It's an unwritten rule. The most hyped and most commercialized movie of the year is bound to fail to meet expectations. We saw it with Spider Man III - lots of criticism for the Emo Spider Man. To some extent, we saw it with Superman Returns, which I actually really liked. But for some, it was just another case of Lex Luthor trying to get rich with land (wasn't that what the first Superman movie was all about?). Even the vaunted Star Wars movies took their blows, most notably The Phantom Menace.
But this summer, we've had not one but two superhero movies with BIG TIME hype and fan boys everywhere just chomping at the bit for the latest grainy photos of the production in Iron Man and The Dark Knight.
Iron Man was immediately hailed by fans and critics alike for setting a new bar for superhero/comic book movies. Robert Downey, Jr., perhaps the most unlikely of heroes was terrific and John Favreau's take was dead on. Marvel 1, DC 0.
Not so fast. If you haven't seen The Dark Knight, what's keeping you. This is, hands down, the best so-called comic book movie ever made. Partially because it's the one comic book movie which transcends its comic book roots. Christopher Nolan has reinvented the genre by using as little CGI as possible and basing as much of the story and production in reality as one can with such characters.
This is a cast crowded with A-List stars. Christian Bale reprising his role as Batman/Bruce Wayne joined once again by Michael Caine (never not good), Morgan Freeman (not narrating, surprisingly), and Gary Oldman (playing a straight forward good guy - who knew?) and for the first time by Maggie Gyllenhall (big upgrade over Katie Holmes from the first movie) and Aaron Eckhart (always good as the everyman but with an interesting twist that I won't give away). But the tour de force performance by Heath Ledger as The Joker is what everyone is talking about and rightly so. Sure, The Joker's been done before and done well. Cesar Romero in the TV series (and 1966 movie) was actually pretty good. Jack Nicholson was demented and calculating in the 1989 Tim Burton pic. But Ledger redefines evil. His take on The Joker is one who is evil because he believes that at our core, we're all evil and that's what makes Batman's quest such a joke.
He is downright scary from his smudged makeup to the cackle to his unpredictability. This is NOT a kid's movie. If your 10-year old doesn't already have a thing about clowns, he will after he sees this. 11-12 is definitely the cutoff.
Shot almost entirely on location in with Chicago stepping in as Gotham City, the city even becomes somewhat a character in this picture. By the way, a couple of things to note that I thought were kind of fun and these are minor spoilers so be warned. The first: there's a scene set in the Pacific on a boat. That's Lake Michigan with the beach and palm trees done by CGI. Second: in a scene where Morgan Freeman as Lucius Fox is having a meeting with a business man in "Hong Kong" you can pretty clearly see Chicago's McCormick Place in the background.
The Dark Knight works because of a lot of elements, not the least of which being that Batman is perhaps the most intriguing of all superheroes because there's nothing technically super about him. He's a man. Ultra rich, yes. Disciplined beyond belief? Yes. At the height of human physical training? Absolutely, but a man nonetheless. No mutation, radiation, or alien origin. That allows all of us to see a little of ourselves (or how we would like to be) in him.
I've seen it once. I plan on seeing it again and again and then buying the DVD.
Tags: batman, dark, joker, knight, movies
Share
-
▶ Reply to This