True, but his basic archetype is still Zorro. If you want to "re-imagine" Batman, that's one thing. But even campy West Batman could still do lots of crime fighting. My issue is with the idea of treating Batman as some kind of archaic idea when he's anything but.Zixinus wrote: ↑2017-07-13 01:42pm The thing about Batman is that he changes with the times. 1950's Batman and cast would look ridicolous or bizarre today. Batman's character is subtly altered, sometimes forcefully, all the time to fit new conceptions and taste. When criminals became organized and less thugish, he became a competent detective. When criminals can buy fancy gadgets, he gets gadgets of his own.
Maybe... I don't know, humanity will reach a point where 99% of people have so much natural empathy the idea of harming another person or ignoring the plight of suffering people will become an alien idea. But I can't really see a realistic depiction of humanity where a fictional concept of someone like Batman, Zorro, Robin Hood, Speedy Gonzales, whatever won't be a popular idea and considered a hero.
Unless you're writing click-bait articles I guess. And let's be honest here: even Bale Batman is fucking ridiculous. His costume and toys look badass by modern standards. But the idea of a billionaire in a failed city using his money to find fancy ways to punch bad guys in the face is ridiculous. Zorro made a lot more sense considering the time, location, and technology.
Once again, true. And that's because Watchmen deals with what would "realistically" happen when you had supers running around the world, which is usually where you find deconstructions even if they have their own crazy shenanigans. Batman can't really fit in here for multiple reasons.Watchmen is a deconstruction of the entire classic superhero genre which rather directly addresses the concepts underlying Batman in not one but three different characters with their own aspects.
I don't agree here. Batman would love that provided it was an actual Utopia. He either grows up a kid with two loving parents, thus the idea of becoming Batman never enters his mind or he finds a world where no one needs his help and he hangs up his cape. At the end of the day, he's only a rich kid. It's not like Superman or any other actual "supers" finding a Utopia then having to fit in as a total outsider where all their gifts are not only "useless," but have the potential to cause loads of damage.Or better, a place where he isn't needed, an utopia. A place where the tragedy that defines him simply don't happen, where no child's parents are gunned down by a ruthless mugger for their wallets and jewelry. Where the criminals (such as they are) don't need face-punching from a borderline-superhuman ninja-detective preying on superstition. Where all his near-superhuman skills are simply not needed, where the police are well equipped and trained to handle the crime that is and supervillains are either never made or are actually cured before they could start their rampage. That would actually be rather hellish place for him.
EDIT: Actually, in this case I could see the supers being the catalyst for the downfall of the utopia just by nature of existing and being known. They would breed fear in a fearless populace by being so far and above them all.