We didn't need a whiny Bruce about his alter ego becoming a personality disorder as they tried to infer in Batman Forever, or make him emotionally unstable like The Batman.
Nolan's Batman, much like Burton's Batman, was very thoroughly masculine in knowing who he was and what he had to do, and how to do it. There was no confusion in his methods, and I think that's what helped those iterations resonate so much with broader audiences (especially men).
Nolan's Batman was essentially the epitome of the manosphere tenets about being on your grind and staying on your grind no matter what, and in his universe, Batman did so until he physically couldn't really do it anymore.
Well said and I agree.
We didn't need a whiny Bruce about his alter ego becoming a personality disorder as they tried to infer in Batman Forever, or make him emotionally unstable like The Batman.
Nolan's Batman, much like Burton's Batman, was very thoroughly masculine in knowing who he was and what he had to do, and how to do it. There was no confusion in his methods, and I think that's what helped those iterations resonate so much with broader audiences (especially men).
Nolan's Batman was essentially the epitome of the manosphere tenets about being on your grind and staying on your grind no matter what, and in his universe, Batman did so until he physically couldn't really do it anymore.