The beginning of the story is doomed to the tragic color of this superhero, and it also directly conveys that Nolan's tragic plot and his thinking about justice have reached a situation of fighting each other. Whether it is the height of the individual's thinking, or whether the legal system is right or wrong. The feeling that Nolan gives me is the denial of himself, or the denial of everything and thinking about its two sides. The crime of rape is to punish people and cities that have been depraved, and to be kind enough to be killed by those who are saved by themselves. This is huge irony. The Shadow Warrior Alliance is organized to destroy everything for the sake of evil. I think if I knew more about biblical culture, I would understand somewhat better. In the end, no one can represent anyone. Thinking it's righteous is just madness, but you may be aiming at the savior. This is not a one-level, one-sex thinking thing.
The first half of the film uses Nolan's usual reverse sequence and cutscene to introduce Bruce's past neatly. For the first time, I noticed the fast editing to strengthen the film's rhythm. The bridge built by Bruce's father was for the benefit of the city of Takamori, and Batman destroyed it in a different way to protect the city, which had fallen into disrepair.
If there is a flaw in the mystery of Xia Yingying, it is too focused on Batman's heroism, while ignoring more individual things. But from the whole point of view, it is an organization against an organization.
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