Labor

Written by C Hues

September 5, 2022

When you’re seen as a low-class hire
You’re not higher until you strike
When you strike and the freights are on fire
Being fired leaves laborers alike

Men were murdered—but a holiday was born
Survivors left with hate and scorn
But as the generations came and went
We forgot whose blood was spent 

CITATION: [1] History.com. How a Deadly Railroad Strike Led to the Labor Day Holiday. Sarah Pruitt. August 27, 2019. Updated August 30, 2021. Accessed September 5, 2022. https://www.history.com/news/labor-day-pullman-railway-strike-origins .

Daredevil, Season 1, Episode 13: X

Written by C Hues

September 2, 2022

            The following contains spoilers for Daredevil, Season 1. Proceed with caution.

            In Daredevil, Season 1: Episode 13, the letter X carries several themes throughout the episode. It is primarily used as a signal of death, but also reveals multiple meanings as applied to various characters. X’s found throughout the episode are usually a harbinger of destruction and foreshadow the demise of different characters.

In Daredevil, Season 1: Episode 13, the incessant use of the letter X conveys copious meanings regarding myriad characters. One definition for the letter x is “cross”,[1] and a cross is seen over the grave of Ben Urich in the opening of the episode.[2] While this cross is shown, the song “Many Rivers to Cross” by Jimmy Cliff[3] plays. The lyrics are as follows, “Many rivers to cross / But just where to begin, I’m playing for time / There are times I find myself / Thinking of committing some dreadful crime”.[4] This denotes a double meaning for the word cross. Wilson Fisk commits “some dreadful crime” by murdering Ben Urich in the penultimate episode of the season (along with countless other crimes throughout the season), but the lyrics also delve into Matt Murdock’s psyche and the strife he has of crossing a moral line if he decides to murder Fisk.[5] Throughout several episodes, friends and enemies alike (such as Stick, and the Russian mob boss that Kingpin betrays) tell Daredevil that he must “cross” a line and murder Fisk so that he can save Hell’s Kitchen.[6] In the episode “Speak of the Devil”, Matt goes to see a priest to try to convince himself not to murder Fisk, but he contemplates murdering him when he discovers that he has taken Elena’s life (when she refused to be bullied into moving out of her apartment, which Fisk needed to be vacated for his business purposes).[7] “Many Rivers to Cross” also contains the lines, “Many rivers to cross / And it’s only my will that keeps me alive”,[8] which reflect both Daredevil and Kingpin’s circumstances and are a callback to previous episodes. Kingpin’s last name, “Fisk”, is a surname that means “Fish”[9] and shows his ability to survive Hell’s Kitchen. Towards the end of the episode, Kingpin specifically says that Daredevil deserves to “drown in [Hell’s Kitchen’s] filth” and “doesn’t deserve a better tomorrow”.[10] However, Daredevil’s surname, Murdock, also shows that he is a survivor and will not drown in the city’s filth. Daredevil’s last name, Murdock, is of Irish Catholic origin and means “Sea Warrior”, “Sea Ruler”, and “Mariner”.[11][12][13][14] Daredevil has “many rivers to cross”, but because he is a “Sea Warrior”, he will not “drown in [the city’s] filth” as Kingpin wishes.

            The X in the episode also takes on another meaning of cross, which is in a more religious sense. X can also be a symbol for “Christ.”[15] When Kingpin is finally arrested for his crimes, he is taken in the back of a police squad car. In the car he sits with two officers and tells them his interpretation of the Good Samaritan parable. The dialogue is as follows,

Kingpin: I was thinking about a story from the Bible.

Officer 1: Did I tell you to open your mouth?

Officer 2: Let him talk. Don’t mean nothin’.

Kingpin: I’m not a religious man…but I’ve read bits and pieces over the years. Curiosity more than faith. But this one story…There was a man. He was traveling from Jerusalem to Jericho…when he was set upon by men of ill intent. They stripped the traveler of his clothes, they beat him, and they left him bleeding in the dirt. And a priest happened by…saw the traveler. But he moved to the other side of the road and continued on. And then a Levite, a religious functionary, he…came to the place, saw the dying traveler. But he too moved to the other side of the road, passed him by. But then came a man from Samaria, a Samaritan, a good man. He saw the traveler bleeding in the road and he stopped to aid him without thinking of the circumstance or the difficulty it might bring him. The Samaritan tended to the traveler’s wounds, applying oil and wine. And he carried him to an inn, gave him all the money he had for the owner to take care of the traveler, as the Samaritan, he…continued on his journey. He did this simply because the traveler was his neighbor. He loved his city and all the people in it……[sighing] I always thought that I was the Samaritan in that story. It’s funny, isn’t it? How even the best of men can be…deceived by their true nature.

Officer 1: What the hell does that mean?

Kingpin: It means that I’m not the Samaritan. That I’m not the priest, or the Levite. That I am the ill intent…Who set upon the traveler on a road that he should not have been on.[16]

During most of Fisk’s speech, the camera is entirely focused on him. However, when he says the lines, “But then came a man from Samaria, a Samaritan, a good man”, then the camera switches focus to Matt Murdock,[17] in an entirely different location. This is done by the director to allow the audience to understand that Murdock is the antithesis of Fisk. Fisk is an evil man who believes that he is good, but Murdock is a good man who struggles with the belief that he may actually “have the devil in him.”[18] In the original bible passage, Jesus clarifies to a lawyer that he tells the parable of the Samaritan to convey that it is maintaining the law of God to act as the Samaritan did.[19] Matt upholds the law during his day job as a defense attorney (one of the few uncorrupted by Fisk), but he also fulfills God’s law by going out of his way as Daredevil to help the poor and oppressed people of Hell’s Kitchen. Murdock is meant to represent the Good Samaritan, the man who Fisk fooled himself into believing he was. Interestingly, Fisk does not describe himself as one of the robbers who beat and preyed on the man traveling from Jerusalem to Jericho. Fisk describes himself as the “ill intent” that the robbers held in their hearts; evil incarnate which is symbolized by the frequent usage of X throughout the episode.[20] The parable of the Good Samaritan is found in Luke, Chapter 10.[21] X can also mean “10”[22] as in roman numerals. Right after Kingpin tells his interpretation of the parable, he has several police officers murdered on the road to the prison and escapes captivity (at least briefly). Notice that immediately after, the camera pans on a fan in the shape of an X. A little later, the audience sees Vanessa waiting for Fisk to show up in time to leave the country together. The camera focuses on the helicopter blades, which form the shape of an X.[23]

When Fisk discusses finances with Leland, the dialogue and action in the scene reveal several patterns regarding the letter X. X can also mean “stock exchange”,[24] which Leland brags that he is involved in and “move[s] money around for pricks like [Kingpin] all the time.”[25] He also notes that “finances” is his job.[26] Further, the letter X can be symbolic for “24” or mean “the 24th in a series”.[27] When Fisk lets Leland know that he is on to him, the latter reveals that he has Hoffman in his pocket to snitch on Fisk as a sort of insurance. Leland tells Fisk that “Hoffman never left the city after he murdered his partner in the hospital. I scooped him up, squirreled him away for a rainy day. If I don’t check in every 24 hours, Hoffman gets dropped off to the Feds.”[28] X can also be a symbol for “electricity”;[29] Leland uses a taser to electrocute Fisk when the latter attacks him. However, Kingpin’s sheer strength and incredible willpower enable him to endure the assault and kill Leland by throwing him several stories below into an empty elevator shaft. Immediately after Kingpin kills Leland for his betrayal, there are two pipes above Kingpin which form the shape of an X.[30] Here, X is a mark for death, but also reflects the “cross” definition—and further symbolizes double crossing.[31] This is a technique used in the film The Departed, which focuses on the Irish mob in Boston as they double cross each other while being investigated by an undercover cop.[32] Leland double crosses Kingpin and is murdered for it, Ben Urich is double crossed by another writer at the Daily Bulletin (who reports his movement to Kingpin and gets him murdered), Hoffman double crosses his partner and later does the same to Fisk (which leads to the latter’s arrest), the city’s few honest police are double crossed by their own and murdered so that Fisk can temporarily escape, and Fisk double crosses the people of Hell’s Kitchen by pretending to be their savior (while plotting their deaths, bullying them into doing what he wants, stealing from them, and otherwise destroying their lives).[33]

Fisk wears black clothing throughout most of the episode, which symbolizes the death and destruction that he engenders throughout Hell’s Kitchen. In the penultimate episode of the season, he wears black before he murders Ben Urich.[34] He wears black immediately before he kills Leland and is also wearing black right before he has his henchmen (police on his payroll) murder other officers to free him. The black clothing ties into the theme of X as a mark of death. When Kingpin is eventually exposed as the criminal he is and numerous arrests are made of those connected to him, the shots of all arrested reveal that they too are wearing black clothing. The boss of Foggy’s former girlfriend is also arrested, and he is taken out of a black car by the authorities.[35]

The theme of X can be applied to Daredevil as he represents the “unknown”;[36] the “man in the mask”[37] is an enigmatic figure with even more mysterious motives to the people of Hell’s Kitchen (at least initially). Daredevil also represents the retribution and karmic justice that is delivered to Fisk for the pain and destruction that the latter sowed on Hell’s Kitchen. Just as Fisk had his men intercept his car on the road and stopped the police from reaching their destination (to take Kingpin to prison), Daredevil intercepts Fisk when he is riding in the truck en route to Vanessa. He throws his billy club into the window and causes the vehicle to crash.[38] When Kingpin confronts Daredevil, the dialogue is the inverse of “Speak of the Devil”, as Fisk and Murdock essentially switch lines.

Kingpin: I wanted to make this city something better than it is. Something beautiful. You took that away from me! You took everything! I’m gonna kill you!

Daredevil: Take your shot.[39]

 In the song, “Many Rivers to Cross”, one line reads, “My woman left me and she didn’t say why”.[40] Just as Fisk deprives Ben of his “woman” when he murders him and leaves Mrs. Urich a widow, Daredevil returns the favor to Fisk by beating him in the street before he can reach Vanessa. She is forced to leave Fisk as he lays bloodied and defeated by Daredevil.[41]

            Daredevil, Season 1: Episode 13 substantiates that X is a sign of death. However, X has several definitions that define many characters in different ways. The letter X shows up in the form of shapes, numbers, references to bible passages, and in a variety of other methods. X is used most prominently to contrast the sinister ways of Wilson Fisk with the heroic deeds of Daredevil.


[1] X. “Dictionary.com.” https://www.dictionary.com/browse/x. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[2] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[3] “Many Rivers to Cross”. Written by Jimmy Cliff. Originally performed by Jimmy Cliff. LyricFind.com. Universal Music Publishing Group.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 12. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[6] Ibid. Season 1.

[7] Ibid. Speak of the Devil.

[8] “Many Rivers to Cross”. Written by Jimmy Cliff. Originally performed by Jimmy Cliff. LyricFind.com. Universal Music Publishing Group.

[9] Fisk. https://www.ancestry.com/name-origin?surname=Fisk Ancestry.com

[10] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[11] Murdock. www.behindthename.com. https://surnames.behindthename.com/name/murdock

[12] Murchadh. www.behindthename.com https://www.behindthename.com/name/murchadh

[13] Murdock. https://www.ancestry.com/name-origin?surname=murdock Ancestry.com

[14] Murdoch. https://www.ancestry.com/name-origin?surname=murdoch Ancestry.com

[15] X. “Dictionary.com.” https://www.dictionary.com/browse/x. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[16] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[17] Ibid.

[18] Ibid. Season 1, Episode 1.

[19] https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2010&version=NIV. Luke Chapter 10, verse 25-37. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[20] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[21] https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2010&version=NIV. Luke Chapter 10, verse 25-37. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[22] X. “Dictionary.com.” https://www.dictionary.com/browse/x. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[23] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[24] X. “Dictionary.com.” https://www.dictionary.com/browse/x. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[25] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[26] Ibid.

[27] X. “Dictionary.com.” https://www.dictionary.com/browse/x. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[28] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[29] X. “Dictionary.com.” https://www.dictionary.com/browse/x. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[30] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[31] The Next Time You Watch The Departed, Pay Attention To The Xs. Cinemablend.com. Eric Eisenberg. September 27, 2020. https://www.cinemablend.com/news/2555487/the-next-time-you-watch-the-departed-pay-attention-to-the-xs . Accessed September 2, 2022.

[32] Ibid.

[33] Daredevil. Season 1. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[34] Ibid. Season 1, Episode 12.

[35] Ibid. Season 1, Episode 13.

[36] X. “Dictionary.com.” https://www.dictionary.com/browse/x. Accessed September 2, 2022.

[37] Daredevil. Season 1. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[38] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

[39] Ibid.

[40] “Many Rivers to Cross”. Written by Jimmy Cliff. Originally performed by Jimmy Cliff. LyricFind.com. Universal Music Publishing Group.

[41] Daredevil. Season 1, Episode 13. TV Network: Netflix (originally), Disney Plus (currently). Premiere Date: Apr 10, 2015 Genre: Drama. Executive producers: Drew Goddard, Jeph Loeb, Erik Oleson, Jim Chory. Starring: Starring: Charlie Cox, Elodie Yung, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Rosario Dawson. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/daredevil

Flatline

Written by C Hues

September 1, 2022

There seems to be no one about
The light has faded from my eyes
This is no time for dreaded doubt
Today I unmask death’s disguise

This is the last stop for us all
The movie’s end that’s never spoiled
There is the time of our last call
The flatline is what’s never foiled

Fall

Written by C Hues

September 1, 2022

The season’s sneaking—slow silent whist
We wait and watch for change
But like the leaves, life’s greatest twist
Cannot be caught when out of range

Sure as Satan fell for pride
And just as naked truth did hide
And Jesus’ name, Peter denied
The Fall is what we all abide

The Batman: SHADOWS

Written by C Hues

August 26, 2022

           This essay contains spoilers for The Batman (2022 film). Proceed with caution.

The Batman uses the theme of shadows to corroborate the connection between several characters, to delve deeper into Batman’s alter ego, and to show the various methods in which Batman uses fear to attempt to save Gotham City. The shadow is also a psychological term that shows the other side of many trusted, empowered individuals in the city. It also examines how Batman must realize the darker nature of himself to prevent causing the same destructive effect on Gotham City that so many others have engendered before him.

In The Batman, the theme of shadows is pervasive and holds myriad meanings. In his opening monologue, Batman discusses how he uses the shadows to his advantage to prey upon the criminals who victimize the weak. He states,

“Thursday, October 31st. The city streets are crowded for the holiday. Even with the rain. Hidden in the chaos is the element waiting to strike like snakes. But I’m there too. Watching. Two years of nights have turned me into a nocturnal animal. I must choose my targets carefully. It’s a big city. I can’t be everywhere. But they don’t know where I am. We have a signal now. For when I’m needed. But when that light hits the sky, it’s not just a call. It’s a warning. To them. Fear…is a tool. They think I’m hiding in the shadows. But I am the shadows.”[1]

Shadow means, “a dark figure or image cast on the ground or some surface by a body intercepting light”, “shade or comparative darkness, as in an area” or “darkness, especially that coming after sunset.”[2] Batman literally operates in the shadows, but shadows also take on a more figurative meaning. Shadow can also mean “a dominant or pervasive threat, influence, or atmosphere, especially one causing gloom, fear, doubt, or the like”;[3] Batman claims that he uses “fear” as a “tool”.[4] Batman knows that he physically cannot be everywhere that the criminals are located; in the opening monologue, we see several different shots of criminals in various locations in the city. One gangster robs a convenient store, but immediately runs away in fear when he sees the bat signal. Another group are spray painting the word “BROKE” on a structure, but they too flee in fear when they see the bat signal. Batman only shows up at the last location shown, where a group of criminals attack a young man departing from the metro train (or subway). Notice that the criminal who is shown most extensively is the one who has one half of his side painted white and the other half without paint;[5] this symbolizes the shadow self (as defined in psychology by Carl Jung and further analyzed by Zweig)[6] and represents the two sides that most of Gotham seems to hold: Batman and Bruce Wayne, Selina Kyle and Catwoman (although not actually called Catwoman in the film), The Riddler’s two identities (Edward Nashton and Patrick Parker), and countless other people with alter egos.[7] Thus, shadow can also be defined as “a reflected image.”[8] The reflected image is most obviously shown when Batman first appears at the door of the Iceberg Lounge, and he is greeted with hostility by twin henchmen. Later, he visits the Lounge again as his other self, Bruce Wayne, and he is greeted by the same twins with a much friendlier response.[9] Zweig says that “the shadow goes by many familiar names: the disowned self, the lower self, the dark twin”.[10] The double imagery is also shown as Batman says that he has been fighting crime for “two years”.[11] Shadow also means “the dark part of a picture, especially as representing the absence of illumination”,[12] and Riddler’s messages to Batman frequently only contain a certain highlighted or visible part of the message. The rest of the message is obscured in darkness, leaving Batman and Alfred to uncover what is hidden in darkness.[13] When Batman is attacked by Riddler’s thugs near the end of the film, they shoot a projector screen with Bella(the new mayor)’s image on it. Several of the lights are shot out and become dark, reflective of the Riddler’s puzzles.[14] Shadow can mean “a person who follows another in order to keep watch upon that person, as a spy or detective.”[15] Batman debuted in Detective Comics (first appearing as a character in 1939),[16] and frequently operates like a detective to solve crimes. At the start of the movie, Batman follows and spies on Catwoman. Later, he aggressively follows and pursues the Penguin in a dangerous car chase. He uses binoculars and enhanced eyewear to spy on the criminals, cops, and politicians who frequent the 44 Below.[17] Shadow can also mean “a period or instance of gloom, unhappiness, mistrust, doubt, dissension, or the like”,[18] which substantiates the skeptical nature of both Selina Kyle and Batman. Batman does not trust Selina when she tells him that Falcone owes her money and assumes the worst until she reveals that he is her father. Selina asks Batman what is under his mask and jokingly questions if he is “just hideously scarred.” Batman sarcastically says “yeah” in response, but the truth is that he, like most of Gotham, has numerous and deep psychological scars.[19] The trauma of losing both of his parents to violence transformed him into the vigilante known as the Batman. These scars led him down a path of vengeance towards criminals; when he saves the young man from criminals on the subway platform, the young man cowers in fear of Batman and says, “please don’t hurt me.”[20] It is telling that Batman scares not only criminals, but also innocent civilians who are simply trying to survive.

The Batman starts on October 31st. The date of Halloween is appropriate because it is a holiday where people can take on an alter ego and become another person; they do so at night and dress up as someone else. This is what Batman does every night; but it is also what virtually all of Gotham does every night. As revealed throughout the movie, copious politicians, cops, and other trusted and respected members of Gotham City lead a double life. Some of the more prominent people include the District Attorney (DA), the mayor, and the Commissioner. Selina Kyle spots the DA in the 44 Below (club within the Iceberg Lounge that is run by Carmine Falcone, the mob boss who rules Gotham) and says that she saw some prominent politicians in the club before; Batman fights a crooked cop (who supposedly works for Gordon) in the 44 Below.[21] These people have an alter ego much in the same way that Batman does, and their true nature comes out at night in the shadows. In this way, the word shadow takes on another meaning. The “shadow” is a term coined by psychologist Carl Jung, which is described thusly,

“Unfortunately, there can be no doubt that man is, on the whole, less good than he imagines himself or wants to be. Everyone carries a shadow, and the less it is embodied in the individual’s conscious life, the blacker and denser it is. At all counts, it forms an unconscious snag, thwarting our most well-meant intentions.”[22]

Near the film’s end, Batman mentions that he has not had the effect on the city that he intended. Much in the same way, Thomas Wayne’s good intentions (to protect his wife, and to start a program to help Gotham’s poor) was destroyed by his failure to manage and reconcile his shadow self.[23] The “shadow” as defined by Jung and refined by Zweig, ties into the key theme of “Renewal” that is prevalent in The Batman. Thomas Wayne promised a Renewal program that was supposed to save and help the poor and oppressed people of Gotham City, but Falcone took hold of it and began to use the funds from the program selfishly and to line the pockets of cops and politicians under his payroll. Therefore, Riddler writes, “Renewal is a lie” in graffiti, because the people who were put in a position of power failed to recognize their shadows (or darker nature) and continued to lie to the public.[24] Zweig states,

“The shadow, when it is realized, is the source of renewal; the new and productive impulse cannot come from established values of the ego… ….This brings us to the fundamental fact that the shadow is the door to our individuality. In so far as the shadow renders us our first view of the unconscious part of our personality, it represents the first stage toward meeting the Self. There is, in fact, no access to the unconscious and to our own reality but through the shadow. Only when we realize that part of ourselves which we have not hitherto seen or preferred not to see can we proceed to question and find the sources from which it feeds and the basis on which it rests. Hence no progress or growth is possible until the shadow is adequately confronted and confronting means more than merely knowing about it. It is not until we have truly been shocked into seeing ourselves as we really are, instead of as we wish or hopefully assume we are, that we can take the first step toward individual reality.”[25]

Interestingly, Batman’s shadow self is Bruce Wayne. Riddler tells Batman that “Your mask is amazing. I wish you could’ve seen me in mine. Ain’t it funny. All everyone wants to do is unmask you, but they’re missing the point. You and I both know, I’m looking at the real you right now.”[26] Riddler is half right, but ironically, he is the one missing the point. He fails to recognize that Batman is Bruce Wayne; the hero that he idolizes is also the “billionaire with the lying, dead daddy”[27] that he criticizes and detests. Batman is the dominant and truer personality, but the Batman has denied some aspects of Bruce Wayne that he simply cannot escape from. Bruce Wayne was born wealthy and privileged; this will not change, regardless of how many criminals he tortures, defeats, and captures. Nothing that Batman does can erase Bruce Wayne; in fact, Batman can only exist and function because of Bruce Wayne (his technology and wealth alone are essential to provide Batman the gadgets, armor, and most of what he needs to effectively pursue criminals). Batman has an air of superiority towards criminals throughout the movie and looks down on them. This aspect of his personality is ultimately carried over from his shadow self—from Bruce Wayne. Note this exchange between Carmine Falcone and Bruce Wayne (when at the steps before the mayor’s funeral):

Carmine Falcone: Some event, huh? Brought out the one guy in the city more reclusive than me.

Bruce Wayne: Thought you’d never leave the Shoreline. Aren’t you afraid someone’ll take a shot at you?

Falcone: Why? Cause your father ain’t around? [Talking to penguin] Oz, you know Bruce Wayne?

Penguin (Oswald “Oz” Cobblepot): Wow, is that right?

Falcone: His father saved my life. I got shot in the chest. Right here [pointing to where he was shot]. I couldn’t go to no hospital, so we showed up on his doorstep. Operated right on the dining room table. Kid here, he saw the whole thing, up on the stairs looking down. I remember your face. You don’t think that meant something, he did that?

Bruce Wayne [sarcastically]: It meant he took the Hippocratic oath.[28]

Even as a child and before his parents’ murder, Bruce Wayne always looked down on criminals. In the exchange with Falcone, Bruce Wayne walks above Falcone after he makes his snide remark to the mob boss. As Batman, he physically looks down on criminals as he spies on them, waiting for an opportunity to strike. Later, the Riddler exposes Bruce Wayne’s father, Thomas Wayne, and claims that the latter went to Falcone to put a hit on someone that threatened to expose Martha Wayne (Bruce Wayne’s mother)’s violent family history (her mother murdered her father and then committed suicide, leading to Martha’s mental health issues and stay in a psychiatric facility).[29] This causes Bruce Wayne to visit Falcone, and in their second exchange, the two are situated evenly and talk on a flat surface. Bruce and Falcone have literally and psychologically been brought to the same level, and because of the “sins of the father”, Bruce Wayne can no longer look down on anyone.[30] The Riddler, taking influence from Batman, also looks down on criminals. The Riddler sits in an apartment high above Falcone and snipes him when Batman brings the “underworld”[31] boss into the light. He is present at the funeral of the mayor and stands on an upper area of the building.[32] Bruce Wayne spots him as he looks down in judgment at the people there, and he has a car driven inside to attempt to murder the mayor’s son, believing that the boy should pay for the “sins of the father.” In this way, the young son of the mayor acts as a “shadow” of Bruce Wayne, in that they both were from prominent and wealthy families, both were orphaned, and both ended up being targets of the Riddler because of crimes that their fathers committed.[33]  The Riddler also acts as a “shadow” of Bruce Wayne, as he follows Batman’s methods. Aside from looking down on criminals, Riddler also keeps a journal in the same way that Batman keeps a journal to document his daily dealings with criminals.[34] Riddler sees Batman as his shadow, which means “an inseparable companion.”[35] Note the following dialogue between the two:

Riddler: We’ve been doing this together. You’re a part of this.

Batman: We didn’t do anything together.

Riddler: We did. What did we just do? I asked you to bring [Falcone] into the light, and you did. We’re such a good team.

Batman: We’re not a team.

Riddler: I never could’ve gotten him out of there. I’m not physical. My strength is up here. I mean, I had all the pieces. I had all the answers. But I didn’t know how to make them listen. You gave me that.

Batman: I gave you nothing.

Riddler: You showed me what was possible. You showed me all it takes is fear and a little focused violence. You inspired me.[36]

The Batman’s influence on the Riddler is most obvious toward the end, as one of the Riddler’s thugs echoes a statement that Batman made toward a group of criminals that he savagely beat at the start of the film, “I’m vengeance.”[37]

Just as the psychological shadow is underneath and hidden away, the politicians and cops have hidden themselves deep underground in the 44 Below (“the club within the club”). As Batman says that “fear is a tool”,[38] the Riddler takes inspiration from Batman’s methods and literally uses a garden tool (used for digging) to strike fear into the politicians and cops. He attacks and kills the mayor with the tool and later knocks out the DA, holding him hostage with a bomb attached to his neck.[39] When Batman investigates Riddler’s hideout, he uses the Riddler’s garden tool to uncover the plan to flood the city (which is hidden below). The lyrics to the Nirvana song, “Something in the Way”,[40] plays in the beginning of the move and connects to this theme of shadows and foreshadow what is to come. “Underneath the bridge / Tarp has sprung a leak / And the animals I’ve trapped / Have all become my pets / And I’m living off of grass / And the drippings from the ceiling / It’s okay to eat fish / Cause they don’t have any feelings.”[41] In the film, Riddler traps several animals in cages, such as rats and bats. The Riddler tells Batman that as an orphan, he would “wake up screaming with rats chewing [his] fingers.”[42] He even keeps a pet bat at his home, from where he sees Batman “bring [Falcone] into the light.”[43] When he tells Bruce Wayne of a childhood stricken with poverty and tragedy, this reflects the lyrics “I’m living off of grass / And the drippings from the ceiling”.[44] The water imagery (“tarp has sprung a leak”) reflects the flooding of the city that passes at the end of the movie, as all Riddler’s bombs explode and cause the water to leak through the city’s walls.[45] The Batman ultimately must reconcile his two halves, Batman, and Bruce Wayne, to become the hero that Gotham needs. As Zweig states, people must be “shocked into seeing ourselves as we really are”,[46] and Batman cuts an electrical wire that is in danger of killing several civilians and physically shocks himself to save them, falling into the waters of the flooded Gotham City. Batman stays under water briefly, but then comes out, and experiences a baptism of sort.[47] His previous thoughts and methods are washed away, and he comes out a new person. This is confirmed, as he realizes that being a symbol of fear is not enough. He must also provide hope to people. He leads the citizens of Gotham to safety, holding a flare as they “shadow” him. In this way, shadow means “shelter; protection”.[48] Batman decides that he is not merely the vigilante who preys on criminals. Batman evolves into the hero who will protect the weak and vulnerable.

The Batman shows both negative and positive connotations for the word “shadow” and is ultimately a film about how the shadows are a part of humanity that we must recognize, acknowledge, and accept. The only way to prevent one’s shadows from causing one to embark on a destructive path is by facing the truth of one’s darker nature. When Batman realizes what he truly has done to the city and pushes his ego aside, he changes who he is and becomes a better person.


[1] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[2] Shadow. Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/shadow.  Accessed August 26, 2022.

[3] Ibid.

[4] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[5] Ibid.

[6] Academyofideas.com. Carl Jung and the Shadow: The Hidden Power of Our Dark Side. https://academyofideas.com/2015/12/carl-jung-and-the-shadow-the-hidden-power-of-our-dark-side/ . Accessed August 26, 2022.

[7] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

  Ibid.

[8] Shadow. Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/shadow.  Accessed August 26, 2022.

[9] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[10] Academyofideas.com. Carl Jung and the Shadow: The Hidden Power of Our Dark Side. https://academyofideas.com/2015/12/carl-jung-and-the-shadow-the-hidden-power-of-our-dark-side/  Accessed August 26, 2022.

[11] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[12] Shadow. Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/shadow.  Accessed August 26, 2022.

[13] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[14] Ibid.

[15] Shadow. Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/shadow.  Accessed August 26, 2022.

[16] Batman. dc.com. Accessed August 26, 2022. https://www.dc.com/characters/batman

[17] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[18] Shadow. Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/shadow.  Accessed August 26, 2022.

[19] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[20] Ibid.

[21] Ibid.

[22] Academyofideas.com. Carl Jung and the Shadow: The Hidden Power of Our Dark Side. https://academyofideas.com/2015/12/carl-jung-and-the-shadow-the-hidden-power-of-our-dark-side/ . Accessed August 26, 2022.

[23]The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[24] Ibid.

[25] Academyofideas.com. Carl Jung and the Shadow: The Hidden Power of Our Dark Side. https://academyofideas.com/2015/12/carl-jung-and-the-shadow-the-hidden-power-of-our-dark-side/ . Accessed August 26, 2022.

[26] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[27] Ibid.

[28] Ibid.

[29] Ibid.

[30] Ibid.

[31] Academyofideas.com. Carl Jung and the Shadow: The Hidden Power of Our Dark Side. https://academyofideas.com/2015/12/carl-jung-and-the-shadow-the-hidden-power-of-our-dark-side/ . Accessed August 26, 2022.

[32] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[33] Ibid.

[34] Ibid.

[35] Shadow. Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/shadow.  Accessed August 26, 2022.

[36] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[37] Ibid.

[38] Ibid.

[39] Ibid.

[40] Musixmatch. Written by Kurt Cobain. Originally Performed by Nirvana (Kurt Cobain, Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic). Something in the Way. Primary Wave Tunes, The End of Music.

[41] Ibid.

[42] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[43] Ibid.

[44] Musixmatch. Written by Kurt Cobain. Originally Performed by Nirvana (Kurt Cobain, Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic). Something in the Way. Primary Wave Tunes, The End of Music.

[45] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

[46] Academyofideas.com. Carl Jung and the Shadow: The Hidden Power of Our Dark Side. https://academyofideas.com/2015/12/carl-jung-and-the-shadow-the-hidden-power-of-our-dark-side/ . Accessed August 26, 2022.

[47] The Batman. Rating: PG-13 (Some Suggestive Material|Drug Content|Strong Disturbing Content|Strong Language|Strong Violent Content). Genre:Action, Adventure, Crime, Drama.

Original Language: English. Director: Matt Reeves. Producer: Dylan Clark, Matt Reeves. Writer: Matt Reeves, Peter Craig. Release Date (Theaters): Mar 4, 2022  Wide. Release Date (Streaming): Apr 19, 2022.

  Academyofideas.com. Carl Jung and the Shadow: The Hidden Power of Our Dark Side.

[48] Shadow. Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/shadow.  Accessed August 26, 2022.