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Weird Friday, March 22nd 2013 at 11:36 am

No, the Vatican’s Twitter Didn’t Get Hacked, They Really Have an Opinion on Batman

Considering the digital confusion that has come out of the Catholic Church in the last few months, you wouldn’t be out of line in assuming one of the Vatican’s Twitter accounts had been hacked when it tweeted the following yesterday: “Holy switcheroo! Batman has grown bitter, more vengeful with the years.” It wasn’t a hack, though – it was something even weirder: proof that yes, the Vatican apparently does have a position on Batman. And it’s that they miss the Adam West version of the character, which is a really indefensible opinion to espouse, even for the Catholic church.

The article — you can read it here — reminds parents to be wary of the modern Batman and the detrimental influence the Dark Knight could have on young readers, and cautions them that Adam West’s campy 60s take on the hero is no longer par for the course. This fact will come as news to people who have been in multiple decade comas, and also to no other people, though it does serve to add “Batman” to the list of things the modern Vatican is astoundingly out of touch on. That may not necessarily be surprising, but it is, we think, notable.

What’s more surprising to someone who grew up (a really, really crappy) Catholic, though, is that the darker modern take on the hero doesn’t sit well with the Vatican. One would think a guilt-driven and increasingly uncompromising Dark Knight would jibe nicely with a church that has been undoing the liberal reforms of Vatican II for the last several decades. Then again, as an “on the books” member of the church at best, hey, what the heck do I know? Frankly, I’m just amazed the writer got through the article without mentioning the obviously deviant ‘bat-nipples’ costume from Batman & Robin, which not only endangered the morals of a generation, but could put your eye out if you weren’t careful.

(via AP)

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  • http://www.facebook.com/bassoonjedi Peter Schmeiser

    Interesting. As a 2-day Catholic, I find it weird that the Vatican has an opinion on Batman. PR Stunt, or is the church trying to be hip?

  • Countermass

    Why bother with the abuse of children, if you can jabber about batman instead. The only miracle in existence is, why people are still paying for those idiots.

  • Nico Suarez

    Uh-huh. Seems like they’re trying to be more youth-oriented now. How many months ’til they unveil Buddy Christ?

  • http://twitter.com/mr_seans #AnonSean

    Ahhh, the Vatican. Always sharing such useful, current, meaningful points of view that fit in so well with modern society. Pardon me while I slam my head against my desk a few times.

  • Enthusiast

    Great. Thanks to your name, I now have Rico Suave stuck in my head. Thanks!
    I’ll accept Buddy Christ, but only if George Carlin presents him.

  • http://www.thenerdybird.com/ Jill Pantozzi

    Talking about Batman on a geek website – SO WEIRD!

  • Countermass

    I meant the vatican, hon.

  • Wannabee

    Time for tinfoil-hats :D

  • http://twitter.com/Wiswell John Wiswell

    “And it’s that they miss the Adam West version of the character, which is a really indefensible opinion to espouse”

    Wait a freaking minute. Indefensible to miss campy, can’t-get-rid-of-a-bomb Batman? What the hell? I thought Batman Begins and Dark Knight were brilliant, but I’ll happily embrace some wacky Batman that doesn’t take itself too seriously. Brave and the Bold was great.

  • http://www.thenerdybird.com/ Jill Pantozzi

    My mistake, bro.

  • Anonymous

    They apparently don’t know their Batman history. When the character first appeared, he wouldn’t think twice about gunning down criminals. He started dark, went through myriad changes, and continues to be a reflection of the corrupt systems that made him. Kind of like the Papacy, with their long, dark history of offing those they found to be unfriendly to them. Those is glass houses…

  • http://twitter.com/LauraTruxillo Laura Truxillo

    That’s kind of the idea I got.

    And really, while I fully want to raise any hypothetical little geeklets I have wearing Batman pajamas and all, there’s a weird disconnect with how the Batman brand is marketed–on one hand, loads of Batman stuff for the kiddies. At work, we even have easy-read picture books for 5-8-year-olds that are CLEARLY based on The Dark Knight which…not really a movie to take a 5-8-year-old to (I mean, I would be unsurprised that they’d see it, but I wouldn’t want my hypothetical geeklets to watch the Joker’s Magic Trick).

    So on one hand, it’s a brand for kids–which in and of itself is good, I think. But on the other hand, all of the stories being told ARE dark, unpleasant, and vengeful, no matter how well-written. Brave and the Bold was a breath of fresh air–and even that teetered into dark places, but just not so unrelentingly dark as most of the other Batman stories told in the past ten years have been. It would be nice to see DC telling more all-ages-type stories that didn’t have to look purely childish, like Tiny Titans (which was a great book, but not, y’know, really story-driven).

  • Countermass

    More like ‘sis’, but that’s ok.

    That “hon” sure has striked you as a cis-macho-guy word ;-)

  • Terrance Steiner

    I would give the Catholic Church solid props if they managed to bring George Carlin back from the dead,

  • Anonymous

    Oh yeah, it’s absolutely baffling that the Catholic church would be concerned about a comic revolving around a dark, violent sociopath with severe bipolar disorder bordering on MPD, who spent the opening of one issue in recent history LITERALLY FUCKING CATWOMAN. Literally. FUCKING. Catwoman.

    Seriously, Ian. This is an opinion piece, but it’s a crappy one. I’m about as far disconnected from the Catholic church as one can be short of worshiping Satan, but even I can understand why they see Batman as a poor influence. I gotta admit, as someone who grew up with more comics than Carter’s got pills, even I’m put off by the levels of anti-heroism and sex most comics feel the need to cram in these days. As fun and amusing as Dark Knight Batman has been since 1989, there was something to be said for cool, calm, calculating Batman that wasn’t all brooding and manic depressive.