Alatar
rogbngp
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2018
- Messages
- 3,228
- Reaction score
- 2,624
Nice analysis.
To put it succinctly: he realized that he’s become that same guy (or no different than that guy) that murdered his parents in cold blood in that dark alley all those years ago. Which is why I think it would have added so much weight to that scene is if when it showed the scene of his parents’ murder replaying in his head, when it showed the murderer’s face, it showed Bruce’s face instead as being the face of the murderer.
When he then delivered the line, “I’ll make you a promise, Martha won’t die tonight,” you just knew that the best cinematic Batman fight scene was going to ensue and that he was going to start dropping some bodies.
Yep, definitely! And when he says that line, it also isn't like they're suddenly 'Super Friends' either as some fans snicker. Imo Batman says that in genuine deep gratitude because Superman has just given him a valuable gift of insight into himself.
In my own head canon I choose to interpret that scene such that Superman says "Martha" intentionally, and he does it precisely in order to elicit the reaction that it has in Bruce.
At any point Superman could easily have killed Batman. Even with the Kryptonite gas grenades after Superman had recovered the first time he could have momentarily retreated and reemerged to dispatch Bats six ways to Sunday. Superman grants Batman the opportunity to kill him--and almost does get killed by Batman--in order to get through to him the only way that will actually work: emotionally and psychologically.
Anyway, by risking his own life and nudging Bruce into making that epiphany Superman actually saves his soul, as it were.
How did Superman know about their mothers sharing the same first name? Clark is an investigative reporter! He would have researched Bruce Wayne intensively after what he witnessed of Bruce at Lex's charity ball. And as Superman all he would have to do is listen to Bruce at a distance with his super hearing for about a day. He obviously knows Batman is Bruce because he calls out to him by name before the fight. I don't think that is solely because of what Lex says to Superman on the helipad. I think he's known probably since he showed up to toe tap the Batmobile and warn Bruce off the "the Bat is dead."
I'll bet in the hour of footage in the assembly cut that we haven't seen there is a scene of Clark reading about the Thomas and Martha Wayne murders, which takes place shortly after the charity ball.