Here's trying to defend one of the most controversial CBM moments with whatever little understanding of life I have:
I was listening to a song when I was told my grandfather passed away , the first family death I witnessed.
1/?
I was listening to a song when I was told my grandfather passed away , the first family death I witnessed.
1/?
To this day whenever I get the slightest hint of that tune or lyrics, I can't help but get repercussions of how I felt then , shed tears and question how I could have been a better grandchild.
2/?
2/?
You think someone who witnessed such a huge loss at such a young age won't be feeling the same?
Their mothers having the same name doesn't magically solve their fight and makes them best friends.
3/?
Their mothers having the same name doesn't magically solve their fight and makes them best friends.
3/?
It's just a painful parallel for Batman when he sees a boy just helplessly trying to save his mother like he was all those years ago and failing.
4/?
4/?
Hearing someone he was about to kill, speak the words that were his father's last takes him back to when he first heard that faint feeble cry of help with that name leading to the most painful experience a person could have.
It makes him realise he has become the exact person, he was supposed to save the world against.
It's not supposed to be funny, death never is. This is life as we experience it each passing second.
6/?
It's not supposed to be funny, death never is. This is life as we experience it each passing second.
6/?
This is what's about Zack Snyder, if he can make a billionaire playboy relatable to a teenage girl for such a sensitive aspect of life then I don't know if it's anything but brilliant filmmaking about heroes in the modern world.
It's 2021 and 2020 has given us all our shares of losses. Enough with the Martha jokes please?