Showing posts with label batman begins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label batman begins. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Rebooting Batman and Liberace

Now that the Dark Knight trilogy has come to an end, it's time to start thinking about the next movie iteration of the Batman. Naturally, the focus has been on how Warner Brothers should proceed and who should be the next actor to don the cape and cowl. Add in the growing buzz about a possible Justice League movie or perhaps World's Finest team-up between Batman and Superman and we have full blown bat-mania on our hands.

(Note, spoilers lie ahead. If you have not seen the Dark Knight trilogy, you have been warned.) 

Most of the questions surrounding the Dark Knight's future are directly related to a Justice League movie. Should they reboot Batman and establish a different actor as the Caped Crusader or should they set the Justice League in the Dark Knight universe and bring Christian Bale back in the role that he has owned for the past decade? Or should they proceed with John Blake as Batman, and have Joseph Gordon Levitt continue his role from The Dark Knight Rises?

These two options are troubling to me for several reasons. First, if Batman is going to be fighting along side the Super-Friends for the first time in a live action movie, it really ought to be Bruce Wayne and not some other guy who recently took over the job... and who's real name happens to be Robin. And if you recall, at the end of The Dark Knight Rises, Bruce Wayne faked his death and retired, so even if Bale is back as Batman, Bruce Wayne would have way too much 'splaining to do. (As Ricky Riccardo might say.)

The Dark Knight trilogy was great as a stand alone story. I think they should leave well-enough alone and move on. Plus, Heath Ledger had such an impact on the role of the Joker that they might not want to recast that part. Heck, they did not even mention him in The Dark Knight Rises. The Joker is way too important to the Batman legend to be permanently retired. Rebooting Batman solves that problem.

Another benefit of rebooting the Batman franchise is that you can pick up the character at whatever point in his career you want. Batman (1989) started the story just a few weeks into Batman's career. The Dark Knight trilogy takes us all the way back to the beginning in Batman Begins. I'd like to see them go the route of the New Frontier comic book and have us meet Batman early in his career, but after he has already established himself in Gotham City. We don't need another origin story, for god-sakes. A reboot like this will also enable the filmmakers to establish a Batman that exists in a world with super-powered beings. The Dark Knight trilogy was clearly set in a world without superpowers.

Finally, a reboot of Batman means we get to see more villains from his rouges gallery come to life, and none are really off limits, no matter how fantastic they might be. Villains like Clayface, Poison Ivy, Mr. Freeze and Killer Croc don't really fit in the more grounded Dark Knight world and were therefore out-of-play. Now all bets are off. Before the The Dark Knight Rises came out, the rumor mill was burning with talk of Johnny Depp as The Riddler or Philip Seymour Hoffman as The Penguin. Sure, those guys would be great, but I prefer to think bigger. 

Bigger and brighter. 

I say the villain in the next Batman movie should be a resurrection of one of the most unique bad guys from the 60's TV show. Now that Michael Douglas has portrayed Liberace in Behind the Candelabra, why not cast him as The Great Chandell? 

The Great Chandell was a villain portrayed by the famous, flamboyant showman in 1966. He was a pianist who was blackmailed into a life of crime by his twin brother Harry. 

If we are starting over with Batman, why not reboot The Great Chandell while we are at it? And think what an actor of this caliber could do with the duel role of Harry, Chandell's evil twin brother. The possibilities are endless. 

Okay, maybe Chandell will never make it to the silver screen, but you gotta admit, it would be funny. I may be letting my imagination run a little wild, but I've got to do something to keep me busy until we get a new Batman movie. Luckily, we've got the Man of Steel, Thor and Captain America to entertain us in the meantime. It's just too bad none of them fight such fabulous bad guys as the Dark Knight.

Friday, August 17, 2012

The Dark Knight Rises to the Occasion Part 2

This is part two of my look at The Dark Knight Rises. Click here for part one. 

The Dark Knight Rises is a hell of a flick. I have seen it three times and I will surely wear out the Blu-Ray when it comes out. However, like I mentioned in part one of this post, there were a few things that bugged me that I’d like to talk about here. It’s what we fanboys do.

WARNING: Major Spoilers ahead!!

The Dark Knight Rises is the conclusion to Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy; a film series that revived Batman from the coma that films like Batman Forever and Batman and Robin had put him in. The trilogy was grounded in reality, and though there are plenty of fantastic elements at play, it tries to keep Batman’s boots planted in the real world. No super powers, no aliens, no freeze rays or hypnotic plant drugs. This “real world” take on the Caped Crusader gave it an edge and weight like few other movies in the genre ever have. Also, because it was a self-contained story, with a beginning, middle and end, it did what few other movies or comic books could do; have a definitive ending to the Batman story.

For the record, The Dark Knight is my favorite film of the trilogy. Bane and Catwoman are great villains but let’s face it, nothing can beat Heath Ledger’s Joker and what he brought to that movie. But I could also write an article with nitpicks about that film too. So having said that, let’s discuss what worked and what didn’t in The Dark Knight Rises.

Catwoman: As I said before, I was leery of this character being in this movie, but the writers nailed it and Anne Hathaway hit a home run with the role. I really enjoyed her and my only complaint is I wanted to see more of her.

The Action: A lot of people will like this movie more than Batman Begins and a large part of it is because there is simply more action. You have an army of bad guys at war with Gotham City, lead by a masked madman and you have Batman flying around in a cool new vehicle, The Bat. There are some awesome action sequences in this flick.

The Last Hour: The climax of this movie was tremendous. The action was a blast and the ending of the movie was a completely satisfying conclusion to this story.  The nice thing about a finite, self-contained story like this is that we can have a definitive ending and it can be happy. There are no happy heroes until the true ending of a story. If the series continues, Batman must press on. Here we can finally enjoy seeing Bruce Wayne at peace….and with Selina Kyle. Like Ross and Rachel in Friends, they can’t end up together until the show ends.

The Fights with Bane: Okay, this is where I start to nitpick. Ever since the synopsis of this movie came out I figured it was going to follow the structure of Rocky III, with Bane in the Clubber Lang role. (Except great as Tom Hardy is, he ain’t no Mr. T.) Initially, Batman would face Bane after a long layoff and with a weakened spirit and he would get his butt handed to him. Then he would go back, train and recapture the “Eye of the Tiger”… that hunger and passion that fuels a champion, and he would win the belt back.









The first fight with Bane is really good. Batman gets his back broken (or dislocated), similar to the way Bane did it in the famous Knightfall comic book series.  Bane is brutal and he can see that the Dark Knight’s fighting skills are not up to the usual League of Shadows standards. Bane even says, “Victory has made you weak.” 

Batman vs. The Mutant Leader in The Dark Knight Returns
It‘s the second fight I was a little disappointed with. Go back and look at Batman’s fights with the mutant leader in the Dark Night Returns graphic novel. In the first fight Batman is nearly killed because he tries to “fight like a young man”, as they put it. When he gets his rematch, Batman fights smarter, not harder and vanquishes his savage foe. Same thing with Rocky with Clubber Lang; he comes back with a better attitude and an adjusted fighting style. When Batman returns to fight Bane, we know he has rediscovered a “fear of death” that will give him the edge he needs, and we know he’s going to target Bane’s mask this time around, but that’s about it. We don’t really see Batman fight any differently the second time around. And the fight is nowhere near as dramatic or entertaining as the fights in Rocky III. You feel every blow in those scenes and the dramatic payoff is amazing. Look at The Patriot if you want another example of a great climatic fight. Mel Gibson faces the British General that killed his sons amid a pivotal battle between the Colonists and the Red Coats. Again, we have a very dramatic fight, in which you can practically feel every slice of the General’s sword. When Mel makes his move and defeats the General, you are cheering in your seat. The second Batman/Bane fight happens a bit to quickly and could have been filmed a little bit better, in my opinion.

Also, when Batman and Catwoman first fight together on the rooftop, they run away when Bane and his henchmen show up, because they are out numbered and out gunned. I thought it would have been great if Batman and Bane had a quick tussle here, before their big backbreaking encounter.

I guess that’s of another one of my nitpicks. I would have liked to have seen a little more Batman in this movie. He’s only in the bat suit about three or four times in the movie.

Batman’s Career: Another thing that I was not quite thrilled with was the idea that Batman had been inactive for eight years. That means that after training for about seven years, Bruce Wayne becomes Batman for about a year or two and then retires for eight. I thought that lessens the legend of Batman in this universe. Why did it have to be an eight-year period? Why couldn’t he have been active as Batman for a while longer and chased by the police, as suggested at the end of The Dark Knight? After all, the criminals are now under the impression that the Batman kills. His one rule against killing was pointed out as a weakness in TDK, so wouldn't this perceived threat make criminals think twice about messing with Batman? I understand that they wanted to do a “coming out of retirement” story similar to The Dark Knight Returns, but I thought the idea of the Dent Act simply wiping out organized crime was a bit weak.

Some days, you just can't get rid of a bomb.

Another thing that bugged me a little bit was Bane’s plan. He successfully defeats Batman and secures a nuclear device that can level the city. He gives the trigger to an ordinary citizen so they can detonate it if the army tries to stop him or anyone tries to flee the city. So as soon as he learns that Batman has returned, after a generous five month healing period, he does not simply detonate the bomb. Why not? Was the detonator a bluff? Could they not set it off until the reactor melted or could they set it off whenever they wanted? Seems like they could set it off at any time. Also, did Bane and his crew plan on dying in Gotham the whole time, or did they only resign themselves to death once Batman intervened? It was not clear if they had an exit strategy or if they were a death cult. Seems to me, the guy who started this whole “destroy Gotham” thing, Ra's al Ghul, did not plan on killing himself when he attacked Gotham. So why would Bane’s gang want to? I know they said they wanted Gotham to experience false hope before they were annihilated, but it still seemed like they got caught “monologuing”, as they would say in The Incredibles.

Also, the whole disposing of a bomb thing was great, but I could not help but think back to the greatest instance of Batman performing such an act. The immortal Adam West said it best when he uttered those famous words, “Some days, you just can't get rid of a bomb.


John Blake’s Intuition: I had no problem with the John Blake character and I loved his arc. I actually wished he had been a little more involved with the final battle, but I understood the importance of what he was doing with the school bus and the orphans. My only gripe was the way he knew that Batman was Bruce Wayne simply by a look on Bruce’s face. It was a little too simple and I wished they had added a little detective work to the mix to help him verify his suspicions. This was a minor thing, but I think it took people out of the moment during that scene.

Cops In the Sewers:  Here is one more thing that bugged me a bit. You mean to tell me ALL of the cops go into the sewer system? ALL of them? And despite the fact that we see them being supplied with food and water, they all emerge from the depths relatively healthy and clean-shaven. Maybe they could have had half the cops in the sewers and the rest of them in hiding because of bounties on them or something. I don’t know. Like I said, it just bugged me a little. Then they rush into a crowd of well-armed thugs with pistols and nightsticks. It looked cool, but they would have got mowed down.

Okay, enough is enough. You get the idea… great movie but a few things that maybe could have been thought out or executed a little better. However, The Dark Knight Rises is the triumphant conclusion to the best super hero trilogy of all time… and it’s certainly one of the better comic book movies ever.  It is also one hell of a Batman story and the most satisfying ending a Batman movie has ever had.

So what did you think?

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

The Dark Knight Rises to the Occasion

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I’ve been trying to put my thoughts together about The Dark Knight Rises for the past week. I have already seen the movie twice, but I am still not sure how I truly feel about it. I kinda loved it... but there are a few things that bugged me about it. It is a movie that begs to be discussed and debated by fanboys like me.

Someone* recently asked me to rank the Dark Knight films from best to least best and I thought that was a great way to categorize it… least best. I want to convey that I really enjoyed the movie and it’s worth seeing, but for me it was not quite as good as Batman Begins or The Dark Knight.

Let’s start with The Dark Knight Rises. It picks up eight years after The Dark Knight. Batman has taken the blame for the murders committed by Harvey “Two Face” Dent and then disappeared from public view. Organized crime has been eliminated thanks to The Dent Act, a strict law that keeps the criminals behind bars. Thus, there is no need for the Batman. But the lie that has brought peace to Gotham is taking its toll on both Commissioner Gordon and Bruce Wayne, who has become a hobbled recluse in Wayne Manor.  Two things stir Wayne out of retirement, a fascinating and beautiful cat burglar named Selina Kyle and a hulking, masked terrorist called Bane who wreaks havoc on Gotham.

I’ll save the detailed movie review for the professional critics and I’ll just share my thoughts. The Dark Knight Rises is a great movie and a must see, especially in IMAX if you can. The action sequences are incredible, the cast is stellar and the last hour of this movie ranks among the best among the entire trilogy. Best of all, we get a very fitting and satisfying ending to this amazing trilogy. I was very curious as to how Catwoman would fit into the Nolan universe and I am happy to report that Anne Hathaway knocks it out of the park. I think she steals the movie… and not just because she looks amazing in the cat suit. She creates a complex and compelling character that owns every scene she is in. Tom Hardy is also great as Bane, and gives great performance despite the fact that a mask covers the bottom part of his face. However, while I enjoyed the movie and I love the trilogy, there were a few aspects about this film that have been gnawing at me and make me rank it as the “least best” of the series. Let’s look at the other two films first.

I simply loved Batman Begins. It tells the origin of the Batman legend as never before. I remember seeing it in the theater and being blown away by the character development. Bruce Wayne as a child, sharing moments with his father. Commissioner Gordon comforting young Bruce after his parents are killed. Then later, Bruce Wayne as an angry young man, ready to assassinate his parent’s murderer.  This kind of stuff has seldom been dealt with in a comic book movie, and never handled so skillfully. Then you have the ending note with the Joker card reveal, straight out of Batman: Year One. The theater exploded in cheers. Finally, someone got Batman right.

Then came The Dark Knight, my favorite of the trilogy. Holy cow. The Joker simply elevates that movie to another level for me. He is funny and terrifying at the same time and even when he is off screen, you are always thinking about him. I was one of the millions of people who was a bit leery of Heath Ledger when he was first cast in the role, but he proved us all wrong and created the best screen villain since Hannibal Lecter and Anton Chigurh. The Dark Knight seemed like a heist movie as much as a super hero flick. It was Heat with a cape.  The action was incredible and the interrogation scene between Batman and the Joker is one of my favorites of all time. Sure, like Batman Begins before it, you could nitpick on a few things that could have made the movie better, but there was no doubt that this was one of the best comic book movies of all times… if not the best.

 You can imagine my excitement when The Dark Knight Rises finally got here.  In a summer stocked with a lot of potentially awesome movies, this was the one I was most excited about… and that’s a crowded field, with movies like The Avengers, The Amazing Spiderman, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, Prometheus, Ted and The Hobbit.

In part two of this article, I will cover some specific things that I loved about the film and I’ll list some of my complaints as well. It will be full of spoilers, so I suggest seeing the movie before reading it. I'll post part two soon. I think I need to see the movie one more time first.

Read part two here.


Someone = the most awesomest person ever. Thanks Jean.