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jesmardru 's review for:
Batman and Psychology: A Dark and Stormy Knight
by Travis Langley
dark
informative
mysterious
reflective
slow-paced
I was really excited to read this initially, but I’m very disappointed.
It felt like a 11th grader wrote a thesis on Batman and compared it to their Psych101/foundations terminology.
I also think the language in the middle was fairly closed-minded & assuming then “most men” and “most women” are [like this/that]. I mean??? This author did not feel like an expert in psychology in the slightest and it pissed me off.
Some of the closing statements made sense about how some disorderly behavior isn’t exactly defining, I agree. Not everything warrants a diagnosis. HOWEVER, I felt frustrated reading it. And it insinuate that the Red Hood was “more insane” than the Joker?? And that the Joker “was more of a Bipolar Disorder diagnosis vs an actually calculating psychopath?”
Nahhhhh. Get out of here.
Anyway I’m gonna rewatch Nolan’s trilogy and Pattinson’s movies again because they’re awesome depictions of the actual comic.
It felt like a 11th grader wrote a thesis on Batman and compared it to their Psych101/foundations terminology.
I also think the language in the middle was fairly closed-minded & assuming then “most men” and “most women” are [like this/that]. I mean??? This author did not feel like an expert in psychology in the slightest and it pissed me off.
Some of the closing statements made sense about how some disorderly behavior isn’t exactly defining, I agree. Not everything warrants a diagnosis. HOWEVER, I felt frustrated reading it. And it insinuate that the Red Hood was “more insane” than the Joker?? And that the Joker “was more of a Bipolar Disorder diagnosis vs an actually calculating psychopath?”
Nahhhhh. Get out of here.
Anyway I’m gonna rewatch Nolan’s trilogy and Pattinson’s movies again because they’re awesome depictions of the actual comic.