Reviewed by Danny the Demented
Updated July 23 2012
No movie is perfect, but this one is pretty darn close. The Dark Knight Rises is the best movie of the year thus far and I do not expect its status to be challenged anytime soon.
This third and final installment of director Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy picks up 8 years since where the second movie left off: after the death of Harvey "Two Face" Dent and Rachel Dawes, Bruce Wayne aka Batman (Christian Bale) went into retirement as Gotham City is now a peaceful and organized crime-free sanctuary... or so it would seem. A new threat named Bane (Tom Hardy), a former member of the League of Shadows so extreme in his thinking that even the league's former master Ra's al Ghul (Liam Neeson) felt necessary to cast him out. Armed with an army of undyingly royal followers and an unshakable belief inherited from the fallen league leader, Bane arrives at Gotham aiming to take everything down and will stop at nothing to achieve this goal. Despite the heartfelt urging from Alfred (Michael Caine) to stay away, Bruce decides to put on his mask and become the crusader once again to save his beloved city. Along the way he encounters a cat burglar Selina Kyle (Anne Hathaway), meets up with his trusted friend Fox (Morgan Freeman), helps an old ally Jim Gordon (Gary Oldman), sees the future for Gotham in John Blake (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), and embraces a new love interest in Miranda Tate (Marion Cotillard). Making a last stand against an enemy of unprecedented strength and cunning, the batman pushes all his chips forward in this final showdown. If that didn't give you goosebumps, then you are the tin man without a heart.
Quite simply the best film of the trilogy, The Dark Knight Rises redefines the word "epic". The story is told at a speed so perfectly timed that it can only be described as impeccable. The music is deeply moving without being contrived. The characters are all crucial to the film's development with rich back-stories to keep us engaged. Not a single minute is wasted and every second serves a purpose. The car chases are thrilling, the fight sequences are exhilarating, and the big stadium explosion scene almost brought tears to my eyes it was so flawlessly stringed together (see? Michael Bay, you can't even do explosion justice the way Nolan can). It's nearly 3 hours long but you'll crave for 3 hours more. Some may argue that the second installment (The Dark Knight) is the superior film, but I disagree (and remember, Danny is always right, it's science). While the previous film was a fantastic movie, "The Dark Knight Rises" is by far a more completely told tale. The biggest difference perhaps is in character development. The villains in The Dark Knight (Harvey Dent played by Aaron Eckhart and the Joker played by the late Heath Ledger) were brilliant, to be sure, but we knew very little about them. They were given to us as they were and just took off from there, which was fine and the end product is now a legend. However, in The Dark Knight Rises, every new character has a story about them that is fascinating and vital to the development of the plot. They were given to us as seeds, grown throughout the course of the film, then blossomed finally as the film comes to an end. A more difficult approach and needless to say much more time-consuming, but well worth the investment as the payoff is evident. Christopher Nolan left no questions unanswered and every loose end is tied up in satisfying fashions. A more than worthy finale to the series.
Nolan directed the trilogy as crime/action/drama thrillers, not as a superhero franchise, which is most likely the reason for its success. You would call the Avenger series (Iron man, Thor, Captain America, The Hulk) immensely entertaining and fun and you'd be right, but you wouldn't call them masterpieces. The structures and designs of superhero films and traditional crime-dramas are vastly different in nature. While the former's main goal is to entertain, the latter's most important focus is to make the audiences believe. Believe in the struggle, believe in the crime, believe in the evil and believe in the redemption. By taking this approach, Nolan has made the Batman real: we understand his dilemmas, we understand his pain, we understand his thinking and we understand who he ultimately is. Nolan has blew everything from Tim Burton's respectable Batman and Batman Returns to Joel Schumacher's hideous Batman Forever and Batman & Robin right out of the water with his Dark Knight films.
The acting is superb all around. Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman and Gary Oldman (aka Mr. Bring Me Everyone) were as good as they've been in the previous two films. Michael Caine's Alfred was especially brilliant in this one: to watch him try desperately to keep Bruce Wayne safe with his speech was as close to heartbreaking as I will ever feel at a theatre. The new comers were just as brilliant. Anne Hathaway is a fantastic Cat Woman, she portrays the very "adaptable" Selina Kyle with an elegant smirk and unstoppable allure. It is impossible not to fall in love with Hathaway's Selina. Joseph Gordon-Levitt gives a genuinely moving performance as John Blake, the cop with a heart of gold. I've always liked him (ever since his 3rd Rock from the Sun days) and with roles like this and his Arthur in "Inception", he is on his way to a very solid career. Marion Cotillard is full of grace and class as Miranda Tate, even the most subtle twinkle in her eyes seem to tell a story worth a thousand words. And finally Tom Hardy as Bane, one of the most dangerous villain Batman has ever faced (both in comic and film, known as "The man who broke the bat" in the comic book series), is as good a choice anyone has ever made in the history of cinema. Hardy delivered his monologues with a fierce force in a calm and terrifying manner that I feel a chill every time he spoke. Everything he did as Bane, from the way he moved to the way he stood, was sincerely haunting. Mr Nolan sure knows how to pick his bad guys.
There will never again be another Batman series like Nolan's and it ought to be a crime if anyone dares to make another one. Christopher is one of only 3 filmmakers active today that guarantees quality. With Inception in 2010 and now The Dark Knight Rises in 2012, Nolan seems to be on a roll which I hope it never stops. The cinematic world is a better place with you in it and that is as high a praise as I can give to any filmmaker Mr Nolan. Now had I mattered more, someone would actually care about the praises I give, but alas. My name is Danny and I endorse this message.
This third and final installment of director Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy picks up 8 years since where the second movie left off: after the death of Harvey "Two Face" Dent and Rachel Dawes, Bruce Wayne aka Batman (Christian Bale) went into retirement as Gotham City is now a peaceful and organized crime-free sanctuary... or so it would seem. A new threat named Bane (Tom Hardy), a former member of the League of Shadows so extreme in his thinking that even the league's former master Ra's al Ghul (Liam Neeson) felt necessary to cast him out. Armed with an army of undyingly royal followers and an unshakable belief inherited from the fallen league leader, Bane arrives at Gotham aiming to take everything down and will stop at nothing to achieve this goal. Despite the heartfelt urging from Alfred (Michael Caine) to stay away, Bruce decides to put on his mask and become the crusader once again to save his beloved city. Along the way he encounters a cat burglar Selina Kyle (Anne Hathaway), meets up with his trusted friend Fox (Morgan Freeman), helps an old ally Jim Gordon (Gary Oldman), sees the future for Gotham in John Blake (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), and embraces a new love interest in Miranda Tate (Marion Cotillard). Making a last stand against an enemy of unprecedented strength and cunning, the batman pushes all his chips forward in this final showdown. If that didn't give you goosebumps, then you are the tin man without a heart.
Quite simply the best film of the trilogy, The Dark Knight Rises redefines the word "epic". The story is told at a speed so perfectly timed that it can only be described as impeccable. The music is deeply moving without being contrived. The characters are all crucial to the film's development with rich back-stories to keep us engaged. Not a single minute is wasted and every second serves a purpose. The car chases are thrilling, the fight sequences are exhilarating, and the big stadium explosion scene almost brought tears to my eyes it was so flawlessly stringed together (see? Michael Bay, you can't even do explosion justice the way Nolan can). It's nearly 3 hours long but you'll crave for 3 hours more. Some may argue that the second installment (The Dark Knight) is the superior film, but I disagree (and remember, Danny is always right, it's science). While the previous film was a fantastic movie, "The Dark Knight Rises" is by far a more completely told tale. The biggest difference perhaps is in character development. The villains in The Dark Knight (Harvey Dent played by Aaron Eckhart and the Joker played by the late Heath Ledger) were brilliant, to be sure, but we knew very little about them. They were given to us as they were and just took off from there, which was fine and the end product is now a legend. However, in The Dark Knight Rises, every new character has a story about them that is fascinating and vital to the development of the plot. They were given to us as seeds, grown throughout the course of the film, then blossomed finally as the film comes to an end. A more difficult approach and needless to say much more time-consuming, but well worth the investment as the payoff is evident. Christopher Nolan left no questions unanswered and every loose end is tied up in satisfying fashions. A more than worthy finale to the series.
Nolan directed the trilogy as crime/action/drama thrillers, not as a superhero franchise, which is most likely the reason for its success. You would call the Avenger series (Iron man, Thor, Captain America, The Hulk) immensely entertaining and fun and you'd be right, but you wouldn't call them masterpieces. The structures and designs of superhero films and traditional crime-dramas are vastly different in nature. While the former's main goal is to entertain, the latter's most important focus is to make the audiences believe. Believe in the struggle, believe in the crime, believe in the evil and believe in the redemption. By taking this approach, Nolan has made the Batman real: we understand his dilemmas, we understand his pain, we understand his thinking and we understand who he ultimately is. Nolan has blew everything from Tim Burton's respectable Batman and Batman Returns to Joel Schumacher's hideous Batman Forever and Batman & Robin right out of the water with his Dark Knight films.
The acting is superb all around. Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman and Gary Oldman (aka Mr. Bring Me Everyone) were as good as they've been in the previous two films. Michael Caine's Alfred was especially brilliant in this one: to watch him try desperately to keep Bruce Wayne safe with his speech was as close to heartbreaking as I will ever feel at a theatre. The new comers were just as brilliant. Anne Hathaway is a fantastic Cat Woman, she portrays the very "adaptable" Selina Kyle with an elegant smirk and unstoppable allure. It is impossible not to fall in love with Hathaway's Selina. Joseph Gordon-Levitt gives a genuinely moving performance as John Blake, the cop with a heart of gold. I've always liked him (ever since his 3rd Rock from the Sun days) and with roles like this and his Arthur in "Inception", he is on his way to a very solid career. Marion Cotillard is full of grace and class as Miranda Tate, even the most subtle twinkle in her eyes seem to tell a story worth a thousand words. And finally Tom Hardy as Bane, one of the most dangerous villain Batman has ever faced (both in comic and film, known as "The man who broke the bat" in the comic book series), is as good a choice anyone has ever made in the history of cinema. Hardy delivered his monologues with a fierce force in a calm and terrifying manner that I feel a chill every time he spoke. Everything he did as Bane, from the way he moved to the way he stood, was sincerely haunting. Mr Nolan sure knows how to pick his bad guys.
There will never again be another Batman series like Nolan's and it ought to be a crime if anyone dares to make another one. Christopher is one of only 3 filmmakers active today that guarantees quality. With Inception in 2010 and now The Dark Knight Rises in 2012, Nolan seems to be on a roll which I hope it never stops. The cinematic world is a better place with you in it and that is as high a praise as I can give to any filmmaker Mr Nolan. Now had I mattered more, someone would actually care about the praises I give, but alas. My name is Danny and I endorse this message.
You can't just say "only 3 filmmakers" and then not actually name the others!!
ReplyDeleteBy the way I didn't like how they put a gorgeous, brilliant man like Hardy into a hideous mask and distorted his voice. Even if he has more acting skills than Katie Holmes just in his damn eyebrows.
I enjoy being a little mysterious in my reviews....take a guess who the other two are. It's time for "GUESS WHAT DANNY'S THINKING" game. And yes there was no need for all caps but I did it. I am eccentric that way. Tom Hardy really is quite a specimen isn't he. His eyebrows deserves an Oscar. Also, you like how I included your "3 hours more" in my review? That one was for you Mon.
DeleteI DID NOTICE IT, I just thought you decided against "10 more hours" hahaha. Thank you for bestowing this honour upon me. ;D
DeleteAre any of them foreign filmmakers? Because I'd have trouble even naming three English-language ones. Quentin Tarantino?? You liked Pulp Fiction right?
Well Nolan is British I think but no the other two are American, and you got Tarantino right! Monica knows me well. The other is also one of your favorite though he isn't really a director per se. Charlie Kaufman is the man.
DeleteWait are you sure Charlie Kaufman is one of my favourites?? Eternal Sunshine definitely is one of my favourites, but I didn't like Being John Malkovich at all. Kind of on the fence about Adaptation.
DeleteAlso didn't know Christopher Nolan is British... I guess that's why he has styyyle :D
Really? I loved everything he wrote. Haven't had the time to catch up on his directorial debut , Synecdoche, New York. Nolan does have style, those three are the only film-related ppl whose product I will see no matter what, if I can help it.
DeleteI kinda have to disagree with your point on the lack of villain character development in the Dark Knight. We did get enough story on Harvey, a righteous prosecutor. I myself came to really like him up until the point where that thing happened in that one place that gave him his new... look. The whole point about the Joker was that we were very unsure of his past, that was a part of his character. He was mysterious, and with a haunting past we were just not quite sure about. I cannot wait to see this finale though.
ReplyDeleteThey are two different approaches, but the third's is the more effective one if the filmmaker wants to cover all angles which I think should be the goal for every movie related ppl. Both Dent and the Joker were excellent characters (with the Joker being the more fascinating one for obvious reasons), but the back story is lacking and that's an issue. We know Dent is the righteous protector , he showed up as one. But the movie neglect to show us how (there was supposedly a clean-up period at the beginning of the film but it was never shown). How did he clean up the street of Gotham? Why didn't he work with Jim Gordon at the beginning if he started cleaning a while ago?He is the white knight but we weren't told or shown as to how he became who he was, we were given Dent, that's it. That is fine, as I've explained, but could've been better. The Joker was obviously one of the best villains ever, amazing performance by Mr. Ledger. The point of the Joker however isn't about his past, but his unpredictability. Nolan could've let us know about his past and still allow him to remain unknown. He is supposed to be mysterious yes, and obviously has a haunting past sure, he is an agent of chaos and was great at it. But had Nolan given us a bit more why or how he arrived at Gotham, perhaps a quick segment on his arrival, or his childhood, then the movie as a whole would've been even better. This finale takes everything to another level. You will love it. Go see it as soon as possible
DeleteGood review Danny. Yeah, Bane’s no Joker, but then again, what villain really is?!? Hardy is great as Bane, and plays up his physical intimidation, as well as his intellectual one as well. However, everybody else is great here too and gave me the performances I need to hold onto when everything was all sadly said and done.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThanks Dan, it's just a very strong film all around. I hope they don't try to reboot it anytime soon, hopefully not in my lifetime. It'd be hard to top Nolan. Any attempt could be disastrous.
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