Flip wrote:Nah, its a good word to use when compared to Watchmen which was much gorier, intense, and adult situational. It was what i hoped the spidermen movies would have been, too... I started to get tired of superhero movies because they all were cheesy fun (ironman, spiderman, batman, hulk, x-men, etc, the list goes on and on). Wathmen break the mold, IMO, and i was happy for it.
Well, that's precisely what Watchmen was designed to do when it came out in the comics, during the 80s. Nowadays, you can find a lot of the non-traditional heroes and anti-heroes in Vertigo Comics, which Hollywood has just started to tap into: Constantine (Hellblazer), A History of Violence, V for Vendetta, The Fountain. The fact that people don't know that movies like A History of Violence and The Fountain were based on graphic novels is a testament of the non-traditionalist nature of the comics.
However, the new Batman series should not be taken lightly for how much darker and serious it is compared to the old Batman, or other superhero movies. It is no Superman, or Ironman, or Spiderman. You are not laughing with some mousy small-time person turned superhero or laughing at gags. Any sort of comedy in place is much darker than normal.
Plus, Ledger's Joker makes Nicholson's Joker look "whimsical".