The thing is I already thought that Batman v Superman is Underrated. And did you not see the Wall of text I put in the comments @Sisu138
Then why didn’t you lead with that
I missed this so you're spared the usual.
Masterpiece... bwahahaha.
"Batman lost one big characteristic those days, that he's supposed to be Scary."
That's not actually true. Matt Reeves explored Batman's scary nature in his movie. In the opening sequences, you can see criminals are scared of the shadows because they think Batman is there watching them. The whole movie shows a gritty depiction of Batman without making him overly edgy, and by the end of it, he learns that his methods shouldn't rely only on scaring criminals. He must also inspire hope in the innocent residents of a rotten city, because that's what Batman's supposed to represent. And that's something Snyder didn't achieve. At all.
Because I didn't want to spend hours writing a wall of text @Bonkidus.Shwonkidus. And besides, I'm already working on a giant wall of text.
Because I didn't want to spend hours writing a wall of text
And yet you did it anyway.
That's because it was less time consuming @Bonkidus.Shwonkidus
I'm not going to watch a video so if you have points, do write them down and we'll headdesk.
I've seen good movies. I've seen bad movies. I've seen good movies with bad scenes and bad movies with good scenes. No amount of words is going to make BvS anything but a bad movie with bad scenes.
Also @Leto2073, Batman did eventually change his ways during the end of the movie and did get some good character development. This not only comes in the form of the Martha scene (I would right a wall of text for it by I don't feel in the mood for it) but when Superman sacrificed his life Batman and the public realized that they shouldn't fear him. Batman felt responsible for the death of Earth's greatest protector being Superman, so he ask Wonder Women where the other super powered beings are to protect the Earth. But Wonder Woman recommends that they should just leave them to do whatever. Batman character changes much more in Justice League being more similar to the Batman you know.
Nothing of what you just said shows how the people's perception of Batman changes throughout the movie. I understand the meaning of the "Martha" scene, no need to lecture me about it. You say everybody starts seeing Superman as a savior after his sacrifice, sure, but that doesn't change the way the people of Gotham see Batman. There's no scene that shows Batman changing his ways, except for that one blink-and-you-miss-it shot at the end of ZSJL where the criminals are tied down in front of Bat-Tank instead of killed. And even after that, we get another glimpse of the Knightmare future where he again is willing to kill his enemies. That's not development, and it pales in comparison to Robert Pattinson's development in The Batman.