Beastro wrote: ↑Fri Apr 24, 2020 12:34 am
But that's the point of Bruce Wayne: He's supposed to be a empty headed, play-boy shell of a persona.
Everyone's reaction should be that he's too much of a spoiled idiot to ever possibly be Batman.
That's the amusing thing I find about Bill's lines in Kill Bill Vol.2 about Superman having Clark Kent as his alter-ego because if Batman began as an alter-ego, Bruce Wayne retroactively became one. Unlike being some alien who hides himself in daily life, Wayne transferred his main persona into his heroic role and used his outer shell as a cover and a font of money to maintain what he really wants to do in life: Endless beat up on bad people to ruminate over his demons.
The thing with Keaton's Wayne and TAS', which seems fairly emulative of the latter, was that they were personalities that stood on their own and were decent people, which while nice to see, are somewhat counter to what Batman is.
Bruce Wayne going off in his free time to be nice, or to simply just run his company, is not in keeping with Batman. Batman is a guy who spends his free time in his Cave scouring around on his computer for any possible crime, relaxing at most by pulling his mask off. He refuses to let go of his pain and is so concentrated on fighting evil he is nothing but his crime fighting persona.
Eh...no. That's not true at all,
Bruce is always "in danger" of slipping into a pure obsessive loner sort of person, especially when something extra-bad happens like Jason Todd being killed etc, but he's a 3-dimensional character and there is more to him than that.
The whole point of people like Alfred or Robin is to remind him that he has a nice, human side as well, and that it's okay to be happy once in a while and that you can be a crimefighter without being an asshole.
Bill was wrong about Clark Kent, and you are wrong about Bruce Wayne. Bruce likes to THINK that "Bruce Wayne is the mask, Batman is who I really am", but the truth is more like "Playboy Wayne is a mask, Batman is another mask, the real Bruce Wayne exists and is just a complicated guy with many sides".
The brooding paranoiac who spends all of his time sitting alone in a cave, shunning any real human connection unless he's playing a role or punching a clown in the face, that isn't the real Bruce Wayne. That's just Bruce Wayne when he's being moody. He just needs someone to cheer him up or bring out his softer side. The real Bruce is fully capable of being genuinely nice to people and actually enjoying the company of family and friends.