8 Things The Batman Sequels Need To Succeed 

How to get two thumb-drives up in the sequels.

By Jon Garcia /

According to the critics and fan consensus, The Batman is a winning Batman movie.

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Warner Brothers know what they have here, and they are going franchise-crazy with Penguin and GCPD TV spinoffs already on their way, plus the inevitable movie sequels.

However making a franchise out of a realistic and nihilistic Batman world comes with all sorts of problems that the studio will eventually need to push through to make the stories a success.

The movie pointed out why a figure like Batman is problematic in a real-life setting, and so sequels will need to find ways for him to grow and learn so audiences can still cheer and glorify him.

With that in mind, we're going to point out some of the potential problems future movies may face, and also point out ways how to steer the bat-ship smoothly across them.

8. A Bruce Wayne Philanthropist Persona

In The Batman, Bruce Wayne is told repeatedly that he is ignoring his responsibilities as Bruce Wayne. Alfred tells him that he needs to watch out for his family’s legacy, and the new progressive Mayor tells him that Bruce has not done enough philanthropy.

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Thomas Wayne (Bruce’s father) promised to give a fortune to Gotham City when he was alive, only for that plan to go to ruin once he died. Then, we have the twist with The Riddler: When Edward Nashton was an orphan child in poverty, Thomas Wayne’s promises of funding the city were a dream come true - only for the promise to be unkept. Due to that and the city elite’s corruption, Edward instead experienced a life full of suffering in continued poverty. His experience is one of the driving motivations why he became The Riddler.

The message is clear: it is not just Batman who needs to improve, it is also Bruce Wayne. If Bruce gave some time doing some philanthropy work just like his father, instead of just beating up people to make himself feel better, then Bruce would have made some real social change. The Riddler would never have been born.

Isn’t it weird that despite all the setup of the movie to make Bruce Wayne aware of the good things he can do with his money, the movie never pays it off in favor of only the good he can do as Batman?

He's a changed man by the time the credits role, and this is a development we need to see in a sequel.

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