Whizbang Dustyboots
Gnometown Hero
I think one can make a credible argument about mental illness and trauma around a lot of superhero fiction.I would say it's an absolutely midnight dark comedy about mental illness.
I think one can make a credible argument about mental illness and trauma around a lot of superhero fiction.I would say it's an absolutely midnight dark comedy about mental illness.
Sure, but "Super" involves delusion, not powers. If I snapped and started killing Orcs in a shopping mall, with someone following me around with a camera, it wouldn't be a fantasy movie.I think one can make a credible argument about mental illness and trauma around a lot of superhero fiction.
I still think the best take on Batman is that his superpower is massive wealth and white privilege and he uses both to go around beating up mentally ill people. If he wanted to solve crime in Gotham he could invest some of his wealth into job programs, drug rehab, and mental health services. That would do far more good than beating up a rotating cast of thousands of unstable people in goofy pajamas.I think one can make a credible argument about mental illness and trauma around a lot of superhero fiction.
Men will do anything to avoid going to therapy.That would do far more good than beating up a rotating cast of thousands of unstable people in goofy pajamas.
Well Bruce Wayne is a major sponsor of the Arkham Asylum so he does invest in mental health services and research as well Wayne Investments employing a good percentage of Gothams population.I still think the best take on Batman is that his superpower is massive wealth and white privilege and he uses both to go around beating up mentally ill people. If he wanted to solve crime in Gotham he could invest some of his wealth into job programs, drug rehab, and mental health services. That would do far more good than beating up a rotating cast of thousands of unstable people in goofy pajamas.
One of the biggest disconnects is how many people with doctorates are on his crap list. Mr. Freeze is trying to save his terminally ill wife. Poison Ivy is trying to save the planet.I still think the best take on Batman is that his superpower is massive wealth and white privilege and he uses both to go around beating up mentally ill people. If he wanted to solve crime in Gotham he could invest some of his wealth into job programs, drug rehab, and mental health services. That would do far more good than beating up a rotating cast of thousands of unstable people in goofy pajamas.
Right? Having a decent healthcare system in the US and reasonable economic policies re: the environment and neither villain would exist. Like Breaking Bad, it could only happen in the US.One of the biggest disconnects is how many people with doctorates are on his crap list. Mr. Freeze is trying to save his terminally ill wife. Poison Ivy is trying to save the planet.
Maybe I'm thinking too much of the BtaS portrayals of the characters but I'm not sure that's actually right.Like Breaking Bad, it could only happen in the US.
I mean, his is in some versions, not all, but that kind of makes it worse, because Arkham Asylum is universally, through all Batman Mythos I'm aware of (which is a fair bit), to be totally ineffectual, even at helping/rehabilitating the least-crazed and most reasonable people Bats sends there.Well Bruce Wayne is a major sponsor of the Arkham Asylum
In most of the versions that I'm aware of, Arkham is more about storage, than it is about any sort of healing. It's Victorian, if not outright Medieval.I mean, his is in some versions, not all, but that kind of makes it worse, because Arkham Asylum is universally, through all Batman Mythos I'm aware of (which is a fair bit), to be totally ineffectual, even at helping/rehabilitating the least-crazed and most reasonable people Bats sends there.