Nolan's entire approach to the "Dark Knight" trilogy was to show Batman who can exist in realitymore or less. Therefore, as the LA Times told them, they preserved a theater villain as a movie Joker #2.
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"(The" Dark Knight "Joker) is able to be a lot of theatrical because we set Batman as an example of intensive theater in Gotham. It is starting to grow out of Batman. But the premise we started is that Batman created a completely original work," Nolan said.
In maintaining his Batman "completely original" phenomenon, Nolan also wanted to remove the idea that Bruce Wayne was inspired by someone else, even a fictional character. "We didn't want anything that would not undermine the idea that Bruce came up with this crazy plan to put a mask alone. It allowed us to treat it under our own conditions," he explained.
Bruce Wayne is Zoro's childhood fanboy, and as inspiring as he becomes Batman, it is an innate metal concept. Zoro, the character, inspired the creation of Batman by Bill Fink and Bob Caine, along with the other heroes of the pulp like the shadow, the spider, etc. Zoro is Don Diego de la Vega, a Spanish nobleman in 19th -century California. Although unmasked, he is one of the elites, but he also passes the days as a masked and captain of the black vigil that protects people in need. Diego de La La Vega is the original Bruce Wayne, even if he had a trusted horse tornado instead of a Batmobile, and a sword instead of any batarangles.
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In 2008 "Batman" in 1958 #113 (from France Heron and Dick Spang) showed Batman visiting others' world, Zur-ARC and met with Batman on that planet that had a purple, red and yellow suit. The story implied that adventure is a dream, but 50 years later, Morrison revived this forgotten bow story "Batman Rip"
Morrison has reworked Batman at Zur-Ann-Arch in an alternative person to Bruce Wayne, the one who is complete and more brutal about being Batman. Despite the bright suit, Batman on Zea is a darker character than the original. Well, why "Zurn-Arch"? It is a mix of something Thomas Wayne said before his death. Coming out of the theater, eight -year -old Bruce Wayne took Zoro, he asked him if the hero could exist in reality. His father replied: "They will probably throw someone like Zoro in Arkam."
With what happened afterwards, Bruce's conscious mind forgot these words, but they still solidified as cement in his subconscious.
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