Thread:Godzillafan93/@comment-6052796-20141228020835/@comment-397235-20141228190123

He didn't kill Ken Watanabe, and he tried to pull him out of the rubble; he stopped once he realized he was dead. Likewise, he didn't kill Liam Neeson, he just chose not to save him. The Joker even called him on that in the next movie, telling him "Killing is making a choice. Choosing one life over another." That's more or less what happened to Taggert; he wasn't trying to kill her, but he needed to stop her because otherwise they were all going to die. Likewise, he had no intention of killing Bane; he was willing to beat him half to death and leave him, though.

I really enjoyed the old Batman series; it's absurd but it's all in good fun, and the show is well aware of how absurd it is. I'd prefer something that is stupid and knows it versus something that's stupid and tries to take itself seriously. I've not seen Romero in anything else, but I really want to see L attitude Zero.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latitude_Zero_%28film%29

I've seen Adam West in person, but I never spoke to him. It's a shame, because he seemed, for the little time I saw him, like a very sad old man, and because that bastard Seth MacFarlane apparently owns his likeness (I'm not sure if this is true or not). I do want the third Lego Batman game, though, specifically because West reprises his role as the 60s Batman minifigure. He's also in some episodes of Spongebob alongside Burt Ward, which is fantastic.

Rises had so many plots holes and so much general stupidity it's hilarious. I like Joseph Gordon-Levitt but I hated his character in the film and his general lack of common sense. About the only redeeming qualities the film had were Ann Hathaway and Tom Hardy...even Hans Zimmer's score seems somewhat lacking, as James Newton Howard didn't want to contribute anything as he had for the last two films.