I saw The Dark Knight on Sunday morning, a time when most of Little Rock is in church. This sunday was the exception, the IMAX screening was a sold out show leading me to the realization that at this time in history Batman trumps Christ in popularity. Let's face it, he has cooler gadgets.
Picking up where Batman Begins left off we are treated to a very intense bank heist that is beautifully shot with a heart-pounding score that only heightens the experience. I knew within the first 5 minutes that this was going to far exceed my expectations and that was even before the bat or the clown-prince graced the screen.
At it's most simplistic level, The Dark Knight is a horror movie with perhaps the most terrifying villian to grace the screen since Hannibal Lechter. The Joker is given no origin here and that is not a detriment. It adds to the mystery of the man in a grease paint mask and makes him all the more horrifying.
This Batman is not for kids...it is gritty, intense and what makes it so nerve-shattering is that it is quite realistic. The Joker is referred to in this film as a terrorist and it is a title that fits quite appropriately.
Ledger's portrayal is spot-on and well worth the accolades he has received. He disappears into the role and you forget that you are watching the actors final completed performance. The full effect that we have lost such a great actor is not felt until the Joker delivers one of his final lines on screen, "We can do this forever" he tells Batman, explaining why he would not kill the Dark Knight. Only then do you realize as a viewer that his eerie promise will never come to be and as you leave the theater completely exhausted from a fantastic movie-going experience you truly feel the loss of a gifted young man who will never again grace the screens.
But The Dark Knight is much more than Heath Ledgers swan song, it is a film that manages to be an action film, a horror movie and a dramatic character study all rolled into one.
Director Christopher Nolan proves that he can handle multiple villians with grace and tact unlike Joel Schumacher and unfortunately Sam Raimi in Spider-Man 3.
With a cameo by The Scarecrow and The Batman dealing with 2 other villians the movie does not feel cluttered and at 2 and 1/2 hours runtime it most definitely does not feel rushed. I would advise not drinking a trash can-sized Mr. Pibb within the first twenty minutes of the film because you will not want to leave the theater to relieve yourself. The film is that riveting. Luckily, if it is a packed house you can relieve yourself right there and blame one of the other 200 people.
This post was last modified: 07-21-2008, 02:14 PM by Tony H.
“I have come here to chew bubblegum and kick ass. And I'm all out of bubblegum.”
Certified 100% Serious