
"You've got a little fight in ya...I like that." This Joker (Heath Ledger) quote pretty much somes up my feelings for this film. Freed from the shackles of a hokey backstory (Batman Begins - B+), director Christopher Nolan and Co. have crafted a thoroughly dark, mesmerizing and challenging superhero film for our times. The raves we've all heard about Ledger are dead on, as he delivers a villain that anchors the film and puts him in the Villain Hall of Fame along with Jack Torrance, Bill the Butcher and Alex from a Clockwork Orange. Click below for more DARK KNIGHT:
All the old familiar faces (Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, Christian Bale, Gary Oldman, and even, briefly, Cillian Murphy) are back, except for a spot on Maggie Gyllenhaal as Rachel Dawes (replacing Katie Holmes) and a perfectly cast Aaron Eckhart as the "White Knight of Gotham", District Attorney Harvey Dent. But this time, instead of a comically bearded Liam Neeson as Batman's primary foil, we get Ledger's ultraviolent and anarchist Joker.
Thankfully, this film lacks the jokey tone and sci-fi/futuristic Gotham of the prior Batman films (Batman Begins had about 20 jokes about how cool the Batmobile was....enough). The city feels more real, gritty and modern, which strengthens the feel of the characters and the film as a whole.

Batman teams up with Harvey Dent,

The main complaint I have heard (though I have avoided all reviews and clips other than the trailer linked to before) from the major reviewers is that the film is too dark. That's precisely what makes it great in this viewer's mind, and its the light touches that kept me from giving it a full A. I prefer my dramas dark and moody, not whimsical and light. Though the tone of this film is much darker than Batman Begins, there are still several funny moments that are perfect for the situationa nd don't break up the tone of the applicable scenes.
There are some slight political overtones in the film, with the Joker possibly represnting terrorism and Islamists, and Batman overstepping his bounds by 'wiretapping' everyone in the city to catch him, only to be rebuked by Lucius Fox (Morgan Freeman) for such drastic measures. I didn't need to have FISA points made during a Batman movie.
I will be seeing this again with Bride once my regular sitter returns, and we'll be going to the IMAX, as 4 scenes were filmed in this format and cannot be fully viewed on a regular screen. The film is dense and may move to a full A upon a repeat viewing.

Viewing note: At the Plano Tinseltown last night, Appraiser and I took in the 12:30am showing, one of 15 fully sold out midnight screenings. We parked further away than I ever had at the theater and we had to sit in the 3rd row even though we got there 30 minutes early. For those watching this weekend....get your tickets online and go early for a decent seat. New previews shown include Body of Lies (Ridley Scott, DiCaprio, Crowe) and the new Terminator (Bale).
good review. i didn't read yours prior to my posting, but figured you would have a good review (which you did) so i felt freed up to wrote more on a particular issue within the film. i'm not real sure what light elements you're talking about. this is a pretty dark movie, and would have been nice to see as Rated R, since there's no way that kiddos ought to be viewing this one. i did feel like the two-face subplot messed with the rhythm of the film and bogged down the film when it was already ramped up to high and ready to explode. that's my only criticism, though. great.
ReplyDeleteNice Vertigo Pic.
ReplyDeleteThe 2 face conversion was unnecessary, except for the wrap up scenario with Batman taking the rap. As for the light elements, I guess I am a 'dark heart' guy, because I thought the resolution of the Ferry situation wasn't remotely realistic.