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The Dark Knight Rises - seen thread *SPOILERS WITHIN* See Mod Warning in first post

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,053 ✭✭✭homerun_homer


    Erm, one assumes that since The Joker lived at the end of TDK and since The Scarecrow made a comeback after being freed from prison, that The Joker may have showed up? In fact, it is not too much to think that perhaps the third film would have been written very differently had Ledger not died. Who knows, but that's what I was referring to. I never said I wanted to see this, to answer your sort of question/shout. In fact, I would have rathered he not come back, so the rest of your post is a waste. My point was that, without a Ledger-esque performance, the third was never going to reach those heights. That is all. Still, to address your subsequent text, I think the third was like a half-baked attempt at mixing the first (fall from grace, and comeback) and the second (a seemingly unstoppable, ruthless baddie). So yeah, it was a rehash.

    A way of looking at it is that Arkham asylum wasn't on the main island of Gotham. In Begins they shut off access to it by raising the bridge and Raas used the train to get the machine to the main part of gotham in an attempt to destroy the city. Therefore for DKR you would believe Joker is in Arkham and not affected by Banes plans and breaking prisoners out.

    As for Crane, he may have been put in regluar jail after being caught in DKR or maybe since he was mainly a drug dealer got out in the meantime. He wasn't privy to Raas' plans to destroy Gotham, he believed he would hold it to ransom.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    Re: the absence of the Joker

    This film would have gained nothing by his presence IMO. He would only have been a distraction. The Batman/Joker dynamic is totally played out in TDK. Part of what I loved about Nolan's whole game theory take on it was that ultimately it is a battle without end. Neither Batman or Joker can win, because as the Joker says at the end "this is what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object". What we see at the end of TDK is equilibrium. Batman can't beat the Joker, all he can do is lock him up and hope he never gets out. For this reason I don't think the Joker would have been a suitable foe for the third film.

    And even though the Joker is never mentioned in TDKR, I still feel like the events of TDK hang like a shadow over much of the film. Rachel's death, the lie about Harvey, the 8 years of peace based on that lie, Bruce's psychological state, it's all largely down to the Joker. Even the social upheaval caused by Bane upon revealing the truth by Harvey seems to have been predicted by the Joker at the end of TDK. So the Joker doesn't need mentioning. Everyone remembers him and what he did.

    Zactly, I love the final scene between Bats and The Joker in TDK "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..." It sums up their relationship brilliantly. Its done really well in Arkham City as well when (game spoiler for anyone who's not played it yet)
    Joker is about to die and Batman tells him that "Even after all you've done, I still would have saved you"
    Its a genuine pity that Ledger's death meant we'd never get to see that incarnation of that superb character again.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,207 ✭✭✭longhalloween


    How did Bruce not know who Bane was? I mean he trained with the League of Shadows for years, Ra's Al Ghul was his mentor and no one told him about either Bane or Talia?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭phil1nj


    Erm, one assumes that since The Joker lived at the end of TDK and since The Scarecrow made a comeback after being freed from prison, that The Joker may have showed up? .

    There's your problem.
    In fact, it is not too much to think that perhaps the third film would have been written very differently had Ledger not died. Who knows, but that's what I was referring to. .

    You're right no-one will ever know considering what happened. But as I 've said before on this thread most of the critics of TDKR can't help but bring up teh Joker when it comes to criticisng the choice of villains in this movie (you even did it in a round about way yourself). The Scarecrows cameo makes a lot more sense due to the fact that he was working for the LOS in BB and was seen at the start of TDK as a low level drug dealer.
    I never said I wanted to see this, to answer your sort of question/shout. .

    Who's shouting?
    In fact, I would have rathered he not come back, so the rest of your post is a waste. My point was that, without a Ledger-esque performance, the third was never going to reach those heights. That is all. Still, to address your subsequent text, I think the third was like a half-baked attempt at mixing the first (fall from grace, and comeback) and the second (a seemingly unstoppable, ruthless baddie). So yeah, it was a rehash.

    I disagree about your interpretation of BBs by the way (where exactly was the fall from grace?). Bruce Wayne suffers an indiscribeable tradgedy and decides to wander the earth to try and understadn crime/evil as part of a bigger plan (takes almost an hour for him to start to become Batman). His past then comes back to bite him on the arse, cue subsequent mayhem and distruction and victory and on to the next story.

    Sorry, it looks to me like despite what you said, you had higher expectations of TDKR and were disappointed with the end result, fair enough. Like I said each to their own but I disagree with your opinion but I'm not going to tell you you're wrong either.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    How did Bruce not know who Bane was? I mean he trained with the League of Shadows for years, Ra's Al Ghul was his mentor and no one told him about either Bane or Talia?

    Ah now, the league probably has loads of members, Ra's does say he had a wife, his "one great love" or something, just because he does't say "I had a wife, oh and kid who is living in prison, and there's this guy who took a shine to her and he's now a mask wearing badass" you can't retcon everything just because they didn't write that into Begins knowing this is where the story would go, I'd imagine Nolan only even went with Bane after Ledger's death meant they couldnt have the Joker back in any capacity, I don't think he was done with the character.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,053 ✭✭✭homerun_homer


    How did Bruce not know who Bane was? I mean he trained with the League of Shadows for years, Ra's Al Ghul was his mentor and no one told him about either Bane or Talia?

    Years? It was never established in the movie that he was with the League of Shadows for years. He was absent from Gotham and from any contact with anyone for years while doing his uncovering the minds of the criminal underworld thing, but doesn't mean he was training for years.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,822 ✭✭✭Chazz Michael Michaels


    phil1nj wrote: »
    Erm, one assumes that since The Joker lived at the end of TDK and since The Scarecrow made a comeback after being freed from prison, that The Joker may have showed up? .

    There's your problem.
    In fact, it is not too much to think that perhaps the third film would have been written very differently had Ledger not died. Who knows, but that's what I was referring to. .

    You're right no-one will ever know considering what happened. But as I 've said before on this thread most of the critics of TDKR can't help but bring up teh Joker when it comes to criticisng the choice of villains in this movie (you even did it in a round about way yourself). The Scarecrows cameo makes a lot more sense due to the fact that he was working for the LOS in BB and was seen at the start of TDK as a low level drug dealer.
    I never said I wanted to see this, to answer your sort of question/shout. .

    Who's shouting?
    In fact, I would have rathered he not come back, so the rest of your post is a waste. My point was that, without a Ledger-esque performance, the third was never going to reach those heights. That is all. Still, to address your subsequent text, I think the third was like a half-baked attempt at mixing the first (fall from grace, and comeback) and the second (a seemingly unstoppable, ruthless baddie). So yeah, it was a rehash.

    I disagree about your interpretation of BBs by the way (where exactly was the fall from grace?). Bruce Wayne suffers an indiscribeable tradgedy and decides to wander the earth to try and understadn crime/evil as part of a bigger plan (takes almost an hour for him to start to become Batman). His past then comes back to bite him on the arse, cue subsequent mayhem and distruction and victory and on to the next story.

    Sorry, it looks to me like despite what you said, you had higher expectations of TDKR and were disappointed with the end result, fair enough. Like I said each to their own but I disagree with your opinion but I'm not going to tell you you're wrong either.

    Erm, he starts BB (chronologically) as a privledged child and at his lowest point ends up scrambling around the dirt in a Chinese prison. Yeah, not a fall from grace, he was 'finding himself'. Only when Ras found him, did BW 'find himself' and he began his (spiritual) climb upwards.

    TDKR, another fall, another prison, another comeback. Lazy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,905 ✭✭✭✭Handsome Bob


    Erm, he starts BB (chronologically) as a privledged child and at his lowest point ends up scrambling around the dirt in a Chinese prison. Yeah, not a fall from grace, he was 'finding himself'. Only when Ras found him, did BW 'find himself' and he began his (spiritual) climb upwards.

    TDKR, another fall, another prison, another comeback. Lazy.

    Bruce never really found himself in BB, he found a way to challenge his pain and resources for good, but never actually learned how to effectively deal with his pain and grief and to move on.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Entertainment Moderators Posts: 31,418 CMod ✭✭✭✭johnny_ultimate


    faceman wrote: »
    But these points are just touching the surface. In the previous 2 films, there was an underlying theme with the movies. This was noticeably absent from this film and the film suffered as a result. Instead we got too much of trying to cram everything in and fit the story around it which is why the ending suffered as a result. If you are asked to sum up in a line or a word what this film is about, its difficult to do. Batman evolved in each film bar this one. The first film Wayne learns who he is, who Batman is and comes to terms with it. The second film, he learns his limitations and comes to grip with chaos and the lack of control. This time round, there is no development.

    Sorry, I can't agree with that comment at all. There's a crystal clear thematic and character arc in this film - in fact, I'd say it's the single most interesting, brilliant thing about it. It's a direct continuation of TDK for Wayne - forced to don the bat suit one more time for the greater good. After eight years, Batman is finally the hero Gotham needs right now (as explicitly alluded to by Gordon at the conclusion of the last film). And he also manages to find a way to have the icon continue to exist, even in his retirement - and that whole plan, revealed in the final minutes is one that allows to viewer to reinterpret Wayne's motivations and actions throughout - to get 'Robin' to take up the mantle of caped crusader is a beautiful illustrator of Wayne's intelligence.

    As for summing up the themes and narrative trajectory in one word? Well, it's right there at the end of the title :)

    As a film about Bruce Wayne and Batman, I can only firmly disagree with the suggestion that this was a failure.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 716 ✭✭✭phil1nj


    Erm, he starts BB (chronologically) as a privledged child and at his lowest point ends up scrambling around the dirt in a Chinese prison. Yeah, not a fall from grace, he was 'finding himself'. Only when Ras found him, did BW 'find himself' and he began his (spiritual) climb upwards.

    TDKR, another fall, another prison, another comeback. Lazy.

    Jesus wept, we could do this all day. He was in prison by choice in BB begins (wanting to understand the minds of criminals and all that hokem). He came to the attention of the LOS and then started to become the Batman with his newly acquired skills.

    TDKR, Bane puts him in prison, broken and with a direct line to the suffering of Gotham's citizens. What was he suppossed to do, kill him (no movie there), keep him in a box in Gotham somewhere (boring) or put him in the worst (well as bad as a 12A movie would let Chris Nolan show) prison which was described as hell on earth with a damaged back and a broken spirit (TDKR)?

    Like I said, you're coming across as someone who saw a bad movie (why you think it's a bad movie has been well documented) but maybe it's because your expectations were a tad too high after TDK. That is all.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,014 ✭✭✭✭jaykhunter


    Hey did Bane/Talia mention why the League of Shadows are back to burn Gotham to the ground? Just wondering since Gotham seemed to be doing pretty well for itself since the end of TDK.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 51,054 ✭✭✭✭Professey Chin


    jaykhunter wrote: »
    Hey did Bane/Talia mention why the League of Shadows are back to burn Gotham to the ground? Just wondering since Gotham seemed to be doing pretty well for itself since the end of TDK.

    Because its all built on lies & corruption but the balance of power still stayed with all the wealthy


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,115 ✭✭✭✭Nervous Wreck


    jaykhunter wrote: »
    Hey did Bane/Talia mention why the League of Shadows are back to burn Gotham to the ground? Just wondering since Gotham seemed to be doing pretty well for itself since the end of TDK.

    Cos Gotham had achieved 8 years of peace that were based on a lie.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,416 ✭✭✭Jimmy Iovine


    Kiith wrote: »
    You'd need 3 thread.

    1. Reasonable - "I saw it and want to discuss it."
    2. Fanboy - "It was brilliant, everyone else is wrong."
    3. Wannabe film critic - "Why didnt they get on their stomach and spread their weight out on the ice to survive..."

    I was actually thinking that during the film. Maybe I should become a film critic now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,093 ✭✭✭conorhal


    jaykhunter wrote: »
    It seems for every person "nit-picking" in the thread there's one person with a pot on their head, clanging it saying "no! no! no! no! it was absolutely perfect! shut up shut up shut up"

    To deny some people that there are some flaws, or things people didn't think was great, is ridiculous.

    I refer to it as ‘Phantom Menace Psychosis’ , there are some poor bastards that have spent years in therapy, just to get to a place where they can admit to themselves that even the Ewoks sh1t all over Jar-Jar…


    I thought TDKR was pretty disappointing.
    The film felt like Nolan had gotten bored by number 3 and just wanted to end it expediently.
    The writing was lazy (action, exposition, action, exposition), the plot awful (nuke with a big digital count-down) and the action uninspired (all a bit Biff! Bam! Wallop!).
    It lacked any real emotional core, paid some pedestrian lip services to greater themes that it left unexplored and felt like there were at least a dozen scenes that Nolan either cut or just couldn’t be bothered films and said instead, ‘ah we’ll just have Alfred give another expositionary speech to join up the dots’.
    It wasn’t terrible, it wasn’t great, it was just pretty ‘meh’ and I found my attention wandering.. a lot.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,014 ✭✭✭✭jaykhunter


    Because its all built on lies & corruption but the balance of power still stayed with all the wealthy

    Cheers to both of u! And did they come back when Gotham was about to implode on itself (without their help) or were they just a bit cheesed off Gotham has managed to hold itself together even if it was hollow?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 301 ✭✭Ellian


    I loved the film but one thing that disappointed me - especially given the title was that I never got a moment in it, the hero moment that makes my heart leapt like salmon. Best example I can give is in Batman Begins where the bridges have been lifted, Gordon is on the radio and person on the other end says something like "no-one is coming" and then the Tumbler comes roaring up, and leaps the chasm leaving everyone standing around in awe. The closest the film came to was Batman's reappearance, but overall I thought that was an opportunity wasted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 51,054 ✭✭✭✭Professey Chin


    jaykhunter wrote: »
    Cheers to both of u! And did they come back when Gotham was about to implode on itself (without their help) or were they just a bit cheesed off Gotham has managed to hold itself together even if it was hollow?

    It was their influence that seemed to be making gotham start to implode from what I could see. Id imagine they were pissed off though since they had tried to bring it down twice already without success


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 51,054 ✭✭✭✭Professey Chin


    Ellian wrote: »
    I loved the film but one thing that disappointed me - especially given the title was that I never got a moment in it, the hero moment that makes my heart leapt like salmon. Best example I can give is in Batman Begins where the bridges have been lifted, Gordon is on the radio and person on the other end says something like "no-one is coming" and then the Tumbler comes roaring up, and leaps the chasm leaving everyone standing around in awe. The closest the film came to was Batman's reappearance, but overall I thought that was an opportunity wasted.

    I thought the tunnel scene & the bat symbol on the bridge worked pretty well. I would agree for the most part though. (Im a sucker for those kinda entrances)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,734 ✭✭✭Newaglish


    Cos Gotham had achieved 8 years of peace that were based on a lie.

    I thought Bane didn't know that until he read Commisioner Gordon's letter?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 51,054 ✭✭✭✭Professey Chin


    Newaglish wrote: »
    I thought Bane didn't know that until he read Commisioner Gordon's letter?

    I think they knew something wasnt right about it(knowing batmans sense of justice didnt match up with what he took the blame for) but having Gordons own words would be much more effective then making claims without backup


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    It was their influence that seemed to be making gotham start to implode from what I could see. Id imagine they were pissed off though since they had tried to bring it down twice already without success

    and especially since the whole reason for Ra's wanting to take down Gotham is that its corrupt and full of scum, now its no longer that thanks to Batman sooo, why the hating on Gotham? Talia wanting to kill Batman to avenger her dad, fine with that, but why take down a city for no reason? if its just to annoy Batman then that's pretty fcuking elaborate. thats why the Talia reveal is a contradiction of sorts, if Bane wanted to destroy Batman by ruining Gotham then thats one thing, but she's fulfilling her fathers plan which is now rendered pointless because Gotham is safe and no longer run by organised crime.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,811 ✭✭✭CerebralCortex


    I was thrilled by Batman's desperate fight against Bane, pretty much made the movie for me or how he brazenly avoids the cops at his first reappearance.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,798 ✭✭✭✭hatrickpatrick


    I was thinking about the ice thing as well, but actually weren't they given something like 8 minutes to get across? Crawling on your stomach would have taken a lot longer than that, and if I'm right about the 8 minutes thing they were going to be shot if they hadn't made it by the end of the time limit.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,822 ✭✭✭Chazz Michael Michaels


    Aisia wept, this thread is eating my day away, so I'm out. In summary:

    BB: Fall, rise, redemption - awesome
    TDKR: Fall, rise, redemption - yawn

    I will leave the fanboys to it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 51,054 ✭✭✭✭Professey Chin


    krudler wrote: »
    and especially since the whole reason for Ra's wanting to take down Gotham is that its corrupt and full of scum, now its no longer that thanks to Batman sooo, why the hating on Gotham? Talia wanting to kill Batman to avenger her dad, fine with that, but why take down a city for no reason? if its just to annoy Batman then that's pretty fcuking elaborate. thats why the Talia reveal is a contradiction of sorts, if Bane wanted to destroy Batman by ruining Gotham then thats one thing, but she's fulfilling her fathers plan which is now rendered pointless because Gotham is safe and no longer run by organised crime.

    Because its still full of scum to them. All powerful CEOs and politicians controlling so much while people more just live poor.
    It was always going to have Occupy Wall Street echos and its why the rich were put on trial when they took control


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 818 ✭✭✭Triangla


    jaykhunter wrote: »
    Hey did Bane/Talia mention why the League of Shadows are back to burn Gotham to the ground? Just wondering since Gotham seemed to be doing pretty well for itself since the end of TDK.

    I thought this was Talia just seeking revenge against the person who killed her father.

    It wasn't a League of Shadows operation as such.

    It was a pity there were no fights in the prison. It would have been good to see BW built himself up and have to fight to even climb the wall.

    The amount of time & money spent on the film I expected a lot more. I think they crammed two films into one for some reason. I would liked to have seen Bane wreaking havoc in the city running Batman ragged and end with him seemingly broken and then had the 'rises' aspect in a seperate film.

    Along the lines of the KnightSaga comic book series.

    It wasn't bad though, the only part I thought was silly was when Batman let himself be led into a trap by Selina. That was just really out of character, deathwish or not.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    Because its still full of scum to them. All powerful CEOs and politicians controlling so much while people more just live poor.
    It was always going to have Occupy Wall Street echos and its why the rich were put on trial when they took control

    Good point,that was something that they could have gone into more, what was happening the regular citizens of Gotham, we see the rich being put on trial, the prisoners let out, but everyone else seems left to their own devices, long as you weren't a cop or rich you were ok to Bane's army?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,798 ✭✭✭✭hatrickpatrick


    krudler wrote: »
    and especially since the whole reason for Ra's wanting to take down Gotham is that its corrupt and full of scum, now its no longer that thanks to Batman sooo, why the hating on Gotham? Talia wanting to kill Batman to avenger her dad, fine with that, but why take down a city for no reason? if its just to annoy Batman then that's pretty fcuking elaborate. thats why the Talia reveal is a contradiction of sorts, if Bane wanted to destroy Batman by ruining Gotham then thats one thing, but she's fulfilling her fathers plan which is now rendered pointless because Gotham is safe and no longer run by organised crime.

    Could be that she just wants to see Gotham destroyed because her father wanted to see it destroyed, without caring about why. He wanted it done, she will do it to fulfill his wishes, and destroying batman is just icing on the cake.

    I quite enjoyed Bane's initial demeanor, particularly right after the Stadium scene. He tried to sound like such a friendly fella, "And do you ACCEPT this man's resignation?!" "The city is yours! Do as you please!" It sort of reminded me of Voldemort in the Deathly Hallows, when
    Neville stands up to him and he's all sweet, like "Sure why don't you just join me, we could use lads like you?"

    Found that fairly amusing, also how slick he was at the beginning, "Or perhaps he's wondering why someone would shoot a man... BEFORE throwing him out of a plane?" It's like "You guys are fools, I've got this under control"


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,798 ✭✭✭✭hatrickpatrick


    One thing I was slightly disappointed by was Harvey Dent's legacy. I thought more of the movie would be given over to Batman being viewed as a criminal and having to fight evil while being hated by pretty much everyone in the city.
    It was always going to be revealed that Dent's death was a lie, but I was hoping Batman would have to deal with that for a bit longer before the truth came out. That scene where he's chasing the Stock Market invaders while the cops are more interested in taking him down is what I'm talking about, but I was expecting more of that.


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