We all know that Batman I would never kill or a fly, which does not mean that the superhero is a pánfilo that is scared. In fact, it is quite the opposite, and has no qualms about using violence to detain the villains on duty … or even to save them.
Some might think that there is a legal vacuum by which no one forces the dark gentleman to prevent his opponents from dying, because he would not be directly responsible for his death. Nothing is further from reality, as the character himself reminded us in Detective Comics #1096 and that they collect from Comicbook.
The villain Ashema kidnaps Joe Chill, the murderer of her parents, and encloses it in the middle of a fire to die consumed by the flames. In this way, Bruce Wayne would finally have the definitive revenge on one of the men who hate the mostbut decides to rescue him to take him to an ambulance where they attend him.
Asma is intended to torture the Wayne for a turbulent past he had with them, but the protagonist assures him that seeing someone dies is not what his parents would have wanted. The two magnates helped anyone who crossed their way, regardless of their past or the negative consequences of the act of saving them. Compassion is an absolute norm of Bruce’s life, since his mother would have wanted.
The version of the comics is the one that really marks the DC fee, but it must be taken into account that in Batman Begins The bat let Ra’s al Ghul die mercilessly. The flexibility of the norm of not killing seems to vary depending on the universe, although it is quite clear that no one will die for a direct act of Batman.
In Lifextra | When Batman went to Guantazos with Dracula and ended up crushing him with one of the most epic phrases in history
In Lifextra | Almost all video games of DC superheroes have gone to the fuck. What’s happening and how will affect the future of Batman and Superman
In Lifextra | Batman is not the only hero with a car: the spider-mille existed and it was a fiasco that Spider-Man was ashamed