The Batman Bruce Wayne
The Batman: No Playboy Persona For Bruce Wayne According to Robert Pattinson

One of the constant things that has always surrounded Bruce Wayne is his playboy persona! Almost every iteration of Batman has a playboy persona he uses people to throw them off the trail of the Batman. As far as I'm aware that's been around since Batman's early days. Maybe not the very beginning, but it's certainly been that way for many years. With the release of The Batman coming up everyone is wondering how Robert Pattinson's portrayal of Bruce Wayne will be! His Batman is borderline psychotic it seems, and even more surprising... Pattinson says his Bruce has no playboy persona! I'm confident he can still pull it off, though!

It was in a recent interview with GQ that Pattinson discussed Bruce's playboy persona.

"I've definitely found a little interesting thread. He doesn't have a playboy persona at all, so he's kind of a weirdo as Bruce and a weirdo as Batman, and I kept thinking there's a more nihilistic slant to it. 'Cause, normally, in all the other movies, Bruce goes away, trains, and returns to Gotham believing in himself, thinking, I'm gonna change things here. But in this, it's sort of implied that he's had a bit of a breakdown. But this thing he's doing, it's not even working. Like, it's two years into it, and the crime has gotten worse since Bruce started being Batman. The people of Gotham think that he's just another symptom of how shit everything is. There's this scene where he's beating everyone up on this train platform, and I just love that there's a bit in the script where the guy he's saving is also just like: Ahh! It's worse! You're either being mugged by some gang members, or a monster comes and, like, f-cking beats everybody up! The guy has no idea that Batman's come to save him. It just looks like this werewolf.
And I kept trying to play into that, I kept trying to think, and I'm going to express this so badly, but there's this thing with addressing trauma.... All the other stories say the death of his parents is why Bruce becomes Batman, but I was trying to break that down in what I thought was a real way, instead of trying to rationalize it. He's created this intricate construction for years and years and years, which has culminated in this Batman persona. But it's not like a healthy thing that he's done.
And Bruce says: 'This is my family legacy. If I don't do this, then there's nothing else for me.' I always read that as not like, 'There's nothing else,' like, 'I don't have a purpose.' But like: 'I'm checking out. And I think that makes it a lot sadder. Like, it's a sad movie. It's kind of about him trying to find some element of hope, in himself, and not just the city. Normally, Bruce never questions his own ability; he questions the city's ability to change. But I mean, it's kind of such an insane thing to do: The only way I can live is to dress up as a bat."

The Batman is heading into theaters on March 4th!

Alexander Ouellet
Alexander is passionate about everything related to gaming, comics, television, and film. You can usually find him watching some kind of DC show.
Alexander is passionate about everything related to gaming, comics, television, and film. You can usually find him watching some kind of DC show.