he lft ra's a way out. While i think he should have saved him I think the fact that batman killed in the early comics is important here; maybe it was a nod to that? Anyway, it's going to come back to haunt him. he was responsible for the deaths of many people indirectly because he refused to cave in and now someone, bane, is going to hold him accountable for it. It doesn't ruin the film for me in any way and while it's odd for batman to react like this I can understand it as a reference to the early interpretations of batman where he was carrying a gun and was killing his opponents.
Batfan175 wrote:While i think he should have saved him I think the fact that batman killed in the early comics is important here; maybe it was a nod to that?
Batman's time as a killer in the comic books did not survive beyond the first year of publication. Also those deaths were almost always accidental or in self-defense. For the majority of Batman's history, he has had the no-kill rule in place. However that doesn't mean that there hasn't been exceptions or that he hasn't "bent" the rule from time to time. Ultimately, for Batman it always comes down to serving justice and protecting Gotham.
I think the only nod to the gun-toting days may be the way the grappling-gun is designed and worn on his belt.
I always thought this argument was the equivalent of Superman not technically killing Lex Luthor if he fell off a building and then watched him die. If he's against killing, and has the capacity to save him, it's killing him. Trying and failling =/= killing, letting someone die when you are fully capably of doing so as a way to say you didn't kill them = BULLSHIT.
But the rest of Begins is so damn cool I let it slide.
Obviously Batman thought it was for the best.
Ra's Al Ghul would be nipping at his heels forever if he didn't die.
But then again, why didn't he kill Joker?
Urgh, It hurts me to say this but It's think it's the definition of a cop-out line.