Thoughts are more valuable than fantasies

Novella 2022-04-23 07:01:02

After watching Nolan's Batman trilogy in a row, I personally think that the third part is the most grand, thoughtful, and logical. The first pioneering work introduces the origin of Batman, which is quite satisfactory, and is no different from the traditional gods who have experienced hardships, love and hatred, and then reborn; the second is very subversive. Playing cards according to the rules resulted in a tragic ending, but I also questioned that the screenwriter was too mentally handicapped. As for the logic that the clown will burn the money he grabbed, how many rogues will follow? Although it is positioned as science fiction, the social problems mapped by the Batman series are profound. The Wayne family can be considered as a traditional aristocracy, and the father who was assassinated represents the aristocratic thought-founding a business and benefiting the public, but it still exists The gap between the rich and the poor and the idea of ​​hating the rich are confronted from time to time. The destruction of the manor at the end of the first film is also a symbol. The shadow and martial arts alliance is very mysterious. , the idea of ​​reincarnation? The clown is like a bug in the social program. It has no rules. It should represent extreme free thinking and anarchism. The occupation movement led by Bain in the third part is very similar to the revolution launched by the proletarians against the bourgeoisie. The heroine also represents a kind of The idea of ​​legal supremacy, but dead in this one, talking about the ideology of the Batman trilogy is more valuable than sci-fi.

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Extended Reading
  • Jacklyn 2022-03-25 09:01:04

    I love this cast so much, Christian Bale has always been my type.

  • Michelle 2022-03-25 09:01:04

    After seeing Scarlett in the Avengers and Hathaway in Batman 3, any woman around the hero is eclipsed

Batman Begins quotes

  • Henri Ducard: When you lived among the criminals, did you start to pity them?

    Bruce Wayne: The first time I stole so that I wouldn't starve, yes. I lost many assumptions about the simple nature of right and wrong. And when I traveled, I learned the fear before a crime and the thrill of success. But I never became one of them.

  • Henri Ducard: Men fear most what they cannot see.