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Review of THE DARK KNIGHT

Posted by The Visitor at 2:00am.

Posted in Film & DVD Reviews , Thriller, Drama, Action, USA & Canada.

Heath Ledger as the Joker

Here’s the truth: The Dark Knight belongs to Heath Ledger.

I’ll eat all my words and take back all my doubts. From the trailer, I really felt Ledger’s Joker was just no different than Jack Nicholson’s, right down to the maniacal laugh. But boy, am I wrong. And am I glad that I’m so wrong.

Ledger truly lives the character on screen, from that strange gait to the ticks and quirks, smacking his lips after every sentence. His Joker is at once funny, amusing, repulsive and terrifying, a true favourite son of Arkham Asylum. It’s really a brilliant, ingenious take on the character and a great final performance by the late actor.

With The Dark Knight, Christopher Nolan has actually managed to build upon the last film, giving us a richer Batman/Bruce Wayne personality, and a more complete look at Gotham and all its nooks and crannies, and what makes the city tick ... or explode. With its link-up to real life Hong Kong, Gotham is no longer a strictly fictional, fantastical realm but a city that could possibly exist in the real world, with real-life concerns. The action this time is thicker, and Nolan seems to direct those sequences with a more assured hand. Certainly there’s a feeling of gained confidence in the way Nolan handles the action - the scenes are better shot, more coherent and pack a bigger wallop.

But like I said, the film belongs to The Joker. His origins are not clearly explained, unlike in Tim Burton’s version with its vat of chemicals and surgery gone wrong. Here, The Joker just appears, seemingly out of nowhere, like a sudden, deadly typhoon that sweeps Gotham into a chaotic criminal mess. He’s brilliant, he’s crazy, he’s disturbingly logical. He’s the real bogeyman. Ledger takes over every scene that he appears in, delivering the best lines, and even gets to dress up in women’s clothes. Next to him, Christian Bale as Batman seems to only do a lot of brooding.

But this is brilliant writing. Of course, the whole Batman/Joker psychological relationship has been done in the comicbooks, particularly in Arkham Asylum - Serious House On Serious Earth (why so serious?). But the script here does a lot more, delving into the nature of good and evil, how one concept is meaningless without the other, and the nature of heroism and society. There’s even a deeply touching moment during one unexpected act of kindness. The story is full of twists, with surprises at every turn. The one big surprise for me was what the Batcycle turned out to be; I guarantee this is one scene that will have the fanboys cheering in the cinema.

Yet what really makes The Dark Knight, and Nolan, stand out from the rest of the other blockbusters, is that Nolan isn’t afraid to use silence to build mood and atmosphere. These days, there’s just too much noise in Hollywood action films, but it’s the silent, muted moments here that speak louder than all the slam-bang aural onslaught.

The only thing is, the film feels a tad too long, no matter how brilliant or enjoyable it is. Unfortunately it also needs to be that long to get to its final, essential point. And what a point it is. I guess the Batman legacy has finally been properly represented on the big screen.

It all goes back to Heath Ledger and how he pours his heart and soul into fleshing out The Joker, a technical performance that’s pitch-perfect on all points. I daresay, had Ledger not been in this film, The Dark Knight would have come across as a tad mediocre. The Joker is the pulse of the movie, the life of the party. The sad thing is, Ledger has literally left with a bang, given us a final performance so fantastic, we wish we’d get to see more from him. That will never happen, but we’re all truly privileged for having been given a glimpse of a bright shining genius at his peak.

Thank you, Heath, and rest in peace.

 

Reader Comments

  1. anton_es 07/10/2008 @ 7:46am

    well, now I’m officially hyped as well.

  2. Rhythm-X 07/10/2008 @ 8:05am

    “great final performance by the late actor.”

    Does the forthcoming Terry Gilliam film he’s in no longer count?

  3. kinkybob 07/10/2008 @ 8:55am

    I am very you realized the brilliance of Heath Ledger in his role as the Joker. I am so excited for the screening here in FL.

  4. kinkybob 07/10/2008 @ 8:55am

    sorry! lol that VERY GLAD. lol

  5. brbro4 07/10/2008 @ 9:53am

    i’ve yet to read a negative review for this film. i can’t wait. i haven’t been this excited for a movie in a while.

  6. Collin Armstrong 07/10/2008 @ 11:00am

    The Gilliam film is in limbo - might or might not be finished now.  The Dark Knight could indeed be his swan song.

  7. CheechWizz 07/12/2008 @ 7:13am

    I read somewhere that Johny Depp, Colin Farrell and Jude Law were stepping in to save The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus.
    Anyway been looking forward to this one ever since I watched Batman begins.

  8. #1 defender 07/12/2008 @ 10:25am

    The review says that the action scenes are better shot, does that mean Noln restrained from using that typical modern Hollywood closeup, shaky cam style he used in Batman Begins? Because that was my biggest complaint about Begins, which i loved, but that style ruined the final confrontation between Ra’s and Bats for me, as you could hardly see what was going on between some portions of it.

  9. kinkybob 07/12/2008 @ 8:41pm

    you are right cheechwizz. Johnny Depp, Colin Farrell and Jude Law is now in late Heath Ledger’s role.

  10. blackula jonez 07/13/2008 @ 9:38pm

    i honestly don’t know what to make of this, there hasn’t been a single negative review of this movie

    thursday night can’t come fast enough

  11. [Lunatic] 07/14/2008 @ 9:14am

    “we’re all truly privileged for having been given a glimpse of a bright shining genius at his peak”
    very Nicely put into words ..


    haven’t seen the movie myself , hope to see him soon.

  12. Mavsman15 08/13/2008 @ 7:52am

    Well, to be honest, I still am not sure if I have seen this film. As of the writing of this review, I have seen the film three times now and I am still not sure I have seen all that the film has to offer.

    When I was a child, I used to collect comic books and I always had one favorite hero, The Batman. I had no idea why I liked him. Maybe it was his dark outfit, maybe it was him trying to save Gotham City from the bad guys. I have no idea to this day why I selected him as my favorite. All of my other childhood friends were into Superman. I like him but to me he was just to good to be true. After awhile, I quit reading the books and moved onto baseball cards.

    I forgot all about Batman until I heard about a story called The Dark Knight Returns and rediscovered Batman as a dark hero that the world deserved and have not left the Batman world since.

    So who is the man that we call “Batman”? To me he is a Ronin because he has always blamed himself for his parents death as a child. In the new batman film, he looses another one close to him and it looks to make him more of a “Ronin.”

    So with all of this in my mind, I went to see my childhood hero, “Batman’s” latest film, The Dark Knight . I had only one thought after I saw it at the IMAX, “My God, They have finally gotten my hero right.”

    THIS WILL BE A HEAVY SPOILER REVIEW ALERT, SO IF YOU DO NOT WANT THE FILM SPOILED, THEN PLEASE STOP READING NOW.

    If you are going to show a hero, you must also show the villain. Batman’s main villain is The Joker and he is shown the way that the Joker was meant to be played by the late, Heath Ledger.

    Alfred states the best description of “The Joker” and he makes this comment. “You crossed the line first, sir. You squeezed them, you hammered them to the point of desperation. And in their desperation they turned to a man they didn’t fully understand.” …….”Because some men aren’t looking for anything logical, like money. They can’t be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.” Mr. Ledger’s acting makes you think that all he wants to do is to watch the world burn while he laughs at the result.

    I think that the Academy Award Oscar should just be given to the estate of Mr. Ledger for his performance as the Joker.

    Near the end of the film “The Joker” makes A statement that shows that him and Batman are the same..

    The Joker: You just couldn’t let me go could you? This is what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object. You truly are incorruptible aren’t you? You won’t kill me out of some misplaced sense of self-righteousness, and I won’t kill you, because you’re just too much fun. I think you and I are destined to do this forever.
    Batman: You’ll be in a padded cell forever.
    The Joker: Maybe we can share one. They’ll be doubling up, the rate this city’s inhabitants are losing their minds.

    This led to the first major question that I had about the next film. Do they recast the Joker or do they try and find another villain? The Joker was supposed to be in the third film and with the death of Mr. Ledger would you want to even try and make another one? How can you top this battle between good and evil between the Joker and Batman?

    Now for what I liked about the film…

    The voices of sanity for Batman, Alfred Pennyworth: (Michael Caine) and Lucius Fox: (Morgan Freeman) These two fine actors show why they are great actors and they both give the film and Batman a voice of logic in insane times.

    The role of Harvey Dent: (Played by Aaron Eckhart) In this role, he gave Batman hope that he could be the white knight face that Gotham needed. He could be the hero and save Gotham from crime. When you see it all go wrong for Dent, Eckhart’s acting makes you see that he has fallen and the white knight is no more.

    I loved this role, I actually believed that he had made a deal with the devil to get revenge and in the end it cost his life and almost his dream of hero for Gotham.

    The role of James Gordon (Played by Gary Oldman) tells us, the movie viewer, what the city of Gotham needs.

    Lt. James Gordon: Because he’s the hero Gotham deserves, but not the one it needs right now…and so we’ll hunt him, because he can take it. Because he’s not a hero. He’s a silent guardian, a watchful protector…a dark knight.

    In this film, he becomes the police commissioner. He also knows that he must also play a two-face role with Batman. In private he must hunt Batman for his fake crimes and he knows that he will need him to save the city from itself.

    Now for the one thing in the film that I really hated, was the role of Rachel Dawes: (played by Maggie Gyllenhaal).

    This character was never in the comic book and was made for this series of the movie. She was supposed to be a love interest for Bruce Wayne. Instead, when she dies in this film, she becomes another reason for Batman’s “Ronin” outlook. He has now lost his parents and the only woman that he has ever loved. I thought her acting was very bad and she slowed the pace of the film in every shot that she was in.

    At the time of this writing, the film has made over 440 million in the US Market and is within striking range of the 600 million $ that “Titanic” made in the 90’s.

    I have written words of praise for this film in order to try and convince you to see this film. I honesty do not if the words I have written have done this film any justice. All I can ask is that you take your time and please see this film. It is worth your time and your $. We are given a hero that we deserve, as a world. We are not given a hero that we need. I think this is why the film has done so well in the USA. He is what we need as a nation, a dark knight.

    Grade A+

    The Chechen: What do you propose?
    The Joker: It’s simple, we, uh, kill the Batman.
    [mobsters laugh]
    Salvatore Maroni: If it’s so simple, why haven’t you done it already?
    The Joker: If you’re good at something, never do it for free.

    How I saw it. CGV IMAX

    Opened in South Korea on 6 August 2008

    Opening weekend in USA. $158,411,483 (USA) (20 July 2008) (4,366 Screens)

    MAY HEATH LEDGER FIND THE PEACE IN DEATH THAT HE COULD NOT FIND IN THE TIME OF HIS LIFE.

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