Batman: The Dark Knight

Batman pits himself against the Joker and Two-Face in Christopher Nolan's latest offering.
Posted by Paul Whitrow, 21st July, 2008 | Permalink | 2 Comments
Batman: The Dark Knight, is it as goos as the hype? Is it better than the first? Is is the best comic book movie to date? ... to all these questions the answer is a simple "HELL YES".
This is a phenomenal piece of movie making. The story is blistering in scale, pace and execution. The visuals are stunning. The acting is off the scale. The whole production just drips class from every pour.
Christian Bale returns as an even darker more brooding character than his first outing in Batman Begins, and has an edgier tone to his character, you feel he really is close to the edge in this one His acting was good and wholly believable but I still can't take to the voice he uses for the Batman persona. Just doesn't gell for me.
Heath Ledger's portrayal of the Joker was something else. This is the stuff of Hollywood legend. It's such a shame to think that he won't be around to reap the reward from his work in this movie as it really is an Oscar winning performance (albeit posthumously). The Joker that Ledger gives us is cold, calculating, manipulative, psychotic and funny, but in no way insane. This Joker knows exactly what he is doing at every turn, and plays the other characters "like a harp from hell" (see what I did there?) to achieve his goal. The Joker stole the show for me in every scene he was in.
Aaron Eckhart also gives a strong back to Harvey Dent / Two-Face. This is not the pink and glowing version we saw in his last incarnation (Tommy how could you?), but rather a driven, visioned and tormented soul who strives to do the right thing for all, including himself at the end, but gets caught in the cross fire of the fight between the two main protagonists and ends up paying the highest price.
The supporting cast (Maggie Gyllenhaal as Rachel Dawes, Michael Caine as Alfred Pennyworth, Gary Oldman as James Gordon and Morgan Freeman as Lucius Fox) were, as you would expect, also exceptional in the particular roles, which only lent credence to the movie.
At around two and a half hours this movie had to deliver in order to keep you hooked, and it does. This is bum on seat and don't move stuff. Batman at his finest, doing what he does best against his two most dangerous foe.
Well done to all involved as this boys and girls, is a movie making master class.
Plot (contains spoilers!)
The film begins with the Joker robbing a mob-owned bank, and systematically double crossing his accomplices so he can have all the money. That night, multiple Batman impersonators interrupt a meeting between mobsters and the Scarecrow. The real Batman shows up and subdues everyone, but injuries suffered during the confrontation force him to acquire a new, more versatile suit of armor. Batman and Lieutenant James Gordon contemplate bringing new district attorney Harvey Dent in on their plan to eradicate the mob, and the possibility that Dent will become the hero to the people that Batman cannot be. At the same time, Bruce Wayne and Harvey are both competing for the love of Rachel Dawes. The mob bosses meet to discuss how to handle Batman, Gordon, and Dent, while a Chinese mobster accountant, Lau, lets the gang leaders know he has taken their money to Hong Kong to prevent the police and the district attorney from seizing it in an imminent bank raid. The Joker arrives and proposes to kill Batman for them, and also tries to convince them that Lau will give them all up to the police if he is caught.
After Batman successfully abducts Lau in Hong Kong and delivers him to the Gotham City police, the mobsters agree to pay the Joker half of their money in return for killing Batman. The Joker tells all of Gotham that if the Batman does not turn himself in to the police, then he will kill people every day. When the Joker begins killing off public officials, including Commissioner Loeb, despite the best efforts of the police and Batman to stop him, Wayne decides to turn himself in to the police. Before he can do so, Dent publicly admits to being "the Batman" to draw the Joker out of hiding. The Joker attempts to kill Dent during transport, but Gordon and Batman intervene in time to stop and arrest him. With the Joker in custody, Batman interrogates the Joker until he reveals that Rachel and Dent have been taken to opposite sides of the city, far-enough apart that Batman does not have time to save both of them. Batman speeds off to save Rachel, while Gordon and the police head after Dent. Unknown to them, the Joker has switched the locations, sending Batman after Dent and Gordon after Rachel. With the help of a pre-planted phone bomb, the Joker escapes with Lau in tow. Batman arrives and rescues Dent just as both buildings explode; the left side of Dent's face is burned during the explosion. Gordon does not reach Rachel in time; she dies in the explosion. In the hospital, Dent is driven to madness over the loss of Rachel, which he blames on Batman, Gordon and the Joker. The Joker frees Harvey from the hospital and convinces him to exact revenge on the cops, mobsters, Gordon and Batman.
While "Harvey Two-Face" confronts the corrupt cops and the mobsters one by one, flipping a coin to decide their fates, the Joker burns Lau at the top of the clown's share of mob money. The Joker then declares that he will rule the streets and that anyone left in Gotham at nightfall will be subject to his rule. The Joker plants explosives on two ferries of evacuees and gives the passengers on board the chance to destroy the opposing vessel, one full of prison convicts and another with civilians, in order to save their own lives. Batman tracks the Joker to an uncompleted skyscraper. Batman prevents the Joker from blowing up the ferries when both vessels' occupants decide they would rather not sacrifice the lives of the passengers in the other vessel for their own.
Dangling from a wire, the Joker acknowledges that Batman really is incorruptible, but that Dent was not, and that he has unleashed Harvey's madness upon the city. Batman finds Gordon and his family with Dent at the building where Rachel died. Two-Face proceeds to judge Batman, himself, and Gordon's son through the chance of a coin flip, which he sees as the only fairness left in the world. Two-Face shoots Batman in the stomach, but before he can determine the boy's fate, Batman tackles him over the side of the building, saving Gordon's son. As Dent lies motionless on the ground, Batman and Gordon decide that the Joker would win if anyone found out about Dent's corruption and madness. Batman convinces Gordon to let him take all the blame for Dent's murders in order to preserve Dent's image as Gotham's hero and give the city hope. As Gordon destroys the Bat-Signal, a manhunt is issued for Batman.
Extracted from from Wikipedia.
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Comments about ‘Batman: The Dark Knight’
29th July 2008, 11:14 am
Hi Annemiek,
Yes it is very sad that he has gone already, but he has left us with a great memory.
Heath Ledger = new James Dean?
28th July 2008, 7:44 pm
I love the new batman movie i saw it 2 times it was so good. And I watched brokeback mountain and I loved it Heath ledger played in it he did a fantastic job.
I love him (as an actor) and it is very sad that he passed