The Batman (2022 film)

The Batman is a 2022 superhero film based on the comic book character of the same name. It was directed and written by Matt Reeves and featured Robert Pattinson as Bruce Wayne/Batman, Andy Serkis as Alfred Pennyworth, Zoe Kravitz as Selina Kyle/Catwoman, Paul Dano as the Riddler, Jeffrey Wright as James Gordon, Collin Farrell as Penguin, and John Turturro as Carmine Falcone. It will have a spin-off show based on the GCPD on HBO Max. It is not part of the DC Extended Universe.

Two years into Bruce Wayne turning himself into the Batman, a mysterious masked man known only as the Riddler is attacking the elite of society in Gotham and dragging their names through the mud. As Batman races to stop the killings and solve the taunting puzzles left by the supervillain, secrets get unearthed that will force him to reconsider what it really means to help clean up his city.


 * Adaptational Heroism: Selina Kyle's driving trait in most canons is her greed, selfishness, and willingness to use lethal force. She usually scoffs when the Bat-Family tell her not to be a killer. Here, she agrees to team up with Batman to rescue Annika when he keeps her from being busted by the cops looking over the mayor's hideout, and lets her go with Annika's passport. Unlike most versions, Batman convinces her to put the gun down at a crucial time, and she can see he's truly looking out for her.
 * Adaptational Sexuality: This adaptation implies that Selina is bisexual. She's attracted to Bruce. The way that she fights to help get Annika out of town, and how she strives to find her indicates that Annika is more than just her roommate, calling her "Babe" and reassuring her.
 * Ambiguous Situation: The movie hints that Riddler has figured out Batman's identity, but it isn't confirmed one way or the other. He sends a letter bomb to Bruce Wayne intended for him, and a card to Batman that reads, "See you in hell." He ought to have known that Bruce, who rarely leaves the mansion, wouldn't be the type to read his own mail. Riddler also has a vendetta against Bruce Wayne for being the poster boy orphan, while ignoring the starving kids in the system who barely got enough to eat. When it seems he reveals that he figured it out, it's deliberately kept mysterious if Riddler knew the poster boy is the one in the costume.
 * Archnemesis Dad:
 * Big Bad: The Riddler.
 * Both Sides Have a Point: The question of what Thomas Wayne should have done about the journalist that wanted to talk about the Arkhams covering up his wife's mental illness. On the one hand, the Arkhams did some sketchy stuff to maintain their reputation, including covering up that Martha's trauma on seeing her mother kill her father meant she needed serious treatment. As Alfred puts it, however, Martha didn't deserve to be at the center of a media scandal just because her husband wanted to become a politician. Mental illness should not be a scandal, period, and the journalist didn't care about the impact it would have on Martha and Bruce. If we believe Alfred, Thomas was going to go to the cops to confess about what happened with Falcone, withdraw from his campaign, while keeping his wife and son out of the even bigger scandal.
 * Comic Book Movies Don't Use Codenames: Averted with Batman, Penguin and Riddler. Played straight with Catwoman as Selina is never called that, though several indirect allusions like "the Bat and the Cat" do come up.
 * Continuity Reboot: The second reboot of the 1989 Batman film series.
 * Darker and Edgier: The film itself is more gritty than previous live-action Batman films.
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?
 * Ridder talks about how thanks to the killings, people will remember him. Batman points out he's basically a nobody: another killer that went and hurt innocents in the name of his twisted form of justice, and he will die alone in Arkham, with no family or friends to come visit him..
 * Riddler gathers a bunch of
 * Even Evil Has Standards: As Penguin tells Gordon and Batman while they interrogate him, he's not a rat, let alone a snitch. There is such thing as honor among thieves. Also, whoever gave them a message about "El rata alada" is probably a gringo because it's "la rata" in Spanish. This leads to Batman realizing "You are el" is "URL," as in, a website, and types in www.elrataalada.com.
 * Evil Counterpart: Invoked by the Riddler, who tells Batman that he was inspired by the latter showing the power of fear and violence to make things happen. The two of them are eventually revealed to be Foils -
 * Fantastic Drug: "Drops". The shadow of Maroni's drug operation continues to loom in the present day,
 * The Ghost: Maroni is never shown onscreen or even heard in sound only, but the takedown of his drug operation years ago and the repercussions thereof continue to reverberate in the present day.
 * Good Cannot Comprehend Evil: The way that Alfred tells Bruce, Thomas simply could not believe that a man like Carmine Falcone was a killer. He thought he knew the man on whom he had operated, to maybe be a little bullying not but evil.
 * Gratuitous Spanish: A plot point; Penguins points out that "el rata alada" isn't proper Spanish, in the message that Riddler gave to Batman and Gordon. It should be "la rata alada" because "la rata" is feminine. He says whoever gave that clue must be ignorant and not fluent in the language. Sure enough, the Riddler is a very white guy that borrowed from another language to make another language.
 * He Who Fights Monsters: Whatever the Riddler might have been claiming about striking blows against the corrupt system with its Dirty Cops and Sleazy Politicians, by the time of his final plot - - it's clear that he's doing at least as much as if not more harm to the common folk than his victims.
 * Homage: An implacable Black Knight strides down a dark hallway, curb stomping unfortunate underlings. Rogue One, is that you?
 * Ironic Echo: A Riddler supporter says "I'm vengeance" when the police ask who he is, echoing how Batman introduced himself at the start of the film.
 * Misplaced Retribution:
 * Most of Riddler's targets make sense when you learn they are corrupt cops or politicians. Bruce Wayne, however, was basically targeted because of something that Thomas did. Riddler outright calls it Sins of Our Fathers and he's going after Bruce since Thomas has been dead for decades. What makes it really misplaced is that Alfred ended up opening the bomb, and barely survived thanks to his quick thinking to toss the bomb away.
 * Mayor candidate Bella Real is a Gotham native who is revealed to be Good All Along and takes the murder spree in stride, all things considered. Riddler wants her dead simply for promising to enact actual reforms, because her predecessors lied before.
 * Moral Myopia: Riddler has a good reason for hating the mayor, since the mayor was indirectly linked to a drug scandal that overtakes the whole city. He also leaves the mayor's body, blood and all, for the guy's preteen son to find after trick-or-treating, and puts his innocent wife through a Trauma Conga Line when his machinations reveal he was having an affair with Annika. There's also the fact that he spares Gordon and other cops from being killed; when Gordon wonders mildly if he should be afraid, Batman points out that Gordon is not corrupt and new blood. That doesn't change the fact that in the climax, Gordon and the cops with actual integrity are in great danger of being killed.
 * My Greatest Failure: Alfred is still haunted by his failure to protect Thomas and Martha even 20 years later.
 * Non-Action Big Bad: While the Riddler gets the jump on his victims with the aid of surprise and a weapon, he ultimately doesn't get a big fight with Batman. He even lampshades how his strength lies in his head.
 * Private Eye Monologue: Batman does this a few times, in line with the more noir direction of this film.
 * Race Lift: Both Catwoman and James Gordon are black people in this film compared to the comics.
 * Revenge Before Reason:
 * Catwoman doesn't care that avenging Annika would be a Suicide Mission once she finds out who made her roommate disappear. She goes in with a gun, ignoring Batman's legitimate concerns that it would be a one-way trip. Batman manages to talk her down, telling her that it's not who she is.
 * Riddler is a worse example of this. All of his destruction, while uncovering the festering corruption, is going to destroy Gotham City. As we saw, he had the evidence to start outing the scandal the whole time, and merely didn't know who the rat for Sal Maroni was. He outright admits to Bruce that he sees it all as a fireworks show.
 * Riddle for the Ages: When recounting the circumstances of Thomas and Martha's deaths, Alfred wonders aloud if it was a mob hit or just a random mugging gone wrong.
 * Sequel Hook:
 * In Batman's final monologue, he talks about people taking advantage of Gotham's situation while the camera focuses on the Penguin.
 * In the Riddler's last scene, he talks with a man who
 * When talking about future plans, Selina mentions Bludhaven.
 * Shotguns Are Just Better: Rifles do little more than slow Batman, but a double-barreled shotgun knocks him down.
 * Spanner in the Works: Riddler planned for his revenge carefully, including that Batman would play a part in his games. Catwoman was not a part of that bargain; she teams up with Batman to find Annika and helps him capture the dirty cop who outs the real rat.
 * Spiritual Successor: To both The Dark Knight (film) and The Long Halloween. You have a villain that wipes out the authority figures in the city, recruiting the desperate while going against one potential candidate that can change Gotham for the better. In fact, this movie takes a lot of notes from The Long Halloween, with a Batman villain serial killer that starts with the dirty and corrupt, a Catwoman that risks her life to save Batman and do the right thing.
 * Stuffed Into the Fridge: Annika ultimately serves this purpose not to Batman, who merely wants to protect her because it's public decency and she's in danger from the Riddler's machinations, but rather to motivate Catwoman to team up with Batman to find her roommate and girlfriend. Later Catwoman goes on the warpath when Annika shows up dead.
 * Suddenly Shouting: The Riddler has a tendency to suddenly raise his voice at times.
 * Suspiciously Similar Song: Batman's leitmotif sounds a lot like the Imperial March, something that has not escaped the notice of fan composers.
 * Terror Hero: Deconstructed. The first time Batman appears onscreen to save a guy from a gang, the person he's rescuing begs to not be hurt.
 * They Look Just Like Everyone Else: The unmasked Riddler turns out to look just like any bespectacled nerd you might find in the neighborhood or office. One cop even mentions he's an accountant.
 * Your Princess Is in Another Castle: Batman, Gordon and Catwoman find the rat while Riddler surrenders. Seems all the main plot threads are wrapped up...why is there an hour of movie left, and why does Riddler want an audience with Batman in Arkham? Turns out Riddler wanted to be arrested, and he has one last plan in motion.