The Dark Knight
Monday, August 4, 2008

I expected to see more of
Health Ledger as
The Joker. I wasn't disappointed by his performance. He wasn't the
sole focal point I expected. This movie was a heady-duty ensemble piece. I would say that if they didn't have all these characters the film could have been
tighter.
The Joker was enough.
The surprise is that the film didn't feel long. With some movies I feel like I should have brought a pillow. Then again, I walk in just as the credits roll or the film starts.
May I say how hot
Christian Bale is?
It's a shame too, because there is absolutely no chemistry between
Christian Bale and
Maggie Gyllenhaal. Zip, zilch, nada. Hey dudes, try a Latina, or black woman next time - at least to make it interesting!
Kerry Washington would be a fantastic pick.
Christoperh Nolan, the director, and whoever the producers are, need to study up on the
James Bond films.
Bond has massive sex appeal - along with being deadly - that's why the franchise has lasted so long. Not saying this film wont break records, I like logical continuity and development of a character.
This movie is excellent. It is, however, not a film for anyone under 13 or 14 years old. There's hardly any blood, but the suggested violence had me flinching, and I'm a veteran of nihilistic gory films.
Aaron Eckhart (another hotness) as Harvey Dent was another "hero" in contrast to
Batman. He is day light (knight) - in personality and temperament - to
Batman's dark night (knight).
Get it? Wickedly and deliciously, the roles reverse.
Christian Bale's Bruce Wayne shows very little character in this film, unlike the first. To me, he's become one dimensional. I blame it on the movie having too many characters: they weren't necessary.
Heath Ledger as
The Joker did
not steal this film:
Aaron Eckhart as Harvey Dent did.
The contrasts: blond, cleft-chined Harvey Dent was the open, willing, non-masked, non-caped crusader for justice. He was focused on fighting the good fight and he wasn't afraid of dying.
The clever scheme:
The Joker was able to make the case, to a fickle public, that
The Batman, caped crusader, masked, unknown and protected
was
the real menace to society and coward.
The conundrum:
The Joker cleverly corners
Batman. How does one fight a madman who thrives on chaos and violence? The irony of this film - that
violence is all
Batman has to offer, exposes an elemental flaw.
This Batman is too much brute strength, violence, high tech tools, and not enough brain.
Christopher Nolan forgets that part of
Batman's winning appeal and arsenal of weapons
is his intelligence. He can give us riveting contrasts to
Batman, but he neglects
Bruce Wayne's brilliance.
I would appreciate if the next director and writer could remember that
Batman isn't just a violent buff vigilante, he's a clever one too.
As always, I'm impressed by British and Australian actors who speak American dialect(s) so flawlessly and easily.
Labels: Aaron Eckhart, Batman, Christian Bale, Gary Oldman, Maggie Gyllenhaal, The Joker
posted by GoldenAh
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