| Directed
by
Christopher Nolan -- Starring
Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Aaron Eckhart, Gary Oldman, Michael Caine,
Morgan Freeman |
BOTTOM
LINE:
"The Dark Knight"
is nothing short of brilliant. It elevates the comic book movie
to a level that matches any serious Oscar-winning film, has deep
thematic story and structure which will actually engage your brain,
and has some of the most stellar performances you're likely to see,
beginning with Heath Ledger's unforgettable and sinister turn as
the Joker which manages to out-do even the great Jack Nicholson.
THE
GOOD: I’m
ready to say that this is without a doubt the best Hollywood film
of the year. When they finally get it right, that’s when you
feel the magic of the cinema. This film delivers as an entertainment,
as a spectacle, and most importantly, as a strong story with haunting,
deeply dramatic themes and masterful, chilling performances. Batman
Begins was already a fantastic film, but somehow, director Christopher
Nolan has upped the ante and managed to deliver a film that is better
in every department, and it’s not all smiles and sunshine
as most warm and fuzzy Hollywood blockbusters tend to be. This is
a dark, brooding film where not everything turns out well, including
Batman himself who discovers that by becoming a dark, symbolic vigilante
to stomp out crime in Gotham City that he may in fact be making
matters worse. This deterioration in law and order is personified
in the rise of the Joker, played with such a chilling, gleeful menace
by Heath Ledger that you’ll feel your hairs stand up on end
every time he appears. He’s nasty, funny and mad; he doesn’t
want money or power. He’s a total anarchist who wants to show
the people of Gotham City how black they really are. He says to
Batman, “when the chips are down, these so called civilised
people will eat each other!” What makes the Joker work so
well is that he’s not afraid of Batman at all. In one powerful
scene where Batman is interrogating the Joker and trying his best
to intimidate him, the Joker responds by laughing in Batman’s
face the more he attacks him, and trying to push Batman to cross
the line; there are moments where you can see hints of desperation
in Batman when he realises that there’s nothing he can do
to break this mad clown. Therein lies the crux of what makes this
film great; the Joker is powerful enough to stand up to Batman (getting
the upper hand in some cases), and the Joker continually throws
impossible moral and ethical choices at Batman for his own amusement.
Each of these choices ends in a bad place for Batman, particularly
in the case of Gotham District Attorney Harvey Dent (played brilliantly
arrogant by Aaron Eckhart) who transforms in to Two-Face after one
of the Joker’s pranks burns half of his face and kills the
love of his life, Rachel Dawes (Maggie Gyllenhaal). This is a film
I would recommend seeing more than once because there’s so
much going on that you’ll appreciate more the second time
around. Aside from Heath Ledger’s spectacular performance
as the Joker which has far more depth, range and chills than Nicholson’s
performance as the Joker in Tim Burton’s Batman (no small
feat that!), Christian Bale is once again excellent as both Bruce
Wayne and Batman, particularly in the latter with his dark, voice
from hell interpretation of the character. Batman, as played by
Bale, is darker and more sinister this time around, but he’s
still the central character despite the emergence of the Joker in
the story. Aaron Eckhart is wonderful as Harvey Dent/Two-Face, and
in many ways delivers a performance that is just as strong and chilling
as Ledger’s, although it may not get as much attention. Gary
Oldman shines as the newly promoted Commissioner Gordon and is the
only real ‘good’ guy in the film who along with Batman
is trying to reign in Gotham’s criminal hierarchy. Morgan
Freeman and Michael Caine are great in their respective roles of
Lucius Fox and Alfred Pennyworth in assisting Bruce Wayne to be
Batman. There’s also a delicious sub-plot where an employee
of Wayne Enterprises discovers that Bruce Wayne is Batman and tries
to blackmail him over it. Fox replies to him, “let me get
this straight, you want to blackmail someone who spends his nights
beating criminals to a pulp with his bare hands? Good luck!”.
This is a film that delivers on all of its promise and more; go
see it now!
THE
BAD: I would have
given this movie 10/10 but it does have a couple of minor problems.
One of the issues with the Tim Burton/Joel Schumacher Batman films
is that they killed off the villains in each film (for the most part).
Given that this franchise will continue unspooling indefinitely, killing
off villains is not a good idea given that they could appear in future
films. In Batman Begins, Liam Neeson's Ras Al Ghul was killed off
at the end, but there was something very dramatic and correct about
that happening given his connection to Batman/Bruce Wayne. In this
film, unfortunately Two-Face gets knocked off at the end. Although
it makes sense in the story, his character's dramatic realisation
on screen, both visually and as played by Aaron Eckhart, makes you
want more from the character in future films. In fact, he's got more
screen time in this film than I ever imagined given that the Joker
was the central bad guy this time around. I felt it was a shame because
with all the hoopla surrounding Heath Ledger's performance, Eckhart
puts in an equally effective turn as Harvey Dent/Two-Face which you
could theoretically see continue. Another problem with this film was
the running time. The first hour of the film felt a little long, and
it's not until the Joker starts appearing more often that the film
gathers pace. The film does cover a lot of thematic territory but
the almost two and a half hour running time could have been tightened
up a little bit. The only other problem I felt was the treatment of
The Scarecrow character from Batman Begins, which is executed more
as an afterthought than anything else and probably didn't even need
to be in the film at all other than to establish a sense of continuity
with the villains to the previous film.
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