Archive for the ‘The Dark Knight’ Category

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The Dark Knight Streaming

Mardi, juin 8th, 2010
The Dark Knight Streaming. The Dark Knight Streaming.

Movie Title: The Dark Knight
Average customer review:

The Dark Knight is available for streaming or downloading.

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What has been said about the Unlit Knight cannot be elaborated on - so I won’t. The film is muscling its draw into my #1 accepted amusing movie adaptation of all time.

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The reason for my review is in hopes of saving you some money. This double disc Special Edition doesn’t mutter the heed you pay for it. There isn’t even deleted scenes!!! I would keep your very hard earned dollars and capture the single disc version and wait for the inevitable ULTIMATE re-release that will near later on down the road.

But nonetheless, a huge film - you will not be dissapointed; I unprejudiced wish the studio would have given a better Special Edition release than what we have here. So luxuriate in!

Christopher Nolan has a vision. And whether you agree with it or not, he undeniably completes it in “The Sunless Knight”–a vicious, appealing, overwhelming, luminous event- film that re-defines ‘comic-book-flicks’. In Nolan’s grim, dark-depiction of Gotham-City (the crime-ridden hell protected by legendary superhero Batman), the director strives to obtain everything accurate (something he began in the well-received “Batman Begins”) . He makes it plausible, possible. And yet there’s more to it: fair as ‘Begins’ was a dissection of chronicle, the nature of symbols and heroes, ‘Knight’ is the escalation of that idea. It’s a biblical- confrontation of ‘good-and-evil’, yet as ‘good-and-evil’ really exist: a conflict of ideals, something that can’t be purely-defined but that is relative to a viewpoint. In Nolan’s world, the line of villainy and heroism isn’t crossed… it’s non-existent. The bad-guys don’t peer themselves as bad-guys, and as such something so unnervingly-real comes across it might hover past some people’s minds (no insult to anybody, it’s honest current that people don’t witness deep into ‘popcorn-flicks’) : the battle is a complete ambiguity.

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The film runs at nearly 2.5-hours, yet never ceases to lose interest or momentum. It doesn’t kill a scene or moment; every event is utilized and well-known. ‘The Shadowy Knight’ tells a fable worth telling and it takes the ample amount of time to voice it. Action-sequences are frantic, old-school, eye-grabbing stunts (vastly obliging to ‘Begins’) and in their chaotic intensity we inspect that they wait on purpose to the myth, yet more arresting are not played for pure entertainment-value: we are meant to perceive, disquieted, simply hoping that the outcome will go the hero’s procedure. Attention is never lost because we are immersed in a breathtaking, almost completely-unpredictable narrative (it packs many a shock), that makes us believe and more importantly gains our emotional-investment. We advance to care for the characters, because they are believable, developed, and personified fully.

Everyone has great-chemistry together. Maggie Gyllenhal is a more traditional Rachel Dawes than Katie Holmes. Morgan Freeman provides his authoritative presence to the role of bad- gadget-inventor/Wayne-Enterprise CEO Lucius Fox, and under anyone else’s portrayal, the share would be less-memorable. Gary Oldman underplays his world-wearied lawman with such honest-nobility, you never feel for a second any of its forced-acting. The irreplaceable Michael Caine makes a gentle, reassuring, father-like presence as Alfred, and the movie would surely fail without his strong-presence and interjected-moments of light-humor.

And while everyone (rightfully) pours the praise unto Bale and Ledger, I contemplate most are glancing-over Knight’s breakout-performance. As Harvey Dent, Aaron Eckhart does more than contain himself in the company of such a renowned-cast. He makes his presence known, whether he’s playing on the easy-going charisma of Gotham’s ‘White-Knight’ or the broken and damaged, twisted-soul of Two-Face. He achieves a full-impact with the tragedy that comes unto his character, and so closely connects with Dent, that he makes his hurt tangible for us: we sympathize even as we become haunted. He captures both facets of each personality flawlessly.

Now, some people cite that ‘Knight’ has a potential fatal-flaw in the supposedly wooden- acting of Christian Bale. Admittedly, his development is not as expansive as in ‘Begins’ (yet that film gave us such a worthy psychoanalysis of Wayne, we hardly need more), yet what Bale pulls off is admirable. Wayne is not an eccentric personality. He is a disillusioned man who can hardly get any joy in having no family, giving up his love-interest and spending his life fighting a battle that may never raze. He’s dismal and conflicted, and Bale plays up on that brooding-mood by making Wayne inspect as though a thousand dark-things were on his mind. He’s not wooden…he’s a humorless, unruffled individual. Even when Wayne is acting as a frivolous playboy for the public, every now and then Bale offers us a worthy recognize that reminds us its all a façade; that deep down, something more shocked irks him. Occasionally he offers a broken-smile when exchanging banter with Alfred, letting us know that beyond the dour depression of the Caped-Crusader lies a damaged human-being. It is only in the guise of a growling masked-man, that he can unleash his right, ferocious personality.

Finally, who could forget Heath Ledger. Now, when he was first-announced for the allotment, I was (along with many other people) asking myself: “Why? “. Mr. Ledger had proved with ‘Brokeback Mountain’ he could recount a potent performance. But he hadn’t before. It is only, after seeing this film, that I know the acknowledge to ‘why? ‘: I spy the significance of his loss.

When Heath appears in this movie, he is completely unrecognizable. His dispute is distinctly-altered; a near-whiny, pedophile-like tone that sends shivers down the spine. His face is completely splattered with makeup that renders him both freakishly-nightmarish and strangely-funny. And when you sight him, you don’t contemplate it’s him. In this, his final performance, Ledger proved he was a chameleon. His two iconic performances in this, and ‘Brokeback’, could not be more different. I am convinced he could have been anything in his career. He commits so intensely to character that the line of actor/portrayal dies. His every tick and gesture only further-enhances his character. Heath never hams the role up or goes for something cheap: he delivers a fully-immersed present of psychotic madness…or do we honest note him that to feel safer? The movie writes the character brilliantly; blending horrid truth into his every social-accusation, and making us seek information from why we laugh at his sick-jokes.

‘The Murky Knight’ has had an incredible-amount of hype running for it, from the get-go, mounting ever-higher, until Heath Ledger’s too-soon death. And the finished-product does more than exceed all of the near-impossible expectations placed on it. It becomes something remarkable richer than a super-hero-franchise-saga. Christopher Nolan has opened a modern door in cinema: allowing action-flicks to become more serious, apt of intelligence. He has transformed this into a part of artwork, chubby of beauty, apprehension, moral-conundrums. This movie has changed things…forever.

There’s no going abet. 10/10
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