User blog comment:Mr. Xemnas/2 seperate marevl cinematic universe's?????/@comment-1895174-20130201050316/@comment-4651179-20130207032423

Waffle: You have to understand that's why I changed from saying "Bla bla bla bla the real Batman" to "Bla bla bla bla the 'real Batman'"... Because I understood it's wrong to say there as the real Batman, there's always that main concept of Batman almost everyone has (which I described earlier), the concept most people are familiar with. I bet if you put a movie with Batman shooting down criminals the reaction will be different if a movie with a Batman similar to Paul Dini's. Which, as I said before, created the image of Batman most people can identify the character to.

Kilroy, let's continue:

1) "He could've been more like his standard modern comicbook counterpart, but I think it may not have suited a movie as well"... Exactly, because Nolan's universe is that in which white-skinned, green-haired, face-deformed psychopaths don't fit. As well as villains powered by a super-drug which makes them super-strong.

You just said why I don't really like Nolan's vision of Batman: Because comicbook's Batman couldn't fit in.

5) Don't tell me he didn't had a payback with "When you tell me where's the trigger, you have my permision to die". IMO, it was Bruce's way to show Bane in his face he was in control.

By payback I'm not talking about the whole fight scene, but that moment in which, after getting his a** kicked by Green Goblin, Spider-Man manages to rise and fight him, and throw him a wall.

That's a retribution... Bane made broke Bruce? He managed to break Bane. And then... you know, Bane is standing above Batman one second after.

A "Hell yeah!" moment wouldn't be when the city is saved. A "Hell yeah!" moment doesn't need to be reflexive and intellectual, it's just the natural feeling the "bad guy" get's what he deserves, and the "good guy" what he should get.

I hope now you understand. '''A "Hell yeah!" is not about thinking, but feeling happy for something you feel should've happened some time ago. If Bane crippled Batman, put him in a prision and threatened to destroy his city, the "Hell yeah!" moment is when Batman shows Bane he's back and defeats him, not when he saves the city.'''

Never heard of Schrodinger's cat? Weird, it's a concept became really popular lately.

I'll explain the lazy way: Schrodinger was a scientist who made a theoretical experiment to prove something about being impossible to know exactly where an electron would be, in which he would put a cat in a completely closed box with a sealed container of poison. There was a 50/50 chance that the container would open, killing the cat, or stay unopened, and the cat alive. So it wouldn't be able to know exactly if the cat is alive or death until the box is opened, something misinterpreted as "the cat is both alive and death" That's why I joked with Batman, he's "both alive and death", because we know which of this he is.

11) I still can't understand how the reveal that a character we were made believe was something isn't something doesn't bother you. Because it was seen as Bane was THE mastermind, who put this plan altogether. And nope, Chuck Testa... I mean Talia.

Bane was like a delivery boy, he put together a plan he didn't do. Is like you're credited for building an entire house, and they it is revealed you didn't do the design, the blueprints, and just put the walls. It makes you lose importance.