Showing posts with label Batman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Batman. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Batman, The Dark Knight: I didn't like it

I wanted more.

Thanks to my favourite Irish website, Movies.ie I saw the new Batman movie tonight (Tuesday) at the Savoy in Dublin.

There will no doubt be a vast amount of reviews up - I'm greatly anticipating Darren's, who bounced around outside the Savoy in his excitement afterwards. Yet I can't say I was as thrilled as he or Rick seemed to be.



If you haven't seen Batman Begins yet, you may as well stop here. The film that defined the hero, redefined the genre and gave us back Batman, rescued from the silicon masked, rubber suited parody that he'd become under the "care" of Joel Schumacher who gave us the cringeworthy Batman Forever and Batman & Robin.

Christopher Nolan did away with the cartoon that Batman had become and redesigned him into something believable, someone human, somebody cool. Batman Begins set up the story with Bale's Bruce Wayne as a man driven by his demons to rid the city his father has worked so hard to fight. He has a worthy enemy - the League of Shadows, a group set to rid the world of decadence:

a check against human corruption for thousands of years... Gotham's time has come. Like Constantinople or Rome before it the city has become a breeding ground for suffering and injustice. It is beyond saving and must be allowed to die.
His triumph against Ra's Al Ghul is well fought, well planned and executed with flair. Gotham's problems aren't fixed, but Batman's presence is necessary. The movie was fantastic, with nods to its heritage but a firm grip on its own identity.



The Dark Knight's Gotham is different. Supposedly only a few weeks after the end of the first movie, the sense of hunger, of desperation and of panic is missing. Criminals are less confident, the police more so. Supposedly a city in the grip of Mob rule, Gotham shows no sign of the rampaging fear that should be caused by the release (and presumable failure to capture) of its top criminals from the secure wing of its criminal psychiatric hospital.

Instead we're presented with a city who carries on, happy to ignore the crime, almost waiting for something big to occupy its time instead.

And when that happens, boy does it happen.
Bruce Wayne: I knew the mob wouldn't go down without a fight. But this is different. They crossed the line.
Alfred Pennyworth: You crossed the line first, sir. You squeezed them, you hammered them. And in their desperation they turned to a man they didn't fully understand.
At no point during the film did I once look at



and think



Ledger was incredible. This was the Joker. Jack Nicholson may have brought a maniacal clown to the screen in true Nicholson style, a version of Batman's enemy; but Ledger was The Joker, an excitable, twisted, sadistic and oh so brilliant character, who delivered his lines with delight.
Bank Manager: The criminals in this town used to believe in things. Honor. Respect. Look at you! What do you believe in? What do you believe in!
The Joker: I believe whatever doesn't kill you simply makes you... stranger.

"Do I really look like a man with a plan, Harvey? I don't have a plan. The mob has plans, the cops have plans. You know what I am, Harvey? I'm a dog chasing cars. I wouldn't know what to do if I caught one. I just *do* things. I'm a wrench in the gears. I *hate* plans ...

I am not a schemer. I show schemers how pathetic their attempts to control things really are ... I'm a man of simple tastes. I like gunpowder...and dynamite...and gasoline!"
In a strange way I wanted to see the Joker triumph. I wanted to see what he'd do with the power he got, the anarchy he caused, the mania he possessed. In one of my favourite scenes, and quite possibly the most visually appealing in the movie, The Joker blows up a hospital. He saunters away from the building and delights in its destruction. I wanted to see more of that. I wanted to see Gotham burn.





But no. Batman is there. Of course Batman is there. Even when it all goes horribly wrong and Bruce Wayne - or any reasonable hero - should have thought "Ah feck this, let someone else do it" good old Batman heads out there, this time on a very cool steed, to sort the bad boys out. His methods are ingenious, but as with any effective plan, it's over far too quickly. It looked too easy. I wanted it to be more difficult.



As much as I would love to see Ledger be nominated for his role in this movie, I hope Aaron Eckhart does equally as well. His talent and charisma were evident in his performance and he acted the role of "a bit square but actually I'm alright" DA Harvey Dent brilliantly. In Batman Begins we followed the evolution of Bruce Wayne to its dark conclusion - this time the transformation is in Dent. Again, I felt that he wasn't given enough, he wasn't used enough. He didn't get enough opportunity to scare. I believed in Harvey Dent. I believed in what he became a lot more.



The Dark Knight fulfils what any good sequel is supposed to do. It expands the story, gave us more characters and a greater view into existing, familiar ones. Michael Caine as Alfred was excellent - a suitable foil to Bale's Bruce Wayne. Gary Oldman as Gordon, Morgan Freeman as Fox and Maggie Gyllenhall as a very different-from-the-first-character Rachel Dawes all fantastic in their roles. The cinematography flawless, the special effects wonderful. One of the features I became most conscious of was the sound editing, and if there's any justice the wizards behind the sound effects this time will sweep the Oscar board.



The film is almost two and a half hours long and there were scenes that dragged, places where my mind wandered, plot devices that could have been better with a bit more thought and time. All very easy for me to say I know, but dammit, I'm not satisfied. I said to Niamh on the way out - I have to see it again. I couldn't take it in. I have to return. And I will. I think I'll find better seats on a quieter showing and re immerse myself. I'll stop looking for the nods, the references, the "did you see that card, well that meant..." bits and just enjoy it.



I didn't just like The Dark Knight. I loved it. it may not be the "best movie ever", but it's so close that it's difficult to say why it's not. Maybe it didn't go far enough. Perhaps it's the storyline, perhaps that needs work. We may never know what parts were taken out because of Ledger's death, or see now what could have been, but it's an epic that should only be better with repeat viewings.

Even as I write this my mind is racing with the possibilities of the next one. Bale says he'll do it if Christopher Nolan directs. I think it would be a brave director who'd try replace him. The potential is incredible and the third one could well be the best movie ever made. If I could I'd book my tickets now. I'll just have to make do with the Dark Knight, Thursday, again.

Great to meet so many bloggers - Pinky, David, Anthony, Sinéad, Damien and Rick were all there, as were Neil Delamere and Brian Kennedy. Swit swoo, or what?

They're discussing the movie now over on Movies.ie - I'm off to share my thoughts. If you've seen it and have any comments, I'd love to hear them.



Images taken, lovingly, from the best Dark Knight blog ever.

Thursday, July 03, 2008

Get over to Movies.ie NOW!!

Don't even read this.

Just go. Now
!!

What are you waiting for?

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Getting back into movies

The last film I saw in the cinema, would you believe, was the Movies.ie Preview of Iron Man.

Which by the way was excellent. Darren's review is here. Thumbs up from me too:


Cheesy as anything, me :-P

That's been ages ago.

I love film. I love the medium, I love reading about them, talking about them and the extras on DVDs - happily sit down and go through the entire extras of the extended Lord of the Rings movies.

I registered with MovieExtras ages ago to see what happens on a film set. I collect the monthly Movies Plus magazine, I'm a member of the IFI, I'll check out FilmReviews.ie when I get the chance, worked on the Cinemagic and Darklight Festivals, am a Filmbase member and I have more DVDs than books - and that's saying something!

And yet it's been April 30 since I was in the cinema.

That has to change. I've been over on the wonderful Movies.ie site today and from now on this is going to be my first stop for deciding what I'm going to see. I'm really impressed by how much work has gone into this - the guys behind it obviously know movies and know what they're up to.

They've got competitions, reviews, preview screenings, trailers, interviews, forums ... it's a site I could get lost in for days. They've also got quirky ads:



I'm going to have to start with the coming soon page - and there's a number of ones I want to see:

  • Priceless (Hors de prix) - out June 13 with Audrey Tautou

  • The Incredible Hulk - out the same day with Edward Norton as Bruce Banner.

  • Prince Caspian - from the Chronicles of Narnia - out June 26. Getting rave reviews apparently.

  • Wanted - out June 27 - with Angelina Jolie and Morgan Freeman. Has one of my favourite movie quotes of the last while, and delivered in Freeman's voice which makes it all the more powerful:
"It a choice, Wesley, that each of us must face: to remain ordinary, pathetic, beat-down, coasting through a miserable existence, like sheep herded by fate, or you can take control of your own destiny and join us, releasing the caged wolf you have inside. ... This is the decision that lies before you now: the sheep, or the wolf. The choice is yours."
  • The Visitor - out June 27 is also one with a great tagline, making me think it might be worth a watch:
In a world of six billion people, it only takes one to change your life.
Then there's the ones I'm REALLY looking forward to:
  • Wall-E - the new one from Pixar. Cannot wait for 18 July.
And then, then there's The Dark Knight. What can I say about this, really? It's gonna rock.

Filmreviews.ie have the official posters here where I got this from:



Roll on July 25!

Of course I'll have to do a review at some stage of it. Won't be as good as Darren, but then again, he was never interviewed on RTE News now, was he?

(You'll need Realplayer for this unfortunately - blink and you'll miss me)


(Thanks to Jazzbiscuit for the embed code!)

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

BATMAN in Dublin: update to the sunset post

The lovely Red Mum just sent me photos from her wonderful photostream of the sunset captured yesterday evening:


Image by Red Mum taken from here

Amazing eh? Great shots, as per usual. Thank you indeed!

But I have to ask. I'm sorry, but I have to...


Image by Red Mum taken from here

Isn't that BATMAN on the far right? And if so, what is he doing over here? Is this, as Anthony has suggested, PR for the upcoming Dark Knight movie? ;-)

Update: Will Knott has pointed to Superman on the left. Any idea who's in the middle?

Too tall to be the boy wonder and has a cape so not Spiderman... any ideas?



(I'm a cheeky pup I know. Congrats to the young wan on the nomination RM. Great stuff!)