Best scene of the movie - (Old Lady walks up to Bruce) Old Lady: Bruce meet my friend, Mr. Razzzz Al Ghuuul. Bruce (very clearly to both Ra's and Old Lady): You're not Ra's Al Ghul. Ra's Al Ghul is dead. I watched him die. (Old Lady quietly leaves)
I was actuelly suprised when he came back for the third act of batman begins being reveld as the True main villain of the movie, i really didn't see that coming
I'm still waiting for a "third" Tim Burton movie, now that Michael Keaton has returned to the role of Batman in THE FLASH. Do you think Ra's al-Ghul could fit into Burton's world? I think so. Maybe not stylistically, but certainly thematically. (Hey, General Zod managed to do it!) I think especially of Danny DeVito's Penguin in BATMAN RETURNS. Many have pointed out over the years that DeVito's incarnation owed more to Killer Croc than the "real" Penguin, but I also see quite a bit of the Mad Hatter in him (the electronic manipulation of the minds of animals) and a little of Ra's, too. Near the climax of the film, DeVito's Penguin even employs some very Ra's-like rhetoric: "The time has come to punish all God's children!...The liberation of Gotham has begun!" I remember watching that prior to my adulthood and wanting to take what he said literally, believing Burton's Gotham to be a solipsistic nightmare: it's literally the only thing in existence as far as Batman knows, and if it's destroyed he will have nothing left.
While I agree that Liam Nelson was Ra's al Ghul throughout the entirety of Batman Begins I still think that's a title that could have been passed down to him during his early years of serving the League of Shadows while Talia and Bane are still down in the pit, so the timeline of events could be this. 1, Liam Nelson's Henry Ducard is exiled by the warlord he had been working for while his pregnant wife is sent down into the pit. 2, during first few years of his Exile he's eventually found and taken in by the League of Shadows of that era Talia would only be a few years old at this point. 3, during the last few years before Talia eventually escapes the pit her father by this point has been passed down the title of Ra's al Ghul after the prior one was either taken out during a mission or actually sacrificed himself to accomplish the mission. 4, Talia escapes and finds her father who goes back to the pit to take out most of the prisoners and to rescue the one who saved his daughter. 5, Bane and taila are taken in by the league and trained. I would have loved to see flashbacks between Bane and Ra's al Ghul to see the dynamic of that relationship because I believe bane would have a huge amount of respect appreciation and admiration for the one who rescued him from that hellish pit and providing him a path which is why he's so willing to buy into and serve the cause of the League of Shadows because he feels like he owes them in a way despite being as strong as he is he could never Escape that pit he had to be saved and that's something that should also bother him a bit much like Batman had been taunted by both Joker and the hallucination of Ra's al Ghul about despite all his strength and resources there were still certain things he was unable to accomplish.
The thing with Ra's Al Ghul being a title is that it's literally how it is in the comics. Ra's isn't his real name, but he and his descendents uses it as one.
Also Ra's Al Ghul's ethnic background is absolutely not important to the character. In Birth of the Demon he literally destroys every last scroll in his tribe's language just so he isn't reminded of his wife. If anything placing importance to his background is antithetical to the character.
@Aistis1918 even though Ras did erase his tribes identity, I do think his ethnicity does matter because he comes from somewhere either in the Middle East or Central Asia. Aside from The Dark Knight trilogy, I can't think of another version where he is a white guy. I'm not applying this to you but I do find it ironic how the same crowd who gets angry when characters are race swapped, even if their ethnicity is not important to the character, they were not angry about a traditionally Asian character being cast by a white man for Batman Begins
@@Spongebrain97 I'll take the Neal Adam's word for it. Most people angry at Ra's being white don't even know his real ethnicity in the comics and don't even know Ra's isn't his real name.
I loved Michael Caine as Alfred. It opened a whole new path for other Alfreds with him being the first cockney Alfred. Thanks to him we got John Pertwee (son of the 3rd Doctor) as a more physical Alfred in Gotham. This Alfred looks like he's most adept in close range combat (a brawler) compared to the more common variations of Alfred. The more common variation has Alfred as more of a mid to long range fighter who often snipes down those who intrude with evil intentions. The Alfred we got with Michael Caine didn't strike me as a fighter type but he led the way for the more brawler type Alfreds to come along
I've always thought of Ra's al-Ghul as more of a James Bond style of villain than a Batman villain. He doesn't have (except for "demons," perhaps) a clearly defined gimmick, and (except for the immortality) he's someone who could plausibly exist in our own world. But Batman himself has described Ra's as perhaps his greatest foe, and I think he could be correct. As terrifying as the Joker is, he doesn't seek genocide of the human species; at worst, he wants to keep at least a few people alive as "harvests" for his ongoing terrorism (and, of course, he NEVER wants to kill Batman). How Ra's is physically embodied really doesn't concern me. His background should be kept completely mysterious - and in fact, when I first saw him, I wondered if he were really human at all. He has either blue or green eyes in almost all depictions, and on the '90s animated series he was voiced - superbly - by the British actor David Warner, so I like to think he could be almost any man. (The eye color could be contact lenses, after all.) The only reason I'd like to see him depicted as South Asian is because I want Naomi Scott as Talia. I think that would be perfect, because I think one of the best ways of describing Talia al-Ghul is "evil Princess Jasmine." It's a shame, though, that we'll probably never get to see the "real" Henri Ducard. I remember encountering him in the comics well before I saw any of the Nolan films, and he's someone I think could have fit very well into Nolan's world: a coldly pragmatic French police detective, someone not unlike Boba Fett of STAR WARS fame, only without the anonymity and striking costume.
Ras al Ghul is very different from other villains. He represents the path Batman could have taken. And unlike the criminals, who wreak havok in Gotham for their own personal reasons, Ras is like a force of judgement against the city itself for creating these criminals. If the Joker is like the final boss of a video game, Ras is more like the "Game Over" screen.
Alfred is my favorite Batman character. I don’t care what anyone says, had it not been for that man looking after Bruce with a loving and kind heart and guiding him down brighter path when he would have chosen darker ones, the Batman would not exist. Not without Alfred. Alfred is the greatest sidekick of all time and nobody even knows it. He is more of a sidekick/mentor but he is my favorite Batman character.
I think people got the idea of Ras Al Ghul being a title based off of the arrowverse. But obviously in this movie it’s just the guys name. The point being that he is constantly minding his surroundings, and didn’t fully trust Wayne yet with all the leagues secrets.
@@jetman80pops Neal Adams has said that the character was conceptualised with no real ethnicity in mind and that it doesn't matter to his character. This is even more apparent in the story Birth of the Demon in which Ras destroys every last scroll in his language just so he isn't reminded of his wife. Also by the time of making the movie his Arab mother didn't exist.
@@jetman80popsStop looking for a reason to complain. Complaining about this looks just as stupid as the people saying Ariel the mermaid can’t be black. None of these characters are real. They’re from comic books. Portrayed by actors ACTING as a completely fictional character. Besides there’s barely ever a canon for comics that is left the same and never changed forever. Everything gets rebooted or retconned eventually. Just shut up and enjoy it and if you don’t then don’t watch it
His name has been pronounced as both the Arabic “Rozz” and the Hebrew “Raysh” in different continuities. So either can be correct for an adaptation since the source material can’t even be consistent.
There is no one way to say it, in Arabic it's "Rahzz" and in Hebrew it's "Raysh" If you're saying it in Arabic you'd lean more to the former, if not then Raysh works fine but you gotta keep in mind that's not how it would be said normally.
I grew up with "Raysh" and rarely heard people say "Rozz" outside of The Untold Legend of Batman audio cassette and Terry saying it in Batman Beyond before Talia corrects him. So to hear "Rozz" in the films threw me off. It doesn't sound right. I've asked both Denny O'Neil and Neal Adams at conventions in the early 2000's how it's supposed to be said. O'Neil goes with "Raysh" while Adams goes with "Rozz". So there's no definitive way. I like how Vee says it, kind of merging the two together for a happy medium. I also love what they did on Arrow where if you're in the league you say "Raysh" while if you're an outsider, you go say "Rozz"
Hey I love The dark Knight trilogy it's one of my favorite versions of the Batman universe I kind of wish they were past three movies and gave us a Nolan version Riddler or a Nolan version Mr freeze or clayface done in a more grounded realistic way that would have been interesting
I doubt we will get a better version of the character unless when Batman Brave and the Bold is done, they do a more accurate version of the character. He will be needed since the Robin is his grandson.
"The Problem With The Dark Knight 's Ra's Al Ghul" Is "The Dark Knight" short for the Nolan trilogy, rather than "The Dark Knight Trilogy"? Honest question, because just by the title, it makes me think we're going to talk about Ra's in "The Dark Knight" movie, and... yeah.
Technically, the Nolan Trilogy is widely accepted now as being "The Dark Knight Trilogy" or "The Dark Knight Saga". If you see "The Dark Knight" in the title of a video talking about Begins or Rises, consider it about the series.
I find it interesting that no one points out that half of the villains in the Dark Knight Trilogy were white washed until now, so thank you for that. They were all excellently acted though. I can't lie about that
@@MichaelWilliams-ti7pn they should have done something like the court and made two face a main villain in another movie would have suited this darker universe
Yes, he was R'as Al ghoul the whole movie and Ken Watanabe's character was a decoy, but since he wasn't really immortal in any way I've always assume R'as Al Ghoul is in fact a title, and Ducard (or whatever his real name is) has been the one in that position for many years. So there's no reason he should be middle eastern.
Race swaps have always bothered me because to me it's all important the way they look, their sex, their personality and all around physical appearance all of the character design because if you change any of this it becomes The uncanny valley to me. That's my opinion at least.
My only issue with Ra's being in Begins is...well it's at the beginning, even implying he trained Batman which is so canon breaking it just didn't sit with me.
Hot take but Ra's in Batman Begins is WAY more interesting then comic Ra's. Comic Ra's just feels like a james bond villain that got lost and ended up in DC
I still say Batman begins feels the most like a Batman movie of the trilogy but also feels like a cop movie first like the rest of the trilogy it just had to also introduce Batman as well where the other 2 movies could just be cop movies with Batman thrown in I understand the realistic approach they were taking but while doing that they showed no understanding of Bruce’s world and as a longtime Batman fan I went into each movie hopeful even though I didn’t enjoyed them but after the multiple rewatches I did after they were physically released the the failure to understand Bruce’s world became more and more obvious even though the movies aren’t unwatchable they just became ones I returned to less cause of that aspect
My problem with Ra's is Nolan whitewashed him. According to the comic books Ra's father was Chinese and his mother was Arabic that doesn't make a white baby.
《a Brainwashed Butler!!!》 ...i thought Liam Neeson was excellent as "Qui-Gon Jinn", but, not so much so as "Ra's al Ghul"... ...i think Ken Wantanabe would have made an excellent "Craig Macguffin"!!! 🤡 🖖 🦇
The way i see it, he is Henri Ducard, but this version of Ducard just so happens to also be Ra’s al ghul. Ducard might have come across legends of a legendary warlord of centruries past named Ra’s al ghul and then decided to take that identity for himself.
Nolan is the king of white washing lol although to be fair with his second white washed villain Bane he was only continuing the tradition of having a white guy play Bane on screen and outside of white washing Bane he also took his backstory and gave it to a white washed Talia.
@@kwayneboy1524 Are you serious? Bane isn't white!!! He's Cuban! He is Hispanic! Did you think a white guy was running around with a lucha libre mask? Talia is also not white she is Chinese and Arab. You realize there are more races and ethnicities then white and black right?
Birth Of The Demon makes it clear he isn't Arabic as he refers to Arabs specifically as a different group people not native to his peoples current land somewhere in North Africa. Has this been retconned as I can't find anything regarding this prior to the whole new 52 BS.
You do realize the issue isn't just about race swapping, it's about diversity and representation in western media. A lot of people like to act like swapping a white character to asian or indian in an American movie is exactly the same as the opposite but no, no it is not. By a landslide most prominent characters in western media are white/caucasian, and the issue arises when the few prominent characters that do exist in western media AND have a diverse background/culture are then stripped of it and played by any other white guy actor. In an industry filled with representation for white europeans it is significantly less of a loss when a white european character is changed to provide more representation for people from other backgrounds.
Best scene of the movie -
(Old Lady walks up to Bruce)
Old Lady: Bruce meet my friend, Mr. Razzzz Al Ghuuul.
Bruce (very clearly to both Ra's and Old Lady): You're not Ra's Al Ghul. Ra's Al Ghul is dead. I watched him die.
(Old Lady quietly leaves)
🤣🤣 she's the real "Unsung Hero"- Bane
I was actuelly suprised when he came back for the third act of batman begins being reveld as the True main villain of the movie, i really didn't see that coming
I'm still waiting for a "third" Tim Burton movie, now that Michael Keaton has returned to the role of Batman in THE FLASH. Do you think Ra's al-Ghul could fit into Burton's world? I think so. Maybe not stylistically, but certainly thematically. (Hey, General Zod managed to do it!) I think especially of Danny DeVito's Penguin in BATMAN RETURNS. Many have pointed out over the years that DeVito's incarnation owed more to Killer Croc than the "real" Penguin, but I also see quite a bit of the Mad Hatter in him (the electronic manipulation of the minds of animals) and a little of Ra's, too. Near the climax of the film, DeVito's Penguin even employs some very Ra's-like rhetoric: "The time has come to punish all God's children!...The liberation of Gotham has begun!" I remember watching that prior to my adulthood and wanting to take what he said literally, believing Burton's Gotham to be a solipsistic nightmare: it's literally the only thing in existence as far as Batman knows, and if it's destroyed he will have nothing left.
Did you tought Scarecrow was going to be the main villain?
@@SeasideDetective2 He's not returning. its been confirmed. He's in the Batgirl movie but they canceled that for a tax return
@@felipereyes1440 yes i very much thought scarecrow was gonna be the main villain
Should probably smoke less weed.
While I agree that Liam Nelson was Ra's al Ghul throughout the entirety of Batman Begins I still think that's a title that could have been passed down to him during his early years of serving the League of Shadows while Talia and Bane are still down in the pit, so the timeline of events could be this.
1, Liam Nelson's Henry Ducard is exiled by the warlord he had been working for while his pregnant wife is sent down into the pit.
2, during first few years of his Exile he's eventually found and taken in by the League of Shadows of that era Talia would only be a few years old at this point.
3, during the last few years before Talia eventually escapes the pit her father by this point has been passed down the title of Ra's al Ghul after the prior one was either taken out during a mission or actually sacrificed himself to accomplish the mission.
4, Talia escapes and finds her father who goes back to the pit to take out most of the prisoners and to rescue the one who saved his daughter.
5, Bane and taila are taken in by the league and trained.
I would have loved to see flashbacks between Bane and Ra's al Ghul to see the dynamic of that relationship because I believe bane would have a huge amount of respect appreciation and admiration for the one who rescued him from that hellish pit and providing him a path which is why he's so willing to buy into and serve the cause of the League of Shadows because he feels like he owes them in a way despite being as strong as he is he could never Escape that pit he had to be saved and that's something that should also bother him a bit much like Batman had been taunted by both Joker and the hallucination of Ra's al Ghul about despite all his strength and resources there were still certain things he was unable to accomplish.
The thing with Ra's Al Ghul being a title is that it's literally how it is in the comics. Ra's isn't his real name, but he and his descendents uses it as one.
Also Ra's Al Ghul's ethnic background is absolutely not important to the character. In Birth of the Demon he literally destroys every last scroll in his tribe's language just so he isn't reminded of his wife. If anything placing importance to his background is antithetical to the character.
@Aistis1918 even though Ras did erase his tribes identity, I do think his ethnicity does matter because he comes from somewhere either in the Middle East or Central Asia. Aside from The Dark Knight trilogy, I can't think of another version where he is a white guy.
I'm not applying this to you but I do find it ironic how the same crowd who gets angry when characters are race swapped, even if their ethnicity is not important to the character, they were not angry about a traditionally Asian character being cast by a white man for Batman Begins
@@Spongebrain97 I'll take the Neal Adam's word for it.
Most people angry at Ra's being white don't even know his real ethnicity in the comics and don't even know Ra's isn't his real name.
I loved Michael Caine as Alfred. It opened a whole new path for other Alfreds with him being the first cockney Alfred. Thanks to him we got John Pertwee (son of the 3rd Doctor) as a more physical Alfred in Gotham. This Alfred looks like he's most adept in close range combat (a brawler) compared to the more common variations of Alfred. The more common variation has Alfred as more of a mid to long range fighter who often snipes down those who intrude with evil intentions. The Alfred we got with Michael Caine didn't strike me as a fighter type but he led the way for the more brawler type Alfreds to come along
I've always thought of Ra's al-Ghul as more of a James Bond style of villain than a Batman villain. He doesn't have (except for "demons," perhaps) a clearly defined gimmick, and (except for the immortality) he's someone who could plausibly exist in our own world. But Batman himself has described Ra's as perhaps his greatest foe, and I think he could be correct. As terrifying as the Joker is, he doesn't seek genocide of the human species; at worst, he wants to keep at least a few people alive as "harvests" for his ongoing terrorism (and, of course, he NEVER wants to kill Batman).
How Ra's is physically embodied really doesn't concern me. His background should be kept completely mysterious - and in fact, when I first saw him, I wondered if he were really human at all. He has either blue or green eyes in almost all depictions, and on the '90s animated series he was voiced - superbly - by the British actor David Warner, so I like to think he could be almost any man. (The eye color could be contact lenses, after all.) The only reason I'd like to see him depicted as South Asian is because I want Naomi Scott as Talia. I think that would be perfect, because I think one of the best ways of describing Talia al-Ghul is "evil Princess Jasmine."
It's a shame, though, that we'll probably never get to see the "real" Henri Ducard. I remember encountering him in the comics well before I saw any of the Nolan films, and he's someone I think could have fit very well into Nolan's world: a coldly pragmatic French police detective, someone not unlike Boba Fett of STAR WARS fame, only without the anonymity and striking costume.
i bet he woulda worked 100% in a spy series
I think the biggest indication that Ken Watanabe's character was never supposed to be Ra's was how quickly he dies in his fight scene.
Ras al Ghul is very different from other villains. He represents the path Batman could have taken. And unlike the criminals, who wreak havok in Gotham for their own personal reasons, Ras is like a force of judgement against the city itself for creating these criminals. If the Joker is like the final boss of a video game, Ras is more like the "Game Over" screen.
i always considered ra's to be the true greatest batman ever. while joker is just an asshole who wants to die
“A brainwashed butler!”
can anyone else get behind a realistic clayface thats just an actor/serial killer and a detective driven batman
Alfred is my favorite Batman character. I don’t care what anyone says, had it not been for that man looking after Bruce with a loving and kind heart and guiding him down brighter path when he would have chosen darker ones, the Batman would not exist. Not without Alfred. Alfred is the greatest sidekick of all time and nobody even knows it. He is more of a sidekick/mentor but he is my favorite Batman character.
RIP Kevin, that cameo never gets old.
you know, they say criminals are a superstitious, cowardly lot but i think ra's might be the exception to the rule
While it’s not Fully Accurate, this is my favorite Villain of the Trilogy.
Liam Neeson makes a good Ra's AL Ghul.
I think people got the idea of Ras Al Ghul being a title based off of the arrowverse. But obviously in this movie it’s just the guys name. The point being that he is constantly minding his surroundings, and didn’t fully trust Wayne yet with all the leagues secrets.
I made a Grinch-like smile when Liam Neeson revealed himself
Also, like you said liam neeson was an amazing choice for this role so I don't really take issue with the fact that he's irish.
So because Liam was cast you're perfectly fine with the whitewashing? Considering the comics Ra's father is Chinese and his mother is Arabic.
@@jetman80pops Neal Adams has said that the character was conceptualised with no real ethnicity in mind and that it doesn't matter to his character. This is even more apparent in the story Birth of the Demon in which Ras destroys every last scroll in his language just so he isn't reminded of his wife.
Also by the time of making the movie his Arab mother didn't exist.
@@jetman80popsStop looking for a reason to complain. Complaining about this looks just as stupid as the people saying Ariel the mermaid can’t be black.
None of these characters are real. They’re from comic books. Portrayed by actors ACTING as a completely fictional character. Besides there’s barely ever a canon for comics that is left the same and never changed forever. Everything gets rebooted or retconned eventually.
Just shut up and enjoy it and if you don’t then don’t watch it
My biggest issue is all the realism and not enough comic elements
I would love to see a video on Alfred. Because honestly I don't think there are enough videos on him.
Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things 😁👍
My biggest problem was how they pronounced his title...
Its pronounced "Raysh"... not "Rozz".
His name has been pronounced as both the Arabic “Rozz” and the Hebrew “Raysh” in different continuities. So either can be correct for an adaptation since the source material can’t even be consistent.
There is no one way to say it, in Arabic it's "Rahzz" and in Hebrew it's "Raysh"
If you're saying it in Arabic you'd lean more to the former, if not then Raysh works fine but you gotta keep in mind that's not how it would be said normally.
As I recall, Dennis O'Neil said it was pronounced "Raysh" and he created the character, so...
I grew up with "Raysh" and rarely heard people say "Rozz" outside of The Untold Legend of Batman audio cassette and Terry saying it in Batman Beyond before Talia corrects him. So to hear "Rozz" in the films threw me off. It doesn't sound right.
I've asked both Denny O'Neil and Neal Adams at conventions in the early 2000's how it's supposed to be said. O'Neil goes with "Raysh" while Adams goes with "Rozz". So there's no definitive way.
I like how Vee says it, kind of merging the two together for a happy medium. I also love what they did on Arrow where if you're in the league you say "Raysh" while if you're an outsider, you go say "Rozz"
Has anyone ever brought up how this and Ironman 3 basically did the same thing with their main bad guys?
Hey I love The dark Knight trilogy it's one of my favorite versions of the Batman universe I kind of wish they were past three movies and gave us a Nolan version Riddler or a Nolan version Mr freeze or clayface done in a more grounded realistic way that would have been interesting
I like to think he has a normal name “Jack Smith” but Ras Al Ghul is still a title. Also yes do Alfred next!
I doubt we will get a better version of the character unless when Batman Brave and the Bold is done, they do a more accurate version of the character. He will be needed since the Robin is his grandson.
They’ll need to make him a really good version of Ra’s, cause you need to make Damien have good reason to be…well Damien
"The Problem With The Dark Knight 's Ra's Al Ghul"
Is "The Dark Knight" short for the Nolan trilogy, rather than "The Dark Knight Trilogy"? Honest question, because just by the title, it makes me think we're going to talk about Ra's in "The Dark Knight" movie, and... yeah.
Technically, the Nolan Trilogy is widely accepted now as being "The Dark Knight Trilogy" or "The Dark Knight Saga".
If you see "The Dark Knight" in the title of a video talking about Begins or Rises, consider it about the series.
Well the alternative is "The Batman Begins's Ra's Al Ghul"
“A brainwashed butler”
I find it interesting that no one points out that half of the villains in the Dark Knight Trilogy were white washed until now, so thank you for that. They were all excellently acted though. I can't lie about that
this did not do ra's justice they also ruined bane
Those are 2 villains that did not need to be in Nolan's grounded series. One uses magic another uses venom
Yes it did. This is one of the only Ra's adaptations that touched upon his origin and the primary motivation which is the death of his wife.
@@MichaelWilliams-ti7pn they should have done something like the court and made two face a main villain in another movie would have suited this darker universe
Agreed
💯💯💯
Actually the pronunciation that vee uses for the demons head moniker would make him jewish because thats the yiddish translation for it
I love you Vee Infuso!!!!!
Yes, he was R'as Al ghoul the whole movie and Ken Watanabe's character was a decoy, but since he wasn't really immortal in any way I've always assume R'as Al Ghoul is in fact a title, and Ducard (or whatever his real name is) has been the one in that position for many years. So there's no reason he should be middle eastern.
Honestly though, a Ken Watanabe Ra’s would be phenomenal
Race swaps have always bothered me because to me it's all important the way they look, their sex, their personality and all around physical appearance all of the character design because if you change any of this it becomes The uncanny valley to me. That's my opinion at least.
Can you take a look at Ra's from Arrow?
If he's supposed to be Arabic, then casting Liam Neeson and Ken Watanabe were perfect for 2005, all things considered.
My only issue with Ra's being in Begins is...well it's at the beginning, even implying he trained Batman which is so canon breaking it just didn't sit with me.
It's canon now
Hot take but Ra's in Batman Begins is WAY more interesting then comic Ra's. Comic Ra's just feels like a james bond villain that got lost and ended up in DC
I want to hear more about brainwashed butlers.
This mf took screen time away from Scarecrow
I wish he called Batman Detective at one point in the movie.
But there was no Lazarus Pit….😢
In the novelization it was
a brainwashed butler poor Alfred. As for this I wish I had more of an opinion to give but its been some time since I saw the movie with Ra's.
I still say Batman begins feels the most like a Batman movie of the trilogy but also feels like a cop movie first like the rest of the trilogy it just had to also introduce Batman as well where the other 2 movies could just be cop movies with Batman thrown in I understand the realistic approach they were taking but while doing that they showed no understanding of Bruce’s world and as a longtime Batman fan I went into each movie hopeful even though I didn’t enjoyed them but after the multiple rewatches I did after they were physically released the the failure to understand Bruce’s world became more and more obvious even though the movies aren’t unwatchable they just became ones I returned to less cause of that aspect
Hello from Russia
Batman begins, did the Iron Man 3 twist first.
I thought Vee was going to talk about a real problem
My problem with Ra's is Nolan whitewashed him. According to the comic books Ra's father was Chinese and his mother was Arabic that doesn't make a white baby.
Oh dont wokify it
@@DillionMallow-s8i 🤡🤡
I remember when Vee Infuso was our least favorite youtuber
My ra’s al ghul burns
Not the butler!
《a Brainwashed Butler!!!》
...i thought Liam Neeson was excellent as "Qui-Gon Jinn", but, not so much so as "Ra's al Ghul"...
...i think Ken Wantanabe would have made an excellent "Craig Macguffin"!!!
🤡 🖖 🦇
👍🏽
The way i see it, he is Henri Ducard, but this version of Ducard just so happens to also be Ra’s al ghul. Ducard might have come across legends of a legendary warlord of centruries past named Ra’s al ghul and then decided to take that identity for himself.
Is crabs more embarassing than aids?
Slightly... only slightly.
a brainwash, Butler
A brainwashed butler!
Nolan is the king of white washing lol although to be fair with his second white washed villain Bane he was only continuing the tradition of having a white guy play Bane on screen and outside of white washing Bane he also took his backstory and gave it to a white washed Talia.
All of which are white in the comics so be quiet
@@kwayneboy1524 Are you serious? Bane isn't white!!! He's Cuban! He is Hispanic! Did you think a white guy was running around with a lucha libre mask? Talia is also not white she is Chinese and Arab. You realize there are more races and ethnicities then white and black right?
@@nicholeharwood6283 dude who cares these things don't matter
@@nicholeharwood6283 Neal Adams who made the Al ghul character gave him no canonical ethnic background.
A brainwashed butler
Is he white in the comics?
He's asian however Neal Adams has said that the character was conceived with no real ethnicity in mind and that it doesn't matter to the character.
He says what his ethnicity is in the video
Although he’s been depicted more Middle Eastern in recent years due to Damien I believe
This and Scarecrow back to back, you really hate Irish people eh?
Raaaaaaaaas
The problem is them saying 'Ras' and not 'Raysh'. A common mistake.
The movies said raysh instead or Raas
Not my Ras Al Ghul. Nolan had his fun now burn these films and move on. Poor man's Batman.
lol keep hating. Consensus best live action batman movies
Eh he still looks like Ra's Al Ghul to me lol just a white version.
Birth Of The Demon makes it clear he isn't Arabic as he refers to Arabs specifically as a different group people not native to his peoples current land somewhere in North Africa.
Has this been retconned as I can't find anything regarding this prior to the whole new 52 BS.
A brain washed butler!
Another example of race swapping only being bad if the character was changed to white.
You do realize the issue isn't just about race swapping, it's about diversity and representation in western media.
A lot of people like to act like swapping a white character to asian or indian in an American movie is exactly the same as the opposite but no, no it is not.
By a landslide most prominent characters in western media are white/caucasian, and the issue arises when the few prominent characters that do exist in western media AND have a diverse background/culture are then stripped of it and played by any other white guy actor.
In an industry filled with representation for white europeans it is significantly less of a loss when a white european character is changed to provide more representation for people from other backgrounds.
first finally
Now you weirdos are criticizing The Batman Nolan Series.
You Professional Couch Critics need to get a Life.
A brainwashed butler!
A brainwashed butler
A brainwashed butler!