, like he is constantly living his trauma trying to rewrite history. The police and even civilians are scared of him because he is legit an absolute freak.
they actually mentioned this in the film i believe, they said something ab him reliving it and being able to take his anger and get his revenge on the criminals he is beating to a pulp
Just watched this movie last night. Not a bad movie, I thought but two major problems I saw that mean it can never be in the league of Nolan's Dark Knight. 1st - Batman is supposed to be worlds greatest detective but at no point does he take initiative away from the Riddler. The Riddler is in control the whole time. That's fine for the first part of the movie, but there need to be a switch where Batman being unbelievably clever puts the Riddler on the defensive. 2nd - That sea wall thing was sooo out of left field. Maybe I missed it but I don't think it was mentioned until the bombs went off. The problem is that this was such an easy fix! Have the sea wall maintenance be linked to the Renewal fund - the fund is drained by corruption and the sea wall is now decrepit. Have this mentioned before the bombs. Now the sea wall is tied to everything else Riddler does, and it fits with the story. When that happened my thought was "Gotham has a sea wall?"
If you actually listen to interviews with the Director he talks about how he drew most of his inspiration for this movie from the comics. Year One especially. Just because it isn’t a carbon copy of the previous trilogies doesn’t mean these filmmakers hate Batman….
@@kevinerose If you think “Batman: Earth One” “The Long Halloween” “Batman: Year One” “Batman: Hush” and “Batman: Ego” (all cited as inspiration for Matt Reeves) are all “woke” comics then you’ve most likely never actually touched an actual Batman comic book in your life. identity politics have become such a factor in your life that you’re seeing “wokeness” in places where it doesn’t exist and using it as an easy excuse to dismiss anything that you don’t have any knowledge in.
@@kevinerose Last I checked Batman: Year One (the main comic series the Director based this film off of) came out in 1987. I hate SJW garbage as much as the next person, but unless there were a ton of woke comics back in 80s I don’t know about (the era he says he based most of the movie off of comics wise) then I don’t think he hates Batman as much as Ben Shapiro thinks he does.
I think Ben missed the point of the movie as to the character Batman. At the beginning of the movie Batman is pure vengeance and at the end he realizes he has to be more than just vengeance. He has to be justice and a hero. That his vow to his parents is more than just punching criminals in the face. This is year two of Batman so we have to understand that Batman is just now figuring out what his purpose is for the city. A big thing I agree with Ben about is Roberts portrayal as Batman/Bruce. Bruce was as skulky non charismatic person who ever went out or did anything. There are two or three moments in the film where ppl see Bruce and they are extremely happy to see him. Why are they happy to see him? Bale's Batman was a man of the town Roberts is not. ***spoilers*** Two of the biggest sins of this movie was not showing Bruce fixing the exploitation of his fathers city fund that the criminals were using. Not setting up the Wayne Foundation for orphans to start to fix one of the reasons why Riddler lost his mind. Granted the next movie can fix these issues but the movie was 3 hours long tie up those loose ends.
At the very end of Batman's final monologue, Matt Reeves literally says the theme of the movie. "Our scars can destroy us, even after the physical wounds have healed. But if we survive them, they can transform us. They can give us the power to endure and the strength to fight." This message is not anti-police or Marxist. In this movie, Batman learns to stop holding on to his pain and trauma and to use it to become greater. That is the lesson we should all learn from Batman.
On Ben's point referring to the Nolan trilogy and Batman's reasoning and tactics; "He needs to create a theatrical sort of fear"... I don't agree they missed that with this movie; it just wasn't given a huge amount of plot time, perhaps because the main audience knows by now why and how he became The Batman, similar to why we don't see the spider bite Peter in the latest Spider-Man trilogy- it's just not so much of an origin story. Well, to this Batman's credit, he clearly states in the first act that he can't be everywhere at the same time, so he spread the idea (fear) into the underworld that when you commit a crime, there's a chance he's already watching you from the shadows (which Gotham City is filled with)and that you could be next. The movie emphasizes on this idea by often making him appear by stepping out of the same shadows he's referring to. In his own words: "I am the shadows".
It was such a cool scene, with the different criminals seeing the Batsignal and then staring into the inky blackness of the dark imagining him there. That was very well done.
The problem I had with that scene is that it was my favorite part of the movie. It was absolutely perfect, but the movie never captured that tension again for me and left me wondering where that Batman was.
I agree that the best scene was hinting he could be anywhere in the darkness, but there isnt a single fight scene where he has the element of surprise or uses the darkness or uses their paranoia against them
Peter’s spider bite gives him his powers, but it’s the death of Uncle Ben that gives him his motivation. For Batman that should be his parents being killed at a botched robbery, but there was a lack of intentionality in the way this Batman goes about doing what he does, he felt aloof during the movie. They stated his motives, but needed to show it.
yea, but at the end of the movie the Batman decides to hiding in the shadows a start helping people get air-lifted to safety… does he need a scary costume for that?
Agreed Ben is really stuck on the Woke thing, I didn’t notice it at all, I think he’s looking for it at this point, there’s plenty of comics that have catwoman as black, who cares if the acting is good
I took it that The Riddler was inspired by Batman's example and took it up a gear. He thought Batman approved of his methods and his plan, not realising he doesn't. It's only when the other Riddler fella says "I'm vengeance" that Batman realises the whole endeavour is no longer just about him. Whether Batman sought to be or not, he has become a symbol that people are beginning to emulate and so far it's an inspiration that's making things worse. Batman realises however that if he's had an effect for bad, maybe he can have an effect for good. That's his rebirth, when he realises it's become a responsibility to others and that there is hope after all that things will get better (remember he questions whether things are getting any better at all) if he can inspire the people of the city to combat the cities, and their own individual, ills and be reborn into a brighter future.
I kind of want to see his review of the Sam Raimi Spider-Man trilogy. They’re kind of campy and goofy sometimes but the acting, for the most part, is great and the writing does take the characters seriously, most of the time, while still keeping everything fun. Plus it’d make for a video likely filled with memes curtesy of the editing staff xD
Well they acknowledged there are also systemic problems in the world as well and punching crime in the face might not always be the answer. What was he supposed to do, enjoy the film or something?
@@Edgarv68 there was plenty of Batman punching the shit out of people to take a break from the mystery. I think it's shy of excellence but it is great.
@@Edgarv68 I will disagree on the point about the badassery, I saw the film in 4dx anytime Batman did something the seats and effects came to life, it happened a lot. I was happy with the level of badassery. And regarding it being a detective story, there have been many Batman fans who wanted a dedicated detective plot. I appreciated the film noir style and the tone the movie generated.
@Picante Tamal It was woke, and Dr. Strange isn't even the star of his own movie. Personally I would considerer it a bad movie. I can for sure say the trailer oversells it... By a lot.
Dang. I didn’t know it was possible to disagree with Ben this much😂 The point of the movie was not that Batman should be a pathetic firefighter. It was that he should be a symbol of hope for Gotham instead of a symbol of only fear. Remember in the train station scene (after the thugs were beat) when the guy who was gonna get beat up told Batman not to hurt him? That’s what the good people of Gotham thought of him. He was purely a symbol of fear. The best of Batman shows him as someone who defends the helpless because he cares about them. I thought the character arc was actually great. This was a really poetic and passionate movie. Ben couldn’t be more wrong about Reeves. Matt Reeves clearly loves Batman.
Exactly! I think the fact that Riddler considered them on the same side and that riddlers minion said “vengeance” was the wake up call for Batman as well.
That's exactly Shapiro's point though. The movie hates the idea of Batman and wants him to be Superman. White knight instead of dark knight. That example of the train station doesn't help - how is that guy cowering in the corner irrationally from the guy who just saved him supposed to know that Batman is now beating people up in a nice, "hopeful" way instead of vengeful? Doesn't make a bit of sense. Batman is supposed to be scary and criminals being afraid of him is supposed to be what gives people hope. The two are one and the same.
Batman isn't a symbol of hope. Possibly deep into his career but the proper iteration of Batman is an obsessive bordering on sociopathic one-man war against crime. SUPERMAN is a symbol of hope. That's why the two are such good foils. Ben is right about one thing, Matt Reeves does not understand Batman.
@@Arphemius that’s true, I agree Superman is more of the symbol of hope. I think you’re right, but Batman has been the hero of compassion for decades. Just watch Batman The Animated Series. He deeply cares for the people he rescues, and is simultaneously terrifying to the people of Gotham. The point of the movie is that he realizes he must be both. “Vengeance” is a morally corruptible reason to inflict violence on any society, and Batman realizes this when the goon calls himself vengeance.
That's not new though. "Batman" being the real Bruce Wayne and "Bruce Wayne" being the mask he puts on is a concept that has been out there for decades. I mean this is what the Nolan films did. The Bruce Wayne public figure is a character precisely created to protect Batman's secret identity. In this movie this concept is completely lacking. Perfectly reasonable for fans to not like that.
@@TheJotaroKujo this movie isn’t Batman and Bruce separated. This is Bruce not being Bruce at all. It starts off with him never leaving at all. He says he’s becoming nocturnal. He’s pale. The sun hurts his eyes. He’s reminded by Alfred that he needs to STILL BE Bruce. He doesn’t want to be Bruce. He doesn’t know how. That’s why he seems like Batman when he’s out.
@@TheJotaroKujo no I think they mean like, Bruce isn't out there, he doesn't really have a public persona, when he shows up places people are like "holy shit its Bruce Wayne" because he's just a little quiet hermit boy who doesn't seem to engage at all with the powerful people of the city that previous versions of him made a point to. Whereas his batman seems to be out every night, strolls onto crime scenes, people don't even seem surprised when he shows up. seems like most of the Batman's I remember, Bruce is a well-known public figure who people think they know, and The Batman is a mysterious figure everyone is entranced by. in this its the opposite, the batman is feared by the underworld but he's kind of regarded as a staple sort of presence, while Bruce Wayne is the one that people seem shocked to see and whisper about. other versions of Bruce would talk to the same people during the day and night, just as a completely different person which other people were unaware of, which causes emotional tension for sure. but in this one I actually really loved that when he showed up at the funeral the people he talks to in the night just kind of pointed him out or shrugged their shoulders at him. its a way different dynamic than what your used to, but I liked it. And that's why some people felt he's the same the whole way through, its because the real Bruce was always like this. the batman is his real personality, the "Bruce" he presented to the public was always an alter ego, in this movie he hasn't created that alter ego yet.
The whole point is that Bruce Wayne doesn't exist right now, he's a broken, rageful young man. He's spent his life so far meditating on revenge, and that's what his character development is, and is going to, focus on.
@@daddyGbaby No it isn't, dummy, it's called subtext and you were too dumb to see it. I'm sorry if you need all art to spoonfeed you the message like it's a nursery rhyme, but that's not how art works
The message I got from the ending was not that he shouldn't fight crime but that his mission needs to be bigger than just an expression of his personal rage following his parents' murder. His personal vengeancebis not s healthy or sustainable motivator for the crusade he is embarking on. The reason he must be Batman becomes protecting the innocent rather than just doing it to hurt the criminals as a proxy for Joe Chill. I accept that a vaguely 'woke' framing of some issues harmed that message such as Batman not contesting that stealing is wrong (and that is her personal vengeance because she has been wronged by powerful men) with Catwoman because the writers are clearly too immersed in that narrative that rich dudes are evil despite the fact that Batman is a rich dude who isn't.
The more I think about it, the more I think Selina's remark about "rich, white privileged assholes" was to showcase her own ignorance, as shown by the fact that she counts Bruce Wayne as one of them, having no idea that that's who she's talking to. Together with the Riddler's minions being a clear allegory of Antifa, it seems as though like Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, it's subtly very anti-Woke.
@@BarterTom I think you might be right. My problem with the line when I was watching in the theater wasn't about the wokeness so much but it momentarily pulled me out of the movie. I hate when moments do that.
I think the meaning of the ending was much more simple than most people think. The whole film Batman was looking for evidence that he was helping the city. By the ending he sees that he is helping his whole city. He might not always put the crime to an absolute end, but he can always help its people. When the kid takes his hand it shows the people now trust him. And it took a kid to grab his hand for the mayor to grab it. Then he led them out of the rubble. He will lead them to the light, a better city. He will be the person on the frontlines fighting for that. He’s not asking to be their leader, just to be their defender.
Frankly I felt what would be considered right wing, conservative messaging subtly underpinning the entire film as well as more obvious yet much less consequential progressive elements. People see what they want.
as a not huge batman fan, this movie was a cool new take on batman, this review feels like ben didn’t like/understand the movie and picked apart things he didn’t get 🌝
Bruce Wayne was definitely written to be obsessed with Batman. It’s made clear throughout the film and a perfect example would be when Bruce walks aggressively towards Falcone outside of the funeral and then gets stopped. When he sees his target he means business and in that scene he almost forgot to channel in Bruce Wayne.
@@houseofmatrix6174 nobody said it is. But to say that the movie wasn't good because of these stupid reasons is reactionary and contrarian and doesn't follow any sort of rational framework at all. It was pretty comic-accurate and had interesting themes but it had flaws. It was overall a good movie.
I agree with Ben. The writing is based on the leftist idea that evil lies in an abstract "system" rather than individual person's heart. The story is thus clearly being sympathetic of the riddler who is a fxxking serial killer. Then the reason of Batman fighting crime is undermined and he turns into an emo guy, showing hesitation and even self-doubt when he chases criminals. Because the more he knows, the more he realises he is not the answer to Gotham's problem. A single Batman can't fight the “evil system”, after all. So naturally, Batman's transformation at the end is not convincing at all. No personal conviction, no strong motivation to fight evil, just suddenly believing “the city can change”. The problem of “collective evil” posed by the story was never solved. Overall, a good detective movie, but bad Batman movie.
There's no dichotomy because there isn't one yet. This is really what would happen if Batman was only 2 years into his career. He's work-obsessed, practically living nocturnally for the last long while, and that has taken a toll on him.
He’s doing what he’s doing because he’s young, pissed off, resentful, vengeful and full of rage. It’s not until the end that he realizes the purpose of Batman where he realizes he needs to separate the two. It shows the growing pains of Batman which I love.
The problem is that this is not explored in the script. Batman's narration is the only thing we get for an arc or exploration of this concept. Lazy writing.
I agree, one thing I loved about it is that we didn’t have to sit through another origin, we already know why he’s Batman because it’s been in all of the other movies
@@adrianpale2342 it's not explored in the script? There is a shot of him at the end leading civilians to safety and another shot of him bring that child to a helicopter. The theme is very much explored in the script and goes beyond the narration given.
The Catwoman dialogue about “rich white men” was cringey because it felt so forced and we see in Gotham that the other two prominent black characters in the story are highly successful at what they do and the Riddler is a white man who was failed by Gotham since childhood, so it doesn’t ring true to make it more about race than class. I think we’re getting a very young Batman in this movie who doesn’t understand who he is as Bruce Wayne. He’s forced to appear as himself in public. He doesn’t understand how to keep up appearances yet. He’s obsessed with being Batman which is partially why the “lesson” he learns works. He needs to become “more.” Loved the first act, disliked the finale and thought the movie was overstaying its welcome by the end.
I interpreted the ending as him understanding that there are two things he must accomplish as Batman. Throughout the film we see he understands that he must strike fear into Gotham’s criminals, but at the end he sees that he also must be a symbol of good for the people of Gotham. And he has to move forward and find that balance in order to truly save the city.
this dude is a clown . im not even american but if u guys listening to ppl like this who dont even do their research before open their big mouths then god help yall
I actually really disagree with the notion that this movie was anti-Batman. See, there's been this misconception in the last several years, particularly since the DCEU's Batman became the cultural face of the character, that Batman is by default a bitter vigilante who targets criminals because he hates them, or that he's only seeking to avenge his parents' murder. His entire schtick before that was fighting crime in Gotham _for the sake of Gotham._ So that no eight year old boy would ever have to watch their parents get gunned down in front of them again. Because Thomas and Martha Wayne loved Gotham City, and practically built it, Bruce carries on that legacy and honors their memory by protecting the city and the people in it that his parents _and himself_ love so much. TL;DR: Batman helping people get airlifted from the flooded Gotham City isn't a "Defund the Police" signal. It's a return to form.
Agreed. I think it it pretty obvious that the police are desperately needed, they also need to not be corrupt. Your point is further validated in the final dialogue for me.
I really love when people comment what I'm thinking. Its super ironic that its one of the more comic accurate batman portrayals but people keep asking wheres Bruce Wayne? You mean batman pretend personality? Who cares.
While he does bring up some good points as to why the movie is not all it’s cracked up to be, I think it’s still fantastic. This movie is a great great movie.
Right? I’m thinking to myself what tf is he talking about? This is the best interpretation of Batman I’ve seen in a long time. Not perfect, but it leaves room for character growth.
All the issues he had with the film were silly. "The film doesn't explain why he became Batman" then he rambles about how Batman Begins explained it...even though it's the exact same thing here. Being a symbol of fear for his enemies. This is a year 2 story. We don't need to know why he became Batrman...we already know why. "The film is saying Batman should be a firefighter. He is never Bruce Wayne...only Batman": The film shows that by him just being a symbol of fear. He is scaring the people he wants to save. I think the next film will totally be about him developing his "Bruce Wayne" persona, and I can't wait!.
i think your missing the point, the conclusion of the movie isnt that batman shouldn't be directly fighting criminals like what he has for as long as we know his character, its just that he realizes what being BATMAN is all about. He still will directly fight and confront criminals, and strike fear in the hearts of those who commits a crime, but he can't be JUST that. He needs to do more (this time as the billionaire bruce wayne). the point that its trying to make, is batman in the majority of this movie doesn't represent the TRUE "BATMAN" character, he hasn't developed into that yet. Because even in the comics, fighting criminals isnt the only thing batman does, he literally uses his wealth to actually develop his surroundings (whether it be gotham or the world in general)
Totally agree! He also talks about how Bruce Wayne was just Batman without wearing the mask and there wasn't a distinction and how Bruce did no charity or philanthropy work. This movie obviously takes place when Batman is young and very new to Gotham. The Police call him a freak, the criminals in the beginning laugh at him, and Bruce is still angry over his parents death and wants vengeance. I think the next movies are going to have huge character development for both Bruce Wayne and Batman and it will make sense why in this movie Bruce is kind of broken. This movie had Batman make his first step from fighting crime out of anger and vengeance, to fighting crime to help others and be a beacon of hope.
Exactly...its a constant learning process...he learns that some doors could be opened a lot easier as Bruce Wayne. For eg- Going to see Falcone as Bruce Wayne .
The score isn’t derivative, it’s more reminiscent than anything. You can instantly tell it’s a Batman theme, so yes it would have to kind of sound like the themes that came before it
It is derivative. It sounds almost exactly the empire’s march from star wars but missing a few bars. You can’t un-hear it bro. When you watch it again you’ll see.
@@brunovaz Don’t tell me you can’t remember the theme in your head right now😂it’s a pretty simple theme that is quite effective in the film, but whatever you say
Totally respect your take on the movie and I can even understand why you would view it in the light you do but I think you missed the point the director is trying to convey. He’s been Batman for two years and crime is still up. He’s not a good business man because he routinely brushes off his BRuce Wayne responsibilities in order to further devote himself to being the bat. He loves being the bat, it’s the only time he truly feels that he is himself. But by the end of the movie he understands that in order to be the change he wants to see in Gotham, he MUST take a multi-faceted approach. This means we will now see his Bruce persona be further developed and as Batman he will not only been and enemy to the criminal elements but he will also be a symbol of hope to the innocents that even in a city corrupt as Gotham There is someone looking out for them.
Exactly this. So many people would need to see him helping the civilians as Bruce Wayne to understand this sadly. Glad they didn't throw out nuance to cater for the slow types.
@@allypezz It also makes sense within the plot - the money from the Wayne's renewal fund had been diverted and if Bruce were not neglecting the family's legacy, he would have noticed it sooner.
And when he held out his hand to help those in the flooded stadium and the others hesitated at first but one boy reached out and grabbed it. Then the others followed him out of he flood. That's what sealed it. This is what he has to become, a symbol, a crusader, a dark knight.
@@lewisherron6842 Hey thanks man, it's funny I don't normally like Ben but even though he missed the point of the movie he is aware of some details I wasn't privy to.
Conservative media comprehension tends to usually be really bad. Obviously not all conservatives, but a lot of the ones that get put on a pedestal usually are incapable of seeing things like this
Ngl Gordon in this movie might be the only race swap in history that was actually good. He embodied everything about Gordon. It didn’t feel like a race swap, it was that they let anyone audition and Wright gave the best one.
In terms of the vengeance aspect, Batman realizes that just punishing criminals isn't enough. In the beginning of the film, when the street gang corners the guy in the train station, Batman intervenes NOT to save and help the guy, but to punish the gang. This clearly shows when the guy says "dont hurt me" and batman doesnt even react. This whole time, his mission has been to punish criminals, not save innocent people from them. By the end of the film, he realizes that he should make an active effort in saving and helping people, as it will give them hope which is more effective than just fighting crime for the sole purpose of punishing criminals
Yeah idk why Ben think this is a superman ripoff. Bruce always wanted to protect Gotham. YES he wants to punish criminals but he also cares about the city. In terms of being a beacon of "hope" I can understand why Ben would say what he said, but I don't think HOPE is batmans actual goal even though that's what he said in the movie
Just to follow up on my initial comment: the whole reason why bruce wayne become batman (in general batman mythos) is so that no child would ever have to experience what he experienced. It was NOT so that all the people that were like the mugger that killed his parents would be punished. but thats his mentality at the beginnnig of the film. He sees a guy about to get beat up and hes like "'oh you wanna beat people up, let me do it to you first" not "damn that guys in danger, let me help him by taking down those thugs"
this is a movie about batman going from being "vengeance," which he realized even criminals can be, to being "justice" which is a force for only good. It was a movie where batman had character development, so I liked it alot!
personally i could not concentrate on the review due to the sound of a jibbering chattering voice that echoed spider monkeys at the zoo. apart fron tht spot on
Ben is kind of missing the point. This is the first movie in the trilogy and they are setting up a character arc. This is still a very young Batman and we see him evolve at the end of the movie
He doesn't learn that being Batman is bad. He needs to reconsider his methods of being Batman, and by the end of the movie understands that by exclusively beating up criminals is not going to help the city, but by protecting the innocent, he could make a real difference. When the riddler thug says that he is vengeance, it makes Batman realize that he is essentially no different than the riddler, and needs to be better than that. And yeah, this movie is 3 hours long, but that's because it takes the time to hold on some shots and allowed for way better impact and emotion from the characters (and mainly Batman). (Edit: When I say protecting the innocent, I mean that he also needs to give them hope. When he saves the man from the gang at the beginning, the man is still afraid even after being saved. Batman realizes that he needs to be a symbol of hope to the people, while still instilling fear into criminals.)
I COMPLETELY AGREE WITH THIS. I think Ben is WAY wrong on this one. The movie was phenomenal. Good enough for me to stomach the 5 seconds of wokeness even! Unlike Rise of Skywalker.
Batman is ninja, what the film is trying to do is make batman fill the role of superman, they even spit the word "hope" few minutes into the ending LMFAO
Okay, a year later and a more careful rewatch later, I am going to completely disagree with Ben. The entire film is about authenticity, empathy, and healing. Every single character in this film save Gordon and the Mayor elect has awful, traumatic pasts that control them. They are all preoccupied with their pain. It's blinded them to the world around them and how their actions only continue the cycle of hurt because they don't reach out. Robert Pattison delivers a wonderful performance. His Bruce Wayne is self-deluded, tortured, and in denial. He believed his parents were ideal paragons. He never considered that they were real human beings with flaws. That's understandable given his young age when they were taken from him. He is arrested as that child. When he stares directly at the Mayor's son after investigating his murder scene, he's thinking about how he vowed to never let this happen again, and he feels the shame of his failure. Bruce's arc in the film is realizing that the world needs more of him. It needs him to be a more complete person to be truly effective in implementing change. All throughout the film, characters confront Bruce, pleading with him to reach out. To share his pain with them and start healing together. You can see that in his relationship with Alfred. At the beginning of the film, Alfred is begging Bruce to open up to him, but Bruce can't. He's locked in his own pain, and he knows which buttons to push on Alfred to get him to leave him alone. Andy Serkis' performance is heartbreaking. To Alfred, it's like watching someone you love destroy themselves through addiction. The Mayor-elect's name is BE-lla Real. It's not the most subtle message, but she's the one that makes Bruce start to consider that other people are hurting other than him. Catwoman's story is inspired by her Long Halloween backstory. She, like Bruce, is an orphan, and she, like Bruce, has encased her heart in a suit of black vinyl armor. She rescues strays, because she sees herself in them. She wishes someone had been there to save her, and so she extends her empathy to other hard-luck cases, like her possible girlfriend/ roommate. She's also extraordinarily lonely (like Bruce). In the scene where he confronts her as she attempts to steal back her lover's passport, you can see both Bruce and Selina calm and start to enjoy their embrace after Batman grabbed her to hide them from the security sweep. In almost every interaction with Bruce, you can hear her saying, "Can I trust you? Will you help me? Please do not hurt me. I've been hurt too much." It's because Bruce can empathize with her that she did not ultimately kill Falcone. After he is eventually killed, you may be able to see from her expression that his death did not solve her problems. It wasn't the magic wand she believed it would be, and it brought her no satisfaction. She too learns to set her selfishness aside and comes to Bruce's aid right when he needs her most. They saved each other. The Riddler in this film is Bruce's dark reflection and a warning about what using fear alone truly inspires. He's what Bruce could have become if he had not initially taken the selfless vow of a wounded child to make a world where nobody would have to feel the fear, anguish, regret, shame, and self-loathing that haunt him. The Riddler is begging to be heard. With each note he writes to the Batman his handwriting becomes larger, more dramatic, and more desperate. The Riddler believes that he and the Batman are the same. He thinks that someone finally understands him and that he isn't alone anymore. He may even believe that he was an orphan living in the same orphanage as he did. The Riddler is also a warning to the audience. This is what you can become if you get sucked into the toxic vortex of social media, where no one is empathetic and everyone is concerned with getting their next like, leaving behind their next sarcastic, passive-aggressive criticism. The validation one receives from those is cheap and no replacement for the real thing. The Riddler's plan is very simple. It's revenge. He wants to kill the people that robbed him of a happy future: The corrupt government officials that plundered funds meant for the needy, and then the society itself that is responsible for the nightmare his life became. The motivation for the final attack is clear. I believe Ben was missing the forest for the trees because he was looking for micro-aggressions that would give him an excuse to demonstrate his big ol' brain. So, no. I do not believe this film hates Batman. This film wants the best for him. He doesn't have to be Superman and he isn't. At the start of the film he stares at the Bat symbol in the sky where he is still ruled by fear this is the photo negative the end of the film where Bruce is starring up at a rising sun the beginning of his healing.
The more I listen to Ben's movie reviews, the more I am shocked by his sheer inability to understand subtext. Batman's arc in this film is not him coming to the conclusion that he shouldn't fight criminals; it's him coming to the conclusion that he shouldn't brutally beat them up and obliterate their bones. That he should function as Gotham's protector and savior, a symbol for justice; not a relentless beast that stands for vengeance. They nailed the character here, really showing the inner scared child that he carries around, full of grief and pain and rage. The point of the movie is to show him giving closure to his trauma.
Yes but he was already a symbol for justice. Vengeance is justice. What do you think the characters in Batman Begins thought he was going around carrying civilians and handing out flowers? People already knew Batman was a good guy they don’t need to see him in broad daylight.
@@cydra_infinity1423 Vengeance for vengeance's sake is not justice. Thinking that this film's ending implies that Batman will become a hippie pacifist is missing the point in a gargantuan way. He will still lurk in the shadows and beat up bad guys, but with the purpose of protecting the people of Gotham, not on a brutal rampage to relieve his own pain.
This is the same thing when it comes to Man Of Steel...ppl shat'd on that movie without understanding that Superman in that movie hasn't become the Superman we all know yet
Batman hardly beat up anyone in this movie. 2 scenes at most did he give a brutal beating , and 1 of those scenes is when he injected himself with adrenaline.
but what’s the point of you want to completely reject and deconstruct the character, but won’t actually own up to it? if Batman’s meant to inspire hope and change, why does he dress like a bat and hide in the shadows?
@@Sam_T2000 the whole point of this movie is batman still learning to how to be batman. He learns he has to inspire hope by the end of the movie. Keep in mind he's only been batman for 2 years so he's still trying to figure it out
@@dg8games438 - since when has Batman ever been a symbol of hope? that’s more Superman’s kind of thing. if anything, Batman is a symbol of justice, but more than that he’s just a man willing to do the right thing in a city full of people doing the wrong thing, leading by example. he’s a hero, but he’s no savior.
@@Sam_T2000 you just said batman is meant to inspire hope and now you are saying when has he ever been a symbol of hope. And yes batman is a symbol of justice and more and this movie is him realizing that's what he has to do.
@@Sam_T2000 this batman is different from the others, he's all about vengeance and what-not. The other batmen from the past are symbols of justice. This first movie with pattinson is him learning a lesson that he needs to be more than just vengeance. I'm sure in the next pattinson batman movie we'll be seeing it
I actually appreciated the fact that they didn't try to explain why Batman has to be Batman, we've all heard it before and everybody watching the film already knows about Batman's origins. Rehashing it over and over with every new movie is annoying and keeps us from seeing all of the other really awesome parts of the story that happen later in his career.
"You don't really know why batman is doing what he's doing": Answer: vengeance and anger. "He doesn't really do anything with his wealth" Answer: He doesn't care about it, and squanders it on his batman stuff.
1. Catwoman isn't always bad and is more of an anti-hero in a lot of iterations of Batman, so saying it's woke because she's of color (which honestly I don't even know if that's true it's been a while since I watched the movie) is really dumb. 2. The fact he doesn't donate to charity doesn't mean the movie is depicting him as a 'bad white man', that might be the most backwards take on this movie ever. It's like that because A. he is spending him money to quite literally FIGHT crime, and B. because he has a hard time being Bruce Wayne and separating him from Batman, which is apart of that plot that you mentioned.
You can agree or disagree with this man's politics but it warms my heart to know we can all come together to say he did a terrible job reviewing this movie lol
@@BornTwizted87 read the comments everyone’s disagreeing. People like by default
I really enjoyed the movie. Looking forward for more sequels
For me Ben being wrong or hateful towards things people love isn’t a surprise. So this is on theme.
I feel like people are assigning a lot more depth and worth to this film than it deserves. It was three hours. I felt fairly hollow in terms of getting what I wanted from these films having spent THREE HOURS in a theater.
he should stick to “debating” college kids.
Personally, I think that the lack of a distinction between Bruce Wayne and Batman is kind of the point. Bruce spends a lot of the movie so obsessed with Batman that he’s forgotten how to be Bruce Wayne.
Alfred made it very clear too
it was year 2 of him being Batman. This is not 38 year old Bruce who knows what he is doing. The film clear shows he just started out when he fails to glide in the air and obviously the lack of equipment we know him to have
I get your standpoint but I cant help but disagree. It makes sense from the standpoint that he just started, but balancing batman and Bruce Wayne has always been a massive part of the comics
It’s also basically the point of Alfred’s lectures towards him. It would be one thing if the movie didn’t address it, but I feel like they did a great job in showing us
Even the Riddler understood this
13:11 "Batman has to be shown the error of his ways"
That's called a character arc lol
@happy little trees 239 I disagree. I think it was very in step with Batman as a character, especially considering how early into his career he was. He’s less mature, less balanced in mind, and less calm to his approach. He’s a new Batman, young, full of rage, and less likely to pull a punch. Anyone saying that he’s not in character in this movie must’ve never heard of character growth, especially when in the Batman comics, Batman time and time again shows growth. He isn’t the perfect Batman in every single story, in fact, in many modern Batman stories, even older and largely popular Batman stories, he shows flaws, and the story and events of each comic consist of story beats that help Bruce to develop more as a man and to overcome these flaws. The story of Bruce being more vengeful and angry in the beginning of this movie, and later finding the error of his ways and seeing that rather than being a symbol of fear, he needs to be a symbol of hope, is very in line with Batman as a character. As we’ve seen in many comics before in many different ways. That’s what makes him such a special character, he shows flaws, he makes mistakes, but in the end he always finds a way to better himself or to fix his mistakes, because deep down he’s a good person. Better than many. Anyone who says that this movie wasn’t in line with Batman’s character has a misunderstanding of Batman as a character. The whole argument of “Batman is perfect and does not show flaws” just suggests that the person making the argument has a very shallow understanding of Batman, and has read very little of his material. I’d also like to point out that the movie incorporated Batman’s internal dialogue, as we see and read countless times in his comics. He’s constantly speaking to himself, and it’s often about his current predicament or current internal strife. Just goes to show more so that this movie was supposed to show the growth of Bruce as a person, and of Batman as a symbol of hope. Bruce was not always perfect, and neither was Batman, and some of his best and most famous stories have shown this. Not to mention, in Batman’s most praised live action adaptation, being the dark knight, he shows flaws. He overcomes those flaws, and in the end makes a decision based on the experiences and the events he faces in the story. Now, I agree that the good characteristics of Batman, those being his understanding of right and wrong, and justice and so on, are what makes him Batman. BUT, in saying this, you would also have to acknowledge the fact that in order to reach such a level state of mind, Batman would’ve had to experience growth to get to those values. You can’t just ignore it and say that he was always perfect, because he wasn’t, and he even very often shows that he’s not perfect, thus creating the basis for a lot of Batman’s more emotional storylines out there. I’d also say that they incorporated the riddler perfectly into this emotional growth for Bruce as well. It was a very good Batman story. The writers showed a clear understanding of what makes a Batman story so special, the emotional depth and growth of the character, and how the story would need to tie into that. By the end of the movie he clearly grows into his new shoes as Batman seeing that he needs to be better, and do better. I don’t know what more you can ask for, that’s actually just Batman. All of those values that you said make Batman what he is, he is learning in this movie. He is going through the motions he needs to to become that “perfect Batman” that everyone knows and loves.
@@reekyfartin this batman is trash accept it, the whole point of batman is that he is vengeance, he is not superman, he is not supposed to represent hope, that is superman, barman is supposed to be dark, and many other videos habe shown , ben isnt a movie critic but he is right about some things, but watch different reviews that say its bad , you will realize its not judt hate, i liked the movie when i saw it but yes other than music and some action its bad, and yes, bruce is supposed to give charity, the whole point is he tries to help with both his money and justice, this batman just doesnt care, he aint batman
@happy little trees 239 Batman in many of his appearances in comic was a ruthless vigilante who beat up and even murdered criminals. You think there is something okay with someone who dresses as a bat vigilante? And besides, what was there to be done in this movie? The biggest outside corruption Maroni was already apprehended and all was left was petty crimes. Organised corruption was very secret and very lowkey, to the point all officials were involved with it. There was little Batman can do against this. Or even Bruce Wayne, all this goes beyond his field.
You missed the entire point of the movie.
@@ericmagana3215 You wrote a whole nonsense essay of a comment and basically said nothing. Batman isn't vengeance. He's justice.
You're ignorant. Accept it.
@@tiaaaron3278 the batman is trash, and im not gonna explain why to you, go watch the negative reviews and thr plot holes of the movie for yourself, and then come back and tell me its good, but research first, i day this because i researched and yeah those people have a point to their critiques, thr batman is overrated as fudge
After decades of Batman movies and shows, we don’t need to see his parents murder again. Personally I liked that they alluded to it and found a different way to spin the culprit.
I also liked how this shows Bruce still brooding like he hasn’t dealt with the trauma enough to function. I think this is the jumping off point to see him become the man he is in the other movies.
Yeah, I think Ben was way off the mark with this review. He basically misinterpreted the entire thing. It’s not an origin story because who the heck doesn’t know Batman’s origin? Bruce Wayne is a shell of a character because he only cares about being Batman. The entire point of the film is to show Bruce going from the vigilante who literally everyone in Gotham fears, to becoming the beacon of hope. Obviously this is just the start of his character evolution. I think The Batman is 10x better than the crap DC has pushed out over the last ten years
Sure, but can we stop with this greater then life BS, symbols of this and that, can't batman just be batman? Leave that BS for the end or when he's passing the torch.
@@china_sickness7005 except.... It was credited as a batman origin I'm pretty sure
@@4Everlast This is an elseworld story were Batman is finding himself more than finding his purpose which is what I think the movie does badly at presenting in the end to be honest.
The whole message of the movie is not "Batman is bad" or that Bruce Wayne is meaningless. It's all about hope, at the end of the movie Batman realizing his purpose is to inspire and be more than just a man fighting crime.
It's sort of the same message that Batman begins has but different because clearly Batman has given up on the city that's what it starts out with.
The whole movie is about him not doing anything else than feed his own ego, his own drive for Vengeance and not because of justice.
That's the thing people are used to seeing Batman being fully aware of why he is doing what he is doing.
In this version he is 2 years into this and have only done it because he likes to beat up people because he hasn't understood how to deal with his own pain.
I think this was badly shown in the movie to be honest, it was less clear.
I don't think Matt dislikes Batman but this is another take on him and not the prime universe Batman. The movie has great scenes and the filming and the city is just perfect for Batman.
Do I think the movie could have been better? Yes but that goes for a lot of movies.
Since it's getting a sequel I think they will explore Bruce wayne further and his Batman.
@@gustaf3811 Yeah... I got what it's about, it's not just clear it's spoon feeding you the message, not sure why, are they aiming for the kids? PG13, was it? You can't have a moody, dark horror-ish batman movie as you pander to kids, kids ain't watching this movie.
Loved the atmosphere, the detective side of Bat's, love the director and many of his previous films, never doubted Pattinson, the black guy playing the comissioner was always on my list of underused actors, so it's good to see he's getting meatier roles, enjoyed Catwoman,the Penguin was GREAT, the freakin batmobile was something else, this movie did a LOT of good, felt slightly rushed at the end with all the action that came out of nowhere and cranking a slow procedural into a Batman flick, but hey, it was done very, very well.
I'm excited to see more, but I hope they don't slip into magic-land territory, I need a palette cleanser after all the Z.Snyder cartoonish CGI as he calls it dark and gritty.
It’s incredible how committed he is to having the worst takes
Some people are really obsessed with being different
Real hater shit lmao
He thinks he is rlly quirky for this one☝️
@@katherinehudson384 quirk up white boy
He also has a strange obsession with race
I would argue that Bruce Wayne isn't even in this movie. It's Batman the entire time even when he's not wearing the mask. I'm sure he'll adopt the Bruce Wayne "persona" in the next movie. This is just the beginning of his character journey.
Exactly, people miss the point when they mention Bruce Wayne barely being in the movie, that’s the whole point at this moment of him being Batman he is truly himself while being Batman not being Bruce
Well according to another CZcams comment the director did it intentionally for that reason. Apparently we are to see how Bruce Wayne is before he adopted the Bruce Wayne persona we all know.
I myself liked how we gotta see batz as Batman majority of the time I d give it iabout 7.5 outta 10
this is year 2 and we're missing year 1 from the tv series
You from talking about politics to talking about film
Nolan’s Batman is really the gold standard and he explains the Bruce Wayne thing really well
11:14 By that logic, Batman should be perfectly fine killing criminals since they're criminals and he's not. But he doesn't. He has to be different than the man who killed his parents. That's whole the point of the ending. He has to get Gotham hope, not just punishment.
You forget: Ben doesn't believe in Hope, just "Facts and Logic"
Well Batman isn’t really doing anything
I think all of us apart from Ben understood that the ending was not about Batman not fighting crime, it was about continuing to fight crime for a different reason. To fight crime not as a horrifying monster to all, but as a beacon of hope for Gotham.
He never said that the movie was about Batman not fighting crime. He's speaking about the message as it's written to relate to irl. Batman in this movie is simply the idol for that message, representing the opposite of the marxist vision.
To quote myself: "The fact that Ben's audience is too dumb to get the point of the movie is legitimately suprising me. So many folks are somehow missing the fact that Ben is talking about the marxist message that's being pushed, as it relates to irl, not about whether or not they're gonna make Batman stop being Batman. Batman in this movie is simply idol of the anti-marxist position. Both he and his dad (his dad usually being represented as a good guy who did a lot of philanthropy) are turned into evil cis white men billionare caricatures and then Batman's approach to crime is a caricature of the conservative view of dealing with crime. More importantly, this isn't the first time that this message has been pushed.
I forget the name of the comic, maybe it was Batman: Black and White or something like that (I remember it being an anthology, essentially, that was drawn in black and white), but there was a comic written not too long in black and white where one of the stories was that Bruce could do more good with his money than as Batman. Batman was drawn as a useless zombie in many situations, but in those same situations Bruce was drawn as a vibrant living man whose money could solve the problems. That's the same thing that's going on in this film. It's like a specifically anti-Nolan version of Batman, but in general it's acting (as Ben said, hating) Batman as a character, in general. Even Nolan's version was doing this, but it still respected the character."
The movie sucked Colin, Batman wouldnt throw cluster bombs and rain down glass on innocent people!
@@roughcutretrospect7235 He does stuff like that all the time in the comics
@@roughcutretrospect7235 Perhaps that's the point the movie is trying to make. Batman SHOULD care more about saving people than catching criminals, but throughout the movie that is clearly not the case, until the end when Bruce realizes that Batman has to be something more. He has to be the man who cares as much as the man who scares.
I'm reminded of the Justice League Unlimited episode "Epilogue" which makes the really compelling case that what makes Batman a hero isn't his money or gadgets or intimidation, but his compassion.
@@blanktrigger8863 you guys are fucking insane it’s a Batman movie dude not a conspiracy Jesus Christ
Ben Shapiro is exactly the kind of person I would expect to not like this movie
He don’t like most of things of this world
@Literal-Littoral right wingers just hate female actors speaking at all lmao
@@nh8444 there was no woke politics. Wut
@Literal-Littoral “batwoman”💀☠️
@Literal-Littoral I replied, but my comments got deleted by CZcams. Hurray for free speech.
The real detective ability is figuring out exactly when Ben is transitioning into his add 😂
started falling asleep
I think its about intention. He realized he was doing it for the wrong reason, then he found the right reason. He still beats up the bad guys, but instead of doing it because he hates them, he does it because he loves Gotham.
"The true soldier doesn't fight because he hates what's infront of him, but because he loves what's behind him." GK Chesterton
And how does that explain everyone in Gotham calling him Vengeance? Did the gangbanger kid go to every door and tell them the Bat guy's name is Vengeance? 🤣
The point is that outside of 2 dialogues that were there to technically check off the ideas of that, it didn't show the emotional weight or value to that realization individually.
yessss
@@RS-kt6bo dude was live streaming on his phone when he pummeled the dude
You honestly could not be more incorrect about the purpose of the film. The director does not hate Batman in any way shape or form, the movie and message behind it was brilliant. Batman went from doing what he was doing out of anger, revenge, and "vengeance" which by the end of the movie was able to grasp that he was sending the wrong message and had no chance to protect Gotham if he stayed the way he was. In no way was he saying that he would not still be fighting, targeting, or beating up criminals, he realized he had to be more intentional with it and focus on helping others not just brutally beating on criminals to ease his personal rage.
Spot on.
I think Ben Shapiro just watches Batman movies to live vicarously through. TDK Rises was peak Batman for him in this sense.
As far as Riddler's seemingly illogical motive to blow up Gotham? After shining a light on Gotham's injustices, deliberately being captured so he can be protected at Arkham while the city washes away and he can converse with Batman all the while inciting his legion to take over...it's not surprising he wants to get rid of Gotham completely. Self-righteous psychopaths seem to want to take down everyone not a part of their movement (think Timothy McVeigh). The logical intent would be that once Gotham falls into anarchy, he'd be freed by his followers and he and Batman can rule the city. The only thing I don't like about it was Riddler giving Batman hints in the Arkham scene like he's a Bond villain but I will give a slight pass in that psuedo-intellectuals like Riddler/Zodiac killer love being the smartest person in the room and his ego got the best of him. It's not a stretch to think Riddler has some...personality flaws to say the least.
Soooooo Shakespearean, sssssoooooo brilliant. Lol I dnt get why ppl give super hero movies more credit than it’s worth. It just dnt find anything entertaining about any of them. They all suck.
He definitely doesn't love Batman that much. If you have to drastically change a character there's no love their. That's just earning a paycheck.
@@thedave6153 he didn’t though. this is the most accurate live-action depiction of batman i’ve seen
@@davidbarroso1960 um. No sir. This is far from accurate.
I actually really enjoyed this film. Granted, I see some woke points but I don't think it hurt the film so much that it was bad. Remember Batman is still devoted to stopping criminals at the end of the film. He monologues that crime will go up after the flood and he says he "has to be more." That idea of Batman learning he has to be more at the beginning of his career is compelling and not unreasonable. He's been at it for 2 years and while not insignificant, its still relatively early on in his career.
I think the director said himself this was suppose to have real life elements in the film so that people can relate to it. Whether it was for the people or more money is up for debate ig but this film is more dark and real life in a sense than any other batfilm. That's my viewpoint.
The word woke has lost any and all meaning thanks to the right lol.
@@alexmaverick6647 thats the society we live in with everything woke in Hollywood feminist girlboss nature/Mary sue as a character or forced representation over story peoples view changes but this movie is the least woke outa other garbage like in msheu
@@sarov7658 You can't be serious with this comment lol
yeah I'm in the same boat. Action was good, Soundtrack was kickass, liked all the characters. I'm willing to overlook that one cringe moment cause the rest of the movie sure as hell makes up for it
Ben makes many good points. If The Riddler's focus is to murder corrupt politicians who diverted funds from child assistance projects... why would his grand finale be a mass murder of thousands of innocents? It is hard to find logical scripts these days... Ben says "the writer hates Batman," which is what I thought about the Star Wars sequels & sad "Emo Kylo". They must've hated Luke Skywalker!
“For the greater good”
True except I would change that to: "Ben makes ONE good point."
I think Ben actually complimented the movie without knowing. He said there was no Bruce Wayne, there was just Batman. At the end of the movie the Riddler says something similar and points out the fact that trying to find out who Batman was was meaningless because Batman IS his true identity.
Gay
That's exactly what I was thinking! This movie had the perfect story arc in my opinion.
Bens point is just that Bruce Wayne is the character and Batman is the true person and changing that so Batman can weirdly figure out that Bruce Wayne needs be more active in Gotham is super weird and a opposite from the comics
@@nickmcmillan2511 this is exactly how I felt during the movie and really my only problem with it! It is a pretty big problem I just say, every other Batman movie “and in comics” Bruce is eccentric and the city loves him and like they say in the movie “the prince of the city” yet he doesn’t act like it at all, he’s a complete awkward loner not flashy at all nor does it seem Wayne enterprise is a very major part of the city at all. The point of Batman “acting” Bruce Wayne is that it’s supposed to seem like he’s so busy being this busy guy essentially running the city how could he possibly be Batman. But it’s like why would everyone be talking about Pattinsons Bruce Wayne when he’s always hiding away, maybe because they know it’s rare to see him which is an odd but sensual take, it’s just not the norm and movie does kind of contradict itself in that sense
I think peoples issue is no dual personas. He is batman all the time. Batman traditionally puts on a Bruce Wayne mask to hide his identity to the public. But I think this version is still too angry to care and just hasn't figured the Bruce Wayne identity out yet. There were clues alluding to it though. The main one being Alfred handing him the cuff links saying, "you still have to learn how to be a Wayne too". So I beleive he will develop that identity in the sequels which im cool with. If he never does, I won't be a fan of that aspect either.
Yeah...disagree here. Batman literally says at the end he has to become "more" than vengeance. Not throw vengeance away altogether - but add to it, so it's not just vengeance for vengeance's sake. To that, I can totally get on board with it. He's still developing and finding himself, and still hasn't mastered the duality of being both Batman/Wayne without one taking over the other completely.
This was just Ben’s bad attempt at making a movie look bad by trying to bring his political agenda into it.....😒
I don't think so the reason why bruce became batman. It was always because he wanted to be a beacon of hope. To prove that there is still good in this world and its worth saving.
Then he isn't Batman. Batman is vengence. 'I am vengence. I am the night. I AM BATMAN!!!
@@phoenixmagi2 If Batman was only vengeance then he would kill the joker without a second thought
@@jakefromstatefarm2806 nope. Batmam does not take lives. He is not a murder.
3:21 how is having three black characters in a movie *wokeness*?
I hate woke politics as much as the next guy, but it sounds like you're complaining about the fact that this movie has black people in it
He means there are no bad black characters and everyone in the city sees all the white characters as bad guys, catwoman hates bruce and they show white polititians as corrupt and bad but the promising black candidate as the hope for the city
I agree with this view in most parts. I left the the theater at the flood part. I thought it was finally over.
Yea. The last thing you want is to ask yourself: "Is it over yet?!" A good film DOES NOT make you ask that.
Besides the review did anyone notice that Batman inserted a syringe into himself and gave himself a boost. The “medicine” was green and reminded me of Banes serum
Yeah and it looks like it will set up for upcoming sequel that bruce will be addicted to it just like in comics and Bane will make an appearance
I figured it was just adrenaline, but a tie in to banes serum would be interesting.
Yep I was quite happy to see that, I think Robert's Batman has faced Bane before and managed to use Bane's venom for medicine purposes
@@AR-cv2fi He became addicted to it? I don't remember that at all
Duuuude! I thought the same exact thing!!
Discovering Bruce Wayne is basically his character arch. By the end of the movie he realizes that what Gotham really needs is a figure of hope - and so I imagine in the next movie, he’ll be crafting that Bruce Wayne persona and utilizing his money and status more to help with his agendas. I love the idea of starting here to see an evolution (throughout this movie) and then expanded in eventual sequels. Really don’t understand that complaint at all.
Something he could've done from the beginning like in the com.... Oh wait...
@@akatoshmorgul9367 I mean we’ve already seen that man. Like… 7 times. Kinda cool seeing a different take for once. And there’s plenty of comic runs where Bruce is more recluse and isolated.
@@akatoshmorgul9367 oh great, you mean the same story arc that nolan’s batman went through in his first movie. that’s great, we need to keep rehashing the same concepts because they’re “comic accurate” and it should be the only way the stories are done. This batman’s journey reflects HIS own journey, serving this film’s unique take while also not steering away from what batman fundamentally is. jesus christ you guys are so strange in wanting the same film over and over again
You understood the Batman movie completely. Thank goodness I found your comment, one of the more recent comments on this video, to be spot on and understanding of what the Batman was all about.
I like the idea of him having to find his Bruce Wayne "persona", but it didn't really work in the film for me. He just felt like a brooding edgy teenager. When he talks about how he's "not afraid to die..." as he intensely stares at Alfred through his long black hair over his face with Nirvana playing in the background I felt like rolling my eyes. Loved his Batman, but some of the dialogue/scenes when he's himself as Bruce felt a bit odd and could've been done better imo.
3:11 “Batman is shown the error of his ways”
Yeah… it’s called a character arc mr failed screenwriter.
I think the whole point was that this young version of Batman hadn’t figured out how to be Bruce Wayne yet but by the end it seemed he realised it
I'm actually glad that Ben's fans can openly disagree with his take. Non-echo chambers are refreshing.
I'm actually glad someone saw the movie I did. I thought I was the only one to see all the junk that was hidden behind a pretty sight.
yup. Ben seems to forget that Batman is literally on his 2nd year only, of course it won't resemble the batman he's used to.
@@sergiom1136 I had almost the same reaction as Ben. The longer the movie played, the less I liked it
@@emosongsandreadalongs if you didn’t compare this movie to other plot lines of Batman would you enjoy it more as an original take on the Batman?
It’s a fucking superhero movie
It is really impressive how Ben came to the wrong conclusion on basically every single point he's making in this video and even had reasoning behind it that anyone who actually saw the movie could see right through.
Pretty good summary of his career.
Like when he said the Riddler had no reason to bomb Gotham? It was one explained in on sentence that was perfect it was to “Wash away the sins of this city”. Amazing review I love how wrong he is on everything lol
Explained in one*
Proper One Such as what? Sounds like you're just simping for the movie giving no counter argument.
@@klaythompson663 well, i do simp for Robert Pattinson, that's a fact.
But i'm just not in the mood to make a gigantic comment explaining my thoughts about the movie when there's so many people in here that disagree with him already
Wow you missed the entire point of the movie.
I thought it was the most Batman batman movie ever, too often the villain or villains have overshadowed Batman in his own movie, we got a celebration of the character in this movie
The ending isn't saying Batman shouldn't exist and be a shallow charity man, it's saying that Batman should look after the people he should protect after he brutally beats up their attackers, and not just disappear into the night. He should be MORE THAN VENGEANCE; he should inspire hope. Like every other superhero. This was shown throughout the movie where everyone around him is still scared shitless even after he dislocates every bone in some low life thug's body. But by the end he shows that he gives enough of a shit about Gotham by helping with rescues after he's done with his badass fight scenes.
At that point though when it’s just about helping, wouldn’t it be more beneficial to help with his resources as Bruce Wayne than as just one individual as Batman?
@@Ash-lf6to no because he still wants to instill fear on those who prey on the weak. bruce wayne can’t do that and won’t do that. only batman can.
@@Ash-lf6to pretty sure he'll do both in the next movie
But, the well is also already poisoned in a sense, gotham is so crime ridden that if he tried to donate anything it would just go to the corrupt politicians
@@Ash-lf6to because he does both. Batman/Bruce Wayne is more than just a violent vigilante. He’s the kindest human in the DC. He’s more human than any other character. It’s unfortunate that that side of him is often lost in media.
Very interesting take! I wonder though, isn't that Batman. The torn up bitter, tortured vigilanty who beats up criminals and makes them afraid to do what they do. He leaves the saved just that, saved because he can't give more than hurt the wrong doers. He's not good with care and compassion. Gotham doesn't need him to, it needs a pitbull not a love giving puppy. And where do they go from there? I think they started well, but are going in a direction to make Batman into Superman.
You missed the whole hour of Batman beating thugs to a pulp. It’s year 2. He’s learning.
"The Batman is a needless collage of not only better movies, but more egregiously of better Batman movies as director/co-writer Matt Reeves and co-writer Peter Craig create an utterly inferior and infuriating vision of the Dark Knight."...SPOT ON!!!
@@EMPATICO4 bro what
@@EMPATICO4 Agreed. This film is pointless and I regret that I wasted 3 hours of my life sitting uncomfortably while checking my watch every 5 min like if you’re gonna do detective stuff at least make it more interesting and batmanny smh.
@@neitherrealms3862 Or as I described it to my brother "totally forgettable".
@@neitherrealms3862 I really enjoyed the movie but at one point I started checking the time too lol
The film does not HATE Batman.
Also Ben Shapiro: _"I really enjoyed Disney's Star Whats The Rise of Palpatine."_
Ben: We don't know Bruce's motivation.
Batman: IM VENGEANCE!!
Me: I get Bruce is doing justice more for hate and anger because of his parents tragedy.
Movie sucks. Respect his opinion.
@@kylelee8685 His opinion sucks, respect my opinion 🤣🤣
@@hermitcard4494 Wahhh Wahhh Wahhh. He doesn't like what I like.
@@kylelee8685 LoL 🤣🤣 bunch of edge lord kids having the fantasy anyone who disagrees them are crying. Are you projecting?
@@hermitcard4494 this film is criminal to the batman name. Just because your feelings for batman are heavy don't be jaded by justifying excuses for why the film is underdeveloped and lacking in fundamental values
It’s interesting that Ben is basing a lot of his opinion off of the comics when it’s a relatively common storyline that when Batman first started, he wasn’t as empathetic towards anyone. Especially if we look at comic Batman over the past 15 years, his dialogue is pretty spot on with Pattinson’s portrayal, and there have been a lot of self-realization moments, similar to what happened in the movie.
Exactly! This whole video I'm saying to my self "He never read Year One"
Yes exactly it follows a lot of them very closely and a lot of what he says is not taking into account the messaging that is subtle and not obvious.
Yeah I actually loved the fact that we got to see this side of Batman, his internal struggles that helped shape who the Batman is
Well said.
That's looking at Batman comics over the past 15 years. What about before that? Is that irrelevant Batman tripe, now?
I personally thought Bruce’s motivation was very clear and makes this take very unique. He starts as vengeance. He’s taking revenge on criminals because it’s the only way he can cope with the trauma of losing his idolized parents. He learns that they were flawed, and that vengeance doesn’t make him better than villains who take a similar motivation like the riddler. So he starts redirecting this motivation to help others.
I loved the movie but in terms of motivation ONLY, I agree half heartedly with Ben. i understood his motivation BUT the movie never really sells it with any dialogue or visual scenes that show or discuss why he's doing what he's doing. You sorta have to assume "his parents are dead therefore Batman vigilante". The death of his parents motivate him, but he never quite gives any dialogue that explains why he wants to emulate them in any way. Batman begins was a beautiful example of how to show Bruce's parents as real humans not just being shot, they interacted with young bruise and taught him the value of Gotham City.
@@fallen4life080 The shooter at the end literally says “ I am vengeance”, and Batman gives him a clear as day look that he is no bette than him. That’s why he goes down to help everyone, he gradually overtime goes from vengeance to a symbol of hope. At the beginning that man getting jumped was scared of him and at the end the woman couldn’t let go of his hand. He’s changing gradually, that’s why Cat Woman said “You’re already taken for”. It’s not that hard to plot together
@@Aces-qx9ln plus they don't need to show us what motivated him in becoming Batman cuz literally almost everyone knows.
@@yourwrongimright101_69 exactly, I thought it was super obvious why they didn’t need to (yet again) explain who Batman was. But apparently Ben was utterly floored by this
@@Aces-qx9ln Thats not at all what I was talking about, i 100% agree with that. Bruce decides he can be better. What I'm saying is that his motivation to be Batman was only superficially teased and left to us to just already know because we know who Batman is But a movie needs to assume you don't know anything about a character and build them from scratch. Therea really only a few scenes with dialogue or visuals to show that he's making choices based on his parents deaths (vengeance) and leave it to you to hit assume that his parents motivate him. Like I get i, but the movie should sell it. Overall tho this move was A material. Great movie in my.book
I thought it was interesting how The Riddler was kind of a mix between Riddler and Red Hood. The way he targeted corrupt people as well was very similar to him and I thought way of him being almost an anti-hero was really cool. He obviously wasn't like Jason Todd, but he was similar to Red Hood as a crimefighter in the Under the Red Hood arc, especially when he targets Black Mask, who would be really cool to also see in this universe. Also, another fun Robin-related fact: at the beginning of the movie when there's the street gang about to beat up some old guy, there's a younger kid who seems to be pretty hesitant to beat him up. He's actually played by Jay Lycurgo, who also plays Tim Drake in the HBO show Titans and does it really well. But yeah if Ben Shapiro wants to see Frank Miller's Batman on-screen then he's just fundamentally, objectively wrong. Frank Miller's Batman in the Dark Knight Returns is supposed to be an anti-hero, which worked amazingly in that story, but also was supposed to be Batman coming out of retirement in a world where everything is absolutely awful. This gritty take on Batman ONLY works for Frank Miller, and only ever has, and why Snyder movies suck. So basically, it's a take equally as stupid as all of Ben Shapiro's others.
I have watched so many Ben Shapiro AI Dubbing now, real one looks like an AI voiceover.
I think Ben missed the point of Batman’s revelation towards the end. The beginning of the movie shows Batman as a reclusive symbol of fear. He even mentions it at the beginning by saying when the bat signal comes out “it’s a warning”. During the first half of the movie, he almost feels a bit like a villain, a silent dark figure that comes out of the shadows engaging in brutal combat with his enemies. Even when he saves that one gentleman from the subway he begs Batman not to hurt him. Up until the asylum scene, the Riddler viewed Batman as a de facto partner. In fact, the Riddler becomes incredibly distraught when he realizes Batman is not on his side. While the Riddler obviously had a deranged perspective, in one of the first scenes, the police accuse Batman of potentially being involved in the mayor’s death so it’s clear this perspective of Batman as a villain was held by others in the city. There’s a similar feel with Bruce Wayne where’s he’s portrayed as this reclusive billionaire that does nothing to help the city even though it’s rapidly declining into chaos.
Towards the end, he realizes that the city is deeply distrustful and scared of his Batman persona whereas his Wayne persona is viewed as just another (reclusive) member of the elite. He realizes that as Batman he has to be more than a symbol of fear and as Wayne, he must be more than an eccentric recluse. I imagine in the next movie we’ll see a version of Batman that has a more cooperative relationship with the police and a version of Wayne that is more of a public figure/philanthropist.
Ben thinks bvs is good. Ben is missing his big brain on this topic
@@PrestonKnightTV
I like both movies. But yeah. Here Ben just didn't get the point at all
Ben misses the point on a lot of shit lol
This movie was bad on many accounts.
The truly breaking point is when one of the terrorists in the Garden answers to the question “who are you” by saying “vengeance”, the same term that Batman uses in the start of the movie to call himself. That’s when he realizes that with vengeance, hate and fear he won’t be able to change the city, because people need hope.
"I'm vengeance" Here's your reason, that's why Bruce became Batman. The plot of the movie is not about how "batman bad" but how this particular batman motives are pretty gray. He doesn't really fight to protect the innocents, he fights to avenge his parents. The whole talk about criminals and justice is mostly just makeup. Pattinson actually talked about this in an interview, how his interpretation of the character was deeply rooted not in justice but in the idea of vengeance, how he sees in every thug he beats up those that murdered his family. Matt Reeves' batman is driven by HATRED, frustration and agression, like he is constantly living his trauma trying to rewrite history. The police and even civilians are scared of him because he is legit an absolute freak.
Megamind
they actually mentioned this in the film i believe, they said something ab him reliving it and being able to take his anger and get his revenge on the criminals he is beating to a pulp
Literally the first spoken line from Batman
Ben Shapiro: hE dOEsNT No WhY hE baTmAN
A very solid rebuttal. Well done 👌
Until the end he realizes that not saving the innocent would make him similar to the criminals so he becomes a beacon of hope.
Just watched this movie last night. Not a bad movie, I thought but two major problems I saw that mean it can never be in the league of Nolan's Dark Knight.
1st - Batman is supposed to be worlds greatest detective but at no point does he take initiative away from the Riddler. The Riddler is in control the whole time. That's fine for the first part of the movie, but there need to be a switch where Batman being unbelievably clever puts the Riddler on the defensive.
2nd - That sea wall thing was sooo out of left field. Maybe I missed it but I don't think it was mentioned until the bombs went off. The problem is that this was such an easy fix! Have the sea wall maintenance be linked to the Renewal fund - the fund is drained by corruption and the sea wall is now decrepit. Have this mentioned before the bombs. Now the sea wall is tied to everything else Riddler does, and it fits with the story. When that happened my thought was "Gotham has a sea wall?"
The Batman is a masterpiece.
If you actually listen to interviews with the Director he talks about how he drew most of his inspiration for this movie from the comics. Year One especially. Just because it isn’t a carbon copy of the previous trilogies doesn’t mean these filmmakers hate Batman….
You mean the WOKE comics. There are 2 comics out there. WOKE comics and normal comics.
@@kevinerose cry more
@@kevinerose If you think “Batman: Earth One” “The Long Halloween” “Batman: Year One” “Batman: Hush” and “Batman: Ego” (all cited as inspiration for Matt Reeves) are all “woke” comics then you’ve most likely never actually touched an actual Batman comic book in your life. identity politics have become such a factor in your life that you’re seeing “wokeness” in places where it doesn’t exist and using it as an easy excuse to dismiss anything that you don’t have any knowledge in.
@@kevinerose Last I checked Batman: Year One (the main comic series the Director based this film off of) came out in 1987.
I hate SJW garbage as much as the next person, but unless there were a ton of woke comics back in 80s I don’t know about (the era he says he based most of the movie off of comics wise) then I don’t think he hates Batman as much as Ben Shapiro thinks he does.
@@MikeSylvester1995 I've got very bad news for you; comics were ALWAYS "woke." Just look up the history of X-Men.
I think Ben missed the point of the movie as to the character Batman. At the beginning of the movie Batman is pure vengeance and at the end he realizes he has to be more than just vengeance. He has to be justice and a hero. That his vow to his parents is more than just punching criminals in the face. This is year two of Batman so we have to understand that Batman is just now figuring out what his purpose is for the city.
A big thing I agree with Ben about is Roberts portrayal as Batman/Bruce. Bruce was as skulky non charismatic person who ever went out or did anything. There are two or three moments in the film where ppl see Bruce and they are extremely happy to see him. Why are they happy to see him? Bale's Batman was a man of the town Roberts is not.
***spoilers*** Two of the biggest sins of this movie was not showing Bruce fixing the exploitation of his fathers city fund that the criminals were using. Not setting up the Wayne Foundation for orphans to start to fix one of the reasons why Riddler lost his mind. Granted the next movie can fix these issues but the movie was 3 hours long tie up those loose ends.
Ben shapiro missed the point of something? That’s unheard of! Completely out of character
Well, Pattinson is a cheery person off camera. So he CAN play a playboy if he’s told to if they’re going to make a sequel.
@PiffMasterG If you take Batman out of the movie, then the Riddler doesn't exist and he's just a crazy killer who kills everyone in Gotham at the end.
The originally had a 4 and a half run time so theres no telling what was cut to maybe be saved for a future film
At the very end of Batman's final monologue, Matt Reeves literally says the theme of the movie. "Our scars can destroy us, even after the physical wounds have healed. But if we survive them, they can transform us. They can give us the power to endure and the strength to fight." This message is not anti-police or Marxist. In this movie, Batman learns to stop holding on to his pain and trauma and to use it to become greater. That is the lesson we should all learn from Batman.
Talking about trauma is for pussies
Ben, you are SO wrong about the music score. It’s fantastic especially the tympani use.
On Ben's point referring to the Nolan trilogy and Batman's reasoning and tactics; "He needs to create a theatrical sort of fear"... I don't agree they missed that with this movie; it just wasn't given a huge amount of plot time, perhaps because the main audience knows by now why and how he became The Batman, similar to why we don't see the spider bite Peter in the latest Spider-Man trilogy- it's just not so much of an origin story.
Well, to this Batman's credit, he clearly states in the first act that he can't be everywhere at the same time, so he spread the idea (fear) into the underworld that when you commit a crime, there's a chance he's already watching you from the shadows (which Gotham City is filled with)and that you could be next.
The movie emphasizes on this idea by often making him appear by stepping out of the same shadows he's referring to.
In his own words: "I am the shadows".
It was such a cool scene, with the different criminals seeing the Batsignal and then staring into the inky blackness of the dark imagining him there. That was very well done.
The problem I had with that scene is that it was my favorite part of the movie. It was absolutely perfect, but the movie never captured that tension again for me and left me wondering where that Batman was.
I agree that the best scene was hinting he could be anywhere in the darkness, but there isnt a single fight scene where he has the element of surprise or uses the darkness or uses their paranoia against them
Peter’s spider bite gives him his powers, but it’s the death of Uncle Ben that gives him his motivation. For Batman that should be his parents being killed at a botched robbery, but there was a lack of intentionality in the way this Batman goes about doing what he does, he felt aloof during the movie. They stated his motives, but needed to show it.
yea, but at the end of the movie the Batman decides to hiding in the shadows a start helping people
get air-lifted to safety… does he need a scary costume for that?
The lesson he learns is this
Fighting for vengeance is wrong
Fighting for the innocent is good
I think Ben overthought this one
Yep, he literally admits he must become more than Vengeance. Vengeance is great, but if not tempered by justice, it becomes tyrannical.
yeah seems like a whole lot of mental gymnastics going on, just enjoy it for what it is! not everything has to be some kind of political commentary
Agreed Ben is really stuck on the Woke thing, I didn’t notice it at all, I think he’s looking for it at this point, there’s plenty of comics that have catwoman as black, who cares if the acting is good
He basically said that 🤣 but he just added other events he didn't like
as he always does. the guy is so uptight.
I took it that The Riddler was inspired by Batman's example and took it up a gear. He thought Batman approved of his methods and his plan, not realising he doesn't. It's only when the other Riddler fella says "I'm vengeance" that Batman realises the whole endeavour is no longer just about him. Whether Batman sought to be or not, he has become a symbol that people are beginning to emulate and so far it's an inspiration that's making things worse. Batman realises however that if he's had an effect for bad, maybe he can have an effect for good. That's his rebirth, when he realises it's become a responsibility to others and that there is hope after all that things will get better (remember he questions whether things are getting any better at all) if he can inspire the people of the city to combat the cities, and their own individual, ills and be reborn into a brighter future.
I kind of want to see his review of the Sam Raimi Spider-Man trilogy. They’re kind of campy and goofy sometimes but the acting, for the most part, is great and the writing does take the characters seriously, most of the time, while still keeping everything fun. Plus it’d make for a video likely filled with memes curtesy of the editing staff xD
I'd like to see Shapiro embarrass himself again
Ben Shapiro is the kid who says "gun beats everything" in rock paper scissors.
ahahahah
And it does if you let it.
was*
@@joannelg06 7
Honestly, Ben Shapiro props himself up as a genius. The only genius I actually believe in is Einstein. Einstein was a true genius.
Imagine being so poisoned by the culture war that you can't allow yourself to enjoy a truly great Batman film.
Well they acknowledged there are also systemic problems in the world as well and punching crime in the face might not always be the answer.
What was he supposed to do, enjoy the film or something?
It's not a great batman movie, it's a basic detective plot movie. Hardly any batman badassery
@@Edgarv68 there was plenty of Batman punching the shit out of people to take a break from the mystery. I think it's shy of excellence but it is great.
@@Edgarv68 I will disagree on the point about the badassery,
I saw the film in 4dx anytime Batman did something the seats and effects came to life, it happened a lot.
I was happy with the level of badassery.
And regarding it being a detective story, there have been many Batman fans who wanted a dedicated detective plot.
I appreciated the film noir style and the tone the movie generated.
@@Edgarv68 oh wow Batman being a detective, who would’ve expected that
Review the cinematic disaster known as "Dr. Strange in the Multiverse of Madness"
@Picante Tamal It was woke, and Dr. Strange isn't even the star of his own movie. Personally I would considerer it a bad movie. I can for sure say the trailer oversells it... By a lot.
“its better than marvel cause everything is better than marvel”
Dang. I didn’t know it was possible to disagree with Ben this much😂
The point of the movie was not that Batman should be a pathetic firefighter. It was that he should be a symbol of hope for Gotham instead of a symbol of only fear. Remember in the train station scene (after the thugs were beat) when the guy who was gonna get beat up told Batman not to hurt him? That’s what the good people of Gotham thought of him. He was purely a symbol of fear. The best of Batman shows him as someone who defends the helpless because he cares about them. I thought the character arc was actually great. This was a really poetic and passionate movie. Ben couldn’t be more wrong about Reeves. Matt Reeves clearly loves Batman.
Exactly! I think the fact that Riddler considered them on the same side and that riddlers minion said “vengeance” was the wake up call for Batman as well.
That's exactly Shapiro's point though. The movie hates the idea of Batman and wants him to be Superman. White knight instead of dark knight. That example of the train station doesn't help - how is that guy cowering in the corner irrationally from the guy who just saved him supposed to know that Batman is now beating people up in a nice, "hopeful" way instead of vengeful? Doesn't make a bit of sense. Batman is supposed to be scary and criminals being afraid of him is supposed to be what gives people hope. The two are one and the same.
Batman isn't a symbol of hope. Possibly deep into his career but the proper iteration of Batman is an obsessive bordering on sociopathic one-man war against crime. SUPERMAN is a symbol of hope. That's why the two are such good foils. Ben is right about one thing, Matt Reeves does not understand Batman.
@@Arphemius yes exactly.
@@Arphemius that’s true, I agree Superman is more of the symbol of hope. I think you’re right, but Batman has been the hero of compassion for decades. Just watch Batman The Animated Series. He deeply cares for the people he rescues, and is simultaneously terrifying to the people of Gotham. The point of the movie is that he realizes he must be both. “Vengeance” is a morally corruptible reason to inflict violence on any society, and Batman realizes this when the goon calls himself vengeance.
I loved the fact that "Bruce Wayne" is the mysterious character and not "Batman". An interesting reversal.
That's not new though. "Batman" being the real Bruce Wayne and "Bruce Wayne" being the mask he puts on is a concept that has been out there for decades.
I mean this is what the Nolan films did. The Bruce Wayne public figure is a character precisely created to protect Batman's secret identity. In this movie this concept is completely lacking. Perfectly reasonable for fans to not like that.
@@TheJotaroKujo i throughout these decades Bruce Wayne has been more of a robot than an actual human, which is very close to source material
@@TheJotaroKujo this movie isn’t Batman and Bruce separated. This is Bruce not being Bruce at all. It starts off with him never leaving at all. He says he’s becoming nocturnal. He’s pale. The sun hurts his eyes. He’s reminded by Alfred that he needs to STILL BE Bruce. He doesn’t want to be Bruce. He doesn’t know how. That’s why he seems like Batman when he’s out.
@@TheJotaroKujo no I think they mean like, Bruce isn't out there, he doesn't really have a public persona, when he shows up places people are like "holy shit its Bruce Wayne" because he's just a little quiet hermit boy who doesn't seem to engage at all with the powerful people of the city that previous versions of him made a point to. Whereas his batman seems to be out every night, strolls onto crime scenes, people don't even seem surprised when he shows up. seems like most of the Batman's I remember, Bruce is a well-known public figure who people think they know, and The Batman is a mysterious figure everyone is entranced by. in this its the opposite, the batman is feared by the underworld but he's kind of regarded as a staple sort of presence, while Bruce Wayne is the one that people seem shocked to see and whisper about. other versions of Bruce would talk to the same people during the day and night, just as a completely different person which other people were unaware of, which causes emotional tension for sure. but in this one I actually really loved that when he showed up at the funeral the people he talks to in the night just kind of pointed him out or shrugged their shoulders at him. its a way different dynamic than what your used to, but I liked it. And that's why some people felt he's the same the whole way through, its because the real Bruce was always like this. the batman is his real personality, the "Bruce" he presented to the public was always an alter ego, in this movie he hasn't created that alter ego yet.
@@TheJotaroKujo that’s not even what the guy said.
Don’t care about the politics, this guy’s takes on the Batman movie are insane LOL
Did he just say Christopher Nolan Batman 💀 Its Christian Bale 💀💀💀
Christopher Nolan directed all three dark knight movies. Christian bale is the actor that played batman.
@@bushy9780 ik but they said Michael Keatons Batman, Michael is the actor
@@Jfjehd oh I see where you're coming from. Fair enough.
The whole point is that Bruce Wayne doesn't exist right now, he's a broken, rageful young man.
He's spent his life so far meditating on revenge, and that's what his character development is, and is going to, focus on.
all that is headcanon its never stated in the movie
@@daddyGbaby it’s called subtext
@@daddyGbaby it is stated in the movie
@@daddyGbaby No it isn't, dummy, it's called subtext and you were too dumb to see it.
I'm sorry if you need all art to spoonfeed you the message like it's a nursery rhyme, but that's not how art works
@@daddyGbaby “The thing isn’t explicitly stated so therefore it isn’t true” is such a low IQ take
The message I got from the ending was not that he shouldn't fight crime but that his mission needs to be bigger than just an expression of his personal rage following his parents' murder. His personal vengeancebis not s healthy or sustainable motivator for the crusade he is embarking on. The reason he must be Batman becomes protecting the innocent rather than just doing it to hurt the criminals as a proxy for Joe Chill. I accept that a vaguely 'woke' framing of some issues harmed that message such as Batman not contesting that stealing is wrong (and that is her personal vengeance because she has been wronged by powerful men) with Catwoman because the writers are clearly too immersed in that narrative that rich dudes are evil despite the fact that Batman is a rich dude who isn't.
The more I think about it, the more I think Selina's remark about "rich, white privileged assholes" was to showcase her own ignorance, as shown by the fact that she counts Bruce Wayne as one of them, having no idea that that's who she's talking to. Together with the Riddler's minions being a clear allegory of Antifa, it seems as though like Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, it's subtly very anti-Woke.
@@BarterTom I think you might be right. My problem with the line when I was watching in the theater wasn't about the wokeness so much but it momentarily pulled me out of the movie. I hate when moments do that.
@@jlane1645 It was both for me. It will date the film badly.
I think the meaning of the ending was much more simple than most people think. The whole film Batman was looking for evidence that he was helping the city. By the ending he sees that he is helping his whole city. He might not always put the crime to an absolute end, but he can always help its people. When the kid takes his hand it shows the people now trust him. And it took a kid to grab his hand for the mayor to grab it. Then he led them out of the rubble. He will lead them to the light, a better city. He will be the person on the frontlines fighting for that. He’s not asking to be their leader, just to be their defender.
Frankly I felt what would be considered right wing, conservative messaging subtly underpinning the entire film as well as more obvious yet much less consequential progressive elements. People see what they want.
as a not huge batman fan, this movie was a cool new take on batman, this review feels like ben didn’t like/understand the movie and picked apart things he didn’t get 🌝
I fell asleep during this movie in the theater. Im not lying.
This guy is the reason we have movies that explain each and every incident making the audience look like fools
Yeah it's like he is uncapable of thinking.
Still was trash. They should’ve focused on the detective part and riddler motives. To many trash sub plots.
Great comment
@@randomlygeneratedname7171 How was it "trash"....? One of the best movies in a LONG time.... And please dont make it about politics...
@@KmartShopper471 the movie sucks, I just wasted 3 hours of my time watching that crap, sorry, it was 2 1/2 hour for I slept for 30 minutes.
Bruce Wayne was definitely written to be obsessed with Batman. It’s made clear throughout the film and a perfect example would be when Bruce walks aggressively towards Falcone outside of the funeral and then gets stopped. When he sees his target he means business and in that scene he almost forgot to channel in Bruce Wayne.
He did it because he thought it was Selena.
He wasn't even a good Batman in that moment.
Doesn’t make it phenomenal
@@houseofmatrix6174 nobody said it is. But to say that the movie wasn't good because of these stupid reasons is reactionary and contrarian and doesn't follow any sort of rational framework at all. It was pretty comic-accurate and had interesting themes but it had flaws. It was overall a good movie.
he noticed the point, but didn't understand it, so of course he disliked it. logic.
@@TheControlBlue it's 2nd year batman, he's still growing
I agree with Ben. The writing is based on the leftist idea that evil lies in an abstract "system" rather than individual person's heart. The story is thus clearly being sympathetic of the riddler who is a fxxking serial killer. Then the reason of Batman fighting crime is undermined and he turns into an emo guy, showing hesitation and even self-doubt when he chases criminals. Because the more he knows, the more he realises he is not the answer to Gotham's problem. A single Batman can't fight the “evil system”, after all.
So naturally, Batman's transformation at the end is not convincing at all. No personal conviction, no strong motivation to fight evil, just suddenly believing “the city can change”. The problem of “collective evil” posed by the story was never solved.
Overall, a good detective movie, but bad Batman movie.
I wouldn't even say it was a good detective movie. In the end Batman couldn't even stop the Riddlers plot to destroy the city.
We want the uncut, 4 hour verison!
There's no dichotomy because there isn't one yet. This is really what would happen if Batman was only 2 years into his career. He's work-obsessed, practically living nocturnally for the last long while, and that has taken a toll on him.
That's my fave aspect. I love thst we are seeing a time where he's obsessed with being batman no time for Bruce stuff
no character development. end of story. selfish "hero"
I mean in the Nolan trilogy there is dichotomy the day he becomes Batman. The he’s only 2 years into Batman excuse is so worn out
2 YEARS TO GET THAT RIGHT!? NO IT SHOULD BE DONE IN 1
@@connorpannellfilm did you miss the part where him being selfish was a major part of his character?
He’s doing what he’s doing because he’s young, pissed off, resentful, vengeful and full of rage. It’s not until the end that he realizes the purpose of Batman where he realizes he needs to separate the two. It shows the growing pains of Batman which I love.
Facts
The problem is that this is not explored in the script. Batman's narration is the only thing we get for an arc or exploration of this concept. Lazy writing.
@@adrianpale2342 so him cutting the wire and getting electrocuted wasn’t implicit enough?
I agree, one thing I loved about it is that we didn’t have to sit through another origin, we already know why he’s Batman because it’s been in all of the other movies
@@adrianpale2342 it's not explored in the script? There is a shot of him at the end leading civilians to safety and another shot of him bring that child to a helicopter. The theme is very much explored in the script and goes beyond the narration given.
Batman uses ring cameras around his mansion .
The Catwoman dialogue about “rich white men” was cringey because it felt so forced and we see in Gotham that the other two prominent black characters in the story are highly successful at what they do and the Riddler is a white man who was failed by Gotham since childhood, so it doesn’t ring true to make it more about race than class.
I think we’re getting a very young Batman in this movie who doesn’t understand who he is as Bruce Wayne. He’s forced to appear as himself in public. He doesn’t understand how to keep up appearances yet. He’s obsessed with being Batman which is partially why the “lesson” he learns works. He needs to become “more.”
Loved the first act, disliked the finale and thought the movie was overstaying its welcome by the end.
I interpreted the ending as him understanding that there are two things he must accomplish as Batman. Throughout the film we see he understands that he must strike fear into Gotham’s criminals, but at the end he sees that he also must be a symbol of good for the people of Gotham. And he has to move forward and find that balance in order to truly save the city.
I thought that was quite a good arc
@@ariobahmani5618 same!
this dude is a clown . im not even american but if u guys listening to ppl like this who dont even do their research before open their big mouths then god help yall
I actually really disagree with the notion that this movie was anti-Batman. See, there's been this misconception in the last several years, particularly since the DCEU's Batman became the cultural face of the character, that Batman is by default a bitter vigilante who targets criminals because he hates them, or that he's only seeking to avenge his parents' murder. His entire schtick before that was fighting crime in Gotham _for the sake of Gotham._ So that no eight year old boy would ever have to watch their parents get gunned down in front of them again. Because Thomas and Martha Wayne loved Gotham City, and practically built it, Bruce carries on that legacy and honors their memory by protecting the city and the people in it that his parents _and himself_ love so much.
TL;DR: Batman helping people get airlifted from the flooded Gotham City isn't a "Defund the Police" signal. It's a return to form.
Agreed. I think it it pretty obvious that the police are desperately needed, they also need to not be corrupt. Your point is further validated in the final dialogue for me.
I agree, loved it
Jesus Christ loves you.
I really love when people comment what I'm thinking. Its super ironic that its one of the more comic accurate batman portrayals but people keep asking wheres Bruce Wayne? You mean batman pretend personality? Who cares.
Hundred percent agree.
While he does bring up some good points as to why the movie is not all it’s cracked up to be, I think it’s still fantastic. This movie is a great great movie.
As a huge Batman fan, the new movie was a disgrace.
Hey man, this is a horrendous take. This films didn't remotely hate batman.
Right? I’m thinking to myself what tf is he talking about? This is the best interpretation of Batman I’ve seen in a long time. Not perfect, but it leaves room for character growth.
@@joecyr5836 I think it being less than perfect kind of mirrors Bruce Wayne's journey to being the Batman we all know and love.
@@mainstreetsaint36 Exactly! I think it’s excellent character development and story telling.
All the issues he had with the film were silly. "The film doesn't explain why he became Batman" then he rambles about how Batman Begins explained it...even though it's the exact same thing here. Being a symbol of fear for his enemies. This is a year 2 story. We don't need to know why he became Batrman...we already know why. "The film is saying Batman should be a firefighter. He is never Bruce Wayne...only Batman": The film shows that by him just being a symbol of fear. He is scaring the people he wants to save. I think the next film will totally be about him developing his "Bruce Wayne" persona, and I can't wait!.
i think your missing the point, the conclusion of the movie isnt that batman shouldn't be directly fighting criminals like what he has for as long as we know his character, its just that he realizes what being BATMAN is all about. He still will directly fight and confront criminals, and strike fear in the hearts of those who commits a crime, but he can't be JUST that. He needs to do more (this time as the billionaire bruce wayne). the point that its trying to make, is batman in the majority of this movie doesn't represent the TRUE "BATMAN" character, he hasn't developed into that yet. Because even in the comics, fighting criminals isnt the only thing batman does, he literally uses his wealth to actually develop his surroundings (whether it be gotham or the world in general)
Totally agree! He also talks about how Bruce Wayne was just Batman without wearing the mask and there wasn't a distinction and how Bruce did no charity or philanthropy work. This movie obviously takes place when Batman is young and very new to Gotham. The Police call him a freak, the criminals in the beginning laugh at him, and Bruce is still angry over his parents death and wants vengeance. I think the next movies are going to have huge character development for both Bruce Wayne and Batman and it will make sense why in this movie Bruce is kind of broken. This movie had Batman make his first step from fighting crime out of anger and vengeance, to fighting crime to help others and be a beacon of hope.
You’re*
@@calendarfactory8566 bruh
@@chrism.r4243 hehehaha
Exactly...its a constant learning process...he learns that some doors could be opened a lot easier as Bruce Wayne. For eg- Going to see Falcone as Bruce Wayne .
I thought the film seemed to start with this gritty edge, which is gradually lost over time until I was just bored and tired at the end
Robert Patson did the on the movie but the best Batman actor is Cristian bale
The score isn’t derivative, it’s more reminiscent than anything. You can instantly tell it’s a Batman theme, so yes it would have to kind of sound like the themes that came before it
It is derivative. It sounds almost exactly the empire’s march from star wars but missing a few bars. You can’t un-hear it bro. When you watch it again you’ll see.
aside from the main theme, I found it to be extremely generic and not memorable. didn't bother me though
@@brunovaz Don’t tell me you can’t remember the theme in your head right now😂it’s a pretty simple theme that is quite effective in the film, but whatever you say
@@Chillo56 I meant that the theme is very memorable, everything else isn't
@@Chillo56 By theme I mean this
czcams.com/video/JMbEpzMR0fs/video.html
Totally respect your take on the movie and I can even understand why you would view it in the light you do but I think you missed the point the director is trying to convey. He’s been Batman for two years and crime is still up. He’s not a good business man because he routinely brushes off his BRuce Wayne responsibilities in order to further devote himself to being the bat. He loves being the bat, it’s the only time he truly feels that he is himself. But by the end of the movie he understands that in order to be the change he wants to see in Gotham, he MUST take a multi-faceted approach. This means we will now see his Bruce persona be further developed and as Batman he will not only been and enemy to the criminal elements but he will also be a symbol of hope to the innocents that even in a city corrupt as Gotham There is someone looking out for them.
I am so glad others picked up on how he must embrace multiple facets of his persona.
Exactly this. So many people would need to see him helping the civilians as Bruce Wayne to understand this sadly. Glad they didn't throw out nuance to cater for the slow types.
Batman was being too myopic in his approach, and realized he will need to tackle it from multiple angles. Not the one he’s most comfortable with.
@@allypezz It also makes sense within the plot - the money from the Wayne's renewal fund had been diverted and if Bruce were not neglecting the family's legacy, he would have noticed it sooner.
And when he held out his hand to help those in the flooded stadium and the others hesitated at first but one boy reached out and grabbed it. Then the others followed him out of he flood. That's what sealed it. This is what he has to become, a symbol, a crusader, a dark knight.
Literally ever critic today hating on good movies just because everyone likes then me
The main theme of the movie plays off of "Something In The Way", not the Danny Elfman Dark Knight theme.
"This is my family's legacy." Right there we found out why he takes the mantle of Batman, Ben. He literally says it.
Great point
@@lewisherron6842 Hey thanks man, it's funny I don't normally like Ben but even though he missed the point of the movie he is aware of some details I wasn't privy to.
That is not a reason, and he doesn’t even recognize this until way way way into the movie when it is pointed out by someone
@@edgy22 he says it the first time we saw Alfred, which was pretty early in the movie.
The family legacy was not crime fighting vigilante? The family legacy was pretty much a rich political career, so what are you talking about?
“rip-off of seven”. completely misses the fact that the movie was literally conceived in paying homage to that very film.
I got that seven vibe too.
@@littlehollow wow you need a life man
@@yourewrongabouteverything how?
Conservative media comprehension tends to usually be really bad. Obviously not all conservatives, but a lot of the ones that get put on a pedestal usually are incapable of seeing things like this
@@bigdadybojangls9219 leftist are not one bit better
Ngl Gordon in this movie might be the only race swap in history that was actually good. He embodied everything about Gordon. It didn’t feel like a race swap, it was that they let anyone audition and Wright gave the best one.
The acting was fine, but the pacing was beyond painful.
In terms of the vengeance aspect, Batman realizes that just punishing criminals isn't enough. In the beginning of the film, when the street gang corners the guy in the train station, Batman intervenes NOT to save and help the guy, but to punish the gang. This clearly shows when the guy says "dont hurt me" and batman doesnt even react. This whole time, his mission has been to punish criminals, not save innocent people from them. By the end of the film, he realizes that he should make an active effort in saving and helping people, as it will give them hope which is more effective than just fighting crime for the sole purpose of punishing criminals
Yeah idk why Ben think this is a superman ripoff. Bruce always wanted to protect Gotham. YES he wants to punish criminals but he also cares about the city. In terms of being a beacon of "hope" I can understand why Ben would say what he said, but I don't think HOPE is batmans actual goal even though that's what he said in the movie
God bless
That's not Batman he's not beacon of hope he's a deterrent that's the whole point of Batman.
And that's the Ben's point. Batman should be like Judge Dredd, but with money and no law degree.
Just to follow up on my initial comment: the whole reason why bruce wayne become batman (in general batman mythos) is so that no child would ever have to experience what he experienced. It was NOT so that all the people that were like the mugger that killed his parents would be punished. but thats his mentality at the beginnnig of the film. He sees a guy about to get beat up and hes like "'oh you wanna beat people up, let me do it to you first" not "damn that guys in danger, let me help him by taking down those thugs"
this is a movie about batman going from being "vengeance," which he realized even criminals can be, to being "justice" which is a force for only good. It was a movie where batman had character development, so I liked it alot!
Vengeance to Hope
i must have slept through that part
@@karlsylvain or lacked the iq
@@roddur1000 or didn't care
@@karlsylvain increase your IQ first
*ONE OF THE FEW BATMAN REVIEWS THAT WASNT BIASED I LUV THIS REVIEW !!!!!!!!!*
For comedy, I like Adam West. Good middle ground, Michael Keaton. Darkness, Christian Bale. ✝ But I really have no desire to see this one.
personally i could not concentrate on the review due to the sound of a jibbering chattering voice that echoed spider monkeys at the zoo. apart fron tht spot on
Ben is kind of missing the point. This is the first movie in the trilogy and they are setting up a character arc. This is still a very young Batman and we see him evolve at the end of the movie
He doesn't learn that being Batman is bad. He needs to reconsider his methods of being Batman, and by the end of the movie understands that by exclusively beating up criminals is not going to help the city, but by protecting the innocent, he could make a real difference. When the riddler thug says that he is vengeance, it makes Batman realize that he is essentially no different than the riddler, and needs to be better than that.
And yeah, this movie is 3 hours long, but that's because it takes the time to hold on some shots and allowed for way better impact and emotion from the characters (and mainly Batman).
(Edit: When I say protecting the innocent, I mean that he also needs to give them hope. When he saves the man from the gang at the beginning, the man is still afraid even after being saved. Batman realizes that he needs to be a symbol of hope to the people, while still instilling fear into criminals.)
I COMPLETELY AGREE WITH THIS. I think Ben is WAY wrong on this one. The movie was phenomenal. Good enough for me to stomach the 5 seconds of wokeness even! Unlike Rise of Skywalker.
How would he go about protecting the innocent? Oh yeah, beating up bad guys...
Batman is ninja, what the film is trying to do is make batman fill the role of superman, they even spit the word "hope" few minutes into the ending LMFAO
Isn't beating up criminals protecting innocents anyways?
Like the asian dude
How many times did Ben say Batman?
Okay, a year later and a more careful rewatch later, I am going to completely disagree with Ben. The entire film is about authenticity, empathy, and healing. Every single character in this film save Gordon and the Mayor elect has awful, traumatic pasts that control them. They are all preoccupied with their pain. It's blinded them to the world around them and how their actions only continue the cycle of hurt because they don't reach out.
Robert Pattison delivers a wonderful performance. His Bruce Wayne is self-deluded, tortured, and in denial. He believed his parents were ideal paragons. He never considered that they were real human beings with flaws. That's understandable given his young age when they were taken from him. He is arrested as that child. When he stares directly at the Mayor's son after investigating his murder scene, he's thinking about how he vowed to never let this happen again, and he feels the shame of his failure. Bruce's arc in the film is realizing that the world needs more of him. It needs him to be a more complete person to be truly effective in implementing change.
All throughout the film, characters confront Bruce, pleading with him to reach out. To share his pain with them and start healing together. You can see that in his relationship with Alfred. At the beginning of the film, Alfred is begging Bruce to open up to him, but Bruce can't. He's locked in his own pain, and he knows which buttons to push on Alfred to get him to leave him alone. Andy Serkis' performance is heartbreaking. To Alfred, it's like watching someone you love destroy themselves through addiction. The Mayor-elect's name is BE-lla Real. It's not the most subtle message, but she's the one that makes Bruce start to consider that other people are hurting other than him.
Catwoman's story is inspired by her Long Halloween backstory. She, like Bruce, is an orphan, and she, like Bruce, has encased her heart in a suit of black vinyl armor. She rescues strays, because she sees herself in them. She wishes someone had been there to save her, and so she extends her empathy to other hard-luck cases, like her possible girlfriend/ roommate. She's also extraordinarily lonely (like Bruce). In the scene where he confronts her as she attempts to steal back her lover's passport, you can see both Bruce and Selina calm and start to enjoy their embrace after Batman grabbed her to hide them from the security sweep. In almost every interaction with Bruce, you can hear her saying, "Can I trust you? Will you help me? Please do not hurt me. I've been hurt too much." It's because Bruce can empathize with her that she did not ultimately kill Falcone. After he is eventually killed, you may be able to see from her expression that his death did not solve her problems. It wasn't the magic wand she believed it would be, and it brought her no satisfaction. She too learns to set her selfishness aside and comes to Bruce's aid right when he needs her most. They saved each other.
The Riddler in this film is Bruce's dark reflection and a warning about what using fear alone truly inspires. He's what Bruce could have become if he had not initially taken the selfless vow of a wounded child to make a world where nobody would have to feel the fear, anguish, regret, shame, and self-loathing that haunt him. The Riddler is begging to be heard. With each note he writes to the Batman his handwriting becomes larger, more dramatic, and more desperate. The Riddler believes that he and the Batman are the same. He thinks that someone finally understands him and that he isn't alone anymore. He may even believe that he was an orphan living in the same orphanage as he did.
The Riddler is also a warning to the audience. This is what you can become if you get sucked into the toxic vortex of social media, where no one is empathetic and everyone is concerned with getting their next like, leaving behind their next sarcastic, passive-aggressive criticism. The validation one receives from those is cheap and no replacement for the real thing. The Riddler's plan is very simple. It's revenge. He wants to kill the people that robbed him of a happy future: The corrupt government officials that plundered funds meant for the needy, and then the society itself that is responsible for the nightmare his life became. The motivation for the final attack is clear.
I believe Ben was missing the forest for the trees because he was looking for micro-aggressions that would give him an excuse to demonstrate his big ol' brain. So, no. I do not believe this film hates Batman. This film wants the best for him. He doesn't have to be Superman and he isn't. At the start of the film he stares at the Bat symbol in the sky where he is still ruled by fear this is the photo negative the end of the film where Bruce is starring up at a rising sun the beginning of his healing.
The more I listen to Ben's movie reviews, the more I am shocked by his sheer inability to understand subtext. Batman's arc in this film is not him coming to the conclusion that he shouldn't fight criminals; it's him coming to the conclusion that he shouldn't brutally beat them up and obliterate their bones. That he should function as Gotham's protector and savior, a symbol for justice; not a relentless beast that stands for vengeance. They nailed the character here, really showing the inner scared child that he carries around, full of grief and pain and rage. The point of the movie is to show him giving closure to his trauma.
Yes but he was already a symbol for justice. Vengeance is justice. What do you think the characters in Batman Begins thought he was going around carrying civilians and handing out flowers? People already knew Batman was a good guy they don’t need to see him in broad daylight.
@@cydra_infinity1423 Vengeance for vengeance's sake is not justice. Thinking that this film's ending implies that Batman will become a hippie pacifist is missing the point in a gargantuan way. He will still lurk in the shadows and beat up bad guys, but with the purpose of protecting the people of Gotham, not on a brutal rampage to relieve his own pain.
This is the same thing when it comes to Man Of Steel...ppl shat'd on that movie without understanding that Superman in that movie hasn't become the Superman we all know yet
Batman hardly beat up anyone in this movie. 2 scenes at most did he give a brutal beating , and 1 of those scenes is when he injected himself with adrenaline.
@@cydra_infinity1423 but obviously this city didn't know what to view him as yet.
Its almost as if a character can have multiple depictions and variations depending on the director🤯
but what’s the point of you want to completely reject and deconstruct the character, but won’t actually own up to it? if Batman’s meant to inspire hope and change, why does he dress like a bat and hide in the shadows?
@@Sam_T2000 the whole point of this movie is batman still learning to how to be batman. He learns he has to inspire hope by the end of the movie. Keep in mind he's only been batman for 2 years so he's still trying to figure it out
@@dg8games438 - since when has Batman ever been a symbol of hope? that’s more Superman’s kind of thing.
if anything, Batman is a symbol of justice, but more than that he’s just a man willing to do the right thing in a city full of people doing the wrong thing, leading by example. he’s a hero, but he’s no savior.
@@Sam_T2000 you just said batman is meant to inspire hope and now you are saying when has he ever been a symbol of hope. And yes batman is a symbol of justice and more and this movie is him realizing that's what he has to do.
@@Sam_T2000 this batman is different from the others, he's all about vengeance and what-not. The other batmen from the past are symbols of justice. This first movie with pattinson is him learning a lesson that he needs to be more than just vengeance. I'm sure in the next pattinson batman movie we'll be seeing it
When they raid the riddlers apartment and they’re going through his notes it was exactly like seven
Why are so many people here to defend this movie? Ben is absolutely right. There is no point to this movie.
I actually appreciated the fact that they didn't try to explain why Batman has to be Batman, we've all heard it before and everybody watching the film already knows about Batman's origins. Rehashing it over and over with every new movie is annoying and keeps us from seeing all of the other really awesome parts of the story that happen later in his career.
I think they coulda fit it in there and it made Batman a lot more 2d
Yeah but a simple line would have done. Also got to remember that the movie has to stand on its own. So not having it at all is a little weird
@@CoolMyron fair enough
They actually told the story. Just in pieces through out the film.
@@dylanlucas3397 no, it’s not fair. And your original comment is correct. They did the same thing w/the new spider man. And that was fine too.
"You don't really know why batman is doing what he's doing":
Answer: vengeance and anger.
"He doesn't really do anything with his wealth"
Answer: He doesn't care about it, and squanders it on his batman stuff.
Also this is touched on in the comics Joker war (great comic btw)
He literally narrates that in the beginning of the movie.
1. Catwoman isn't always bad and is more of an anti-hero in a lot of iterations of Batman, so saying it's woke because she's of color (which honestly I don't even know if that's true it's been a while since I watched the movie) is really dumb.
2. The fact he doesn't donate to charity doesn't mean the movie is depicting him as a 'bad white man', that might be the most backwards take on this movie ever. It's like that because A. he is spending him money to quite literally FIGHT crime, and B. because he has a hard time being Bruce Wayne and separating him from Batman, which is apart of that plot that you mentioned.