Wednesday, 6 August 2008

The Dark Knight - movie review

Have you ever noticed how one measly letter separates "laughter" from "slaughter?"



I almost missed this off-the-cuff joke -- it's spray-painted on the side of a semi
as the Joker (Heath Ledger) descends on a police convoy hustling doomed district
attorney Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart) beneath the streets of Gotham. But it beautifully
captures the balancing act director Christopher Nolan attempts in The Dark Knight, an anticipat
ed blockbuster that seems capable at any point of plunging headlong into hilarity
or insanity, moral stability or absolute chaos.



Anticipation. It's safe to say it has been building at a steady clip ever since Gary
Oldman's Lt. Jim Gordon handed Batman (Christian Bale) a Joker card in the closing
minutes of Nolan's masterful Batman Begins. The director's groundbreaking reboot thoroughly
reinvented the Caped Crusader for a new generation, and the idea that Nolan would
unleash the Joker for a sequel set geek pulses racing. Message-board chatter heated
up with the casting of Ledger in the iconic role, then reached thermonuclear levels
following the actor's untimely death in January.



With growing anticipation comes overwhelming expectation, which can work to a film's
advantage or set it up to stumble. When Nolan revived a dormant Batman franchise
in 2005, he had only to contend with our hazy memories of Joel Schumacher's camp
y, tasteless sequels. This time out, he's measured against his own achievement. Batman Begins
remains one of the finest comic book adaptations of all time. In aspiring to advance
the franchise, Nolan overreaches. The Dark Knight sets numerous goals. Many are reached,
but some are missed.



The sequel is massive in scope, sprawling with ideas, dizzying with its action, and
challenging with its moral quandaries. But Nolan cuts noticeable corners to cover
his expansive canvas. The film is unwieldy where Begins was focused. Double-crosses
can disrupt the narrative flow, creating confusion in Nolan’s elaborate screenplay.
At best, The Dark Knight is flat-out exhilarating, a roller-coaster plunge into the heart
of darkness. At worst -- primarily in its third act -- it's a tad exhausting.



It's also not a Joker story, despite all of the attention paid to Ledger's maniacal
interpretation of Batman's soulless foe. The Joker is but one card in Nolan's very
stacked deck.



Dark Knight chooses instead to focus on Harvey Dent, a champion of justice destined (in
the comics and on screen) to become the villainous Two-Face. Months after the events
of Begins, Batman and Gordon have stepped up efforts to reduce organized crime in
Gotham. The city's do-gooders are making a dent in crime -- pun intended -- thanks
to Dent's fearless approach to wiping out Gotham's corruption.



The Joker acts as the wrench in Dent's plan, the thorn in Batman's side. Nolan wisely
omits the character's back story and paints him as a modern terrorist waging war
on our home turf. Ledger plunges to unspeakable depths to embody the Joker's anarchistic spi
rit. His tongue lolls. His eyes dart. His voice rings with equal amounts of menace
and glee. The Joker's consistently unpredictable, as well. How appropriate that Hans
Zimmer and James Newton Howard's haunting score resembles an air-raid siren warning of impe
nding doom, because the Joker always has something deadly up his sleeve. But he's
mysterious to a fault. The Joker's grand schemes often had me wondering how he pulled
certain things off, when he had time to kidnap certain characters, rig various s
tructures with dynamite, or generate a proper bankroll for his endless stream of
guns, bazookas, automatic weapons and explosives.



Dark Knight pushes the concept of escalation that was introduced in Begins and extends
through the sequel. Yet while everything is bigger, not all of it is better. Nolan
and company nail Harvey Dent's tragic character (Eckhart is fantastic as the pious
civil servant), but mishandle Two-Face. Batman purists may be annoyed by changes Nolan
makes to Dent's wicked transformation, and his status at the end of this film is
a head-scratcher. Stylistically, Dark Knight is a departure for Nolan. An international
mission to Hong Kong helps the film feel like a Mission: Impossible sequel, while Wayne now
possesses enough toys to make an unflappable 007 envious. Maggie Gyllenhaal steps
in for Katie Holmes, and we feel the emotional weight attached to her character.
Michael Caine and Morgan Freeman, however, get less to do this time around.



With so much going on, though, there's more to appreciate than nitpick in Dark Knight.
And it's tough to fault a filmmaker who reaches beyond the stars with what could
be dismissed as a comic book property.



It simply boils down to a matter of taste (for the theatrical). I preferred Batm
an Begins over The Dark Knight. Nolan's introductory film embraced explanations, took time with
its mythology, accepted the character's limitations and established the boundaries
of Batman's fictional world. Dark Knight builds on that foundation, for sure, but thrusts
ever forward when all I really wanted it to do was stop for a second and soak in
the glorious chaos.












Alfred, we're going to need some more TVs.



See Also