Come anticipate "The Dark Knight Rises" with *BATSPOILERS*

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i mean, it's a stupid thing to be real though. it's better as what it was before we find out that it's real - an obvious fantasy tailored to the urgent wishes of a desperate woman, who could then be manipulated into doing or believing anything for it. but then bruce wayne just whips it out and is like, heh, looking for this? it's such an indulgent and pointless moment by nolan

WheatusVEVO (Hungry4Ass), Saturday, 4 August 2012 17:26 (eleven years ago) link

Maybe Bruce whips out a fake? I don't care either way, much like the top at the end of Inception.

Sick Mouthy (Scik Mouthy), Saturday, 4 August 2012 17:30 (eleven years ago) link

I liked the Bat, because Nolan got his own version of a Blade Runner spinner/flying car to play with. Dude's a fan of BR enough to have apparently screened it for the crew of his first batflick as a model for tone & vibe that he wanted.

Fiendish Doctor Wu (kingfish), Saturday, 4 August 2012 17:42 (eleven years ago) link

Really starting to hope for a four-hour cut of this thing, inexplicably.

ditto, though "less important than the matthew modine storyline" is kind of a frightening concept.

da croupier, Saturday, 4 August 2012 20:04 (eleven years ago) link

or maybe it's just the same scenes but slightly longer, more references to "fear" and "anger"

da croupier, Saturday, 4 August 2012 20:04 (eleven years ago) link

if the movie had concentrated more on selina as a character, it could have been a good macguffin. as things are, it was just another pointless distraction.

― contenderizer, Saturday, August 4, 2012 1:22 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark

i thought hathaway was pretty successful at hitting the basic necessities of catwoman: hot, sassy, vaguely mysterious, the latter quality kind of precluding the need for a well rounded character with clear motivations. bane having fuzzy motivations is frustrating because of who he's supposed to be (really smart, with traumatic backstory), but a lot of the classic batman villains have pretty arbitrary and ever changing motives by design.

some white dude (some dude), Saturday, 4 August 2012 20:12 (eleven years ago) link

I don't know anything about the comic-book source material, but as someone who grew up with the TV show, I did question--as much as I liked Hathaway--why she was working together with Batman. She was always a villain...are you allowed to just change the rules like that? It was like King Tut had suddenly switched sides in the middle of one of the old TV episodes.

clemenza, Saturday, 4 August 2012 20:25 (eleven years ago) link

isn't having conditional alliances and romantic entanglements with batman like THE defining trait of almost every incarnation of catwoman besides, like, the catsuit

contender's game (some dude), Saturday, 4 August 2012 20:52 (eleven years ago) link

The romantic element was always there, absolutely, but I don't remember her ever siding with and actively assisting Batman. Not in the TV show, anyway, and I don't think I remember Michelle Pfeiffer doing so, either--maybe I'm wrong. Anyway, I'd put Hathaway right there with Julie Newmar for best-looking Catwoman ever.

clemenza, Saturday, 4 August 2012 20:55 (eleven years ago) link

its usually like, in love while out of costume, rivals while in costume. this movie could def have used more of a romantic spark

Author ~ Coach ~ Goddess (s1ocki), Sunday, 5 August 2012 01:13 (eleven years ago) link

yeah it was a bit "i guess there's no bat/cat romance in this movie after all" until she planted that kiss on him in the last half hour

contender's game (some dude), Sunday, 5 August 2012 01:14 (eleven years ago) link

ya i was actually getting indignant about that - you put catwoman in the movie and dont have any romance with batman, what a waste! - until they did

Author ~ Coach ~ Goddess (s1ocki), Sunday, 5 August 2012 01:17 (eleven years ago) link

it kinda worked for me in the end, though, as fitting with her personality and her grudging, belated changes of heart in general. but it also underlined how opaque and almost asexual bruce wayne has been in all these movies.

contender's game (some dude), Sunday, 5 August 2012 01:20 (eleven years ago) link

but what about WHERE'S RACHEL

Nhex, Sunday, 5 August 2012 01:32 (eleven years ago) link

Tom Cruise and Peter Sarsgaard certainly get treated like super-virile woman-lovin' men because of their relationships with the actresses who played Rachel

contender's game (some dude), Sunday, 5 August 2012 01:46 (eleven years ago) link

I ain't heard no dirt on Sarsgaard

Nhex, Sunday, 5 August 2012 01:48 (eleven years ago) link

i remembering hearing a lot of jokes about his bromance with jake but maybe they were purely intended as jokes and not innuendo

contender's game (some dude), Sunday, 5 August 2012 01:55 (eleven years ago) link

http://livewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/entries/obama-anne-hathaway-was-best-part-of-batman

A few of us have said exactly the same thing on this thread, Anne, and we didn't even hit you up for a contribution.

clemenza, Tuesday, 7 August 2012 02:29 (eleven years ago) link

I do wish for a pre-ADR version of the fights, with Bats and Bane grunting incomprehensible noises at each other.

Stravinsky joins the Zulu nation (zero of the signified), Wednesday, 8 August 2012 06:45 (eleven years ago) link

I thought the Bruce/Selina romance was a longstanding tension in the comics at least. Read a bit of Batman Inc. a few weeks ago and they are an ongoing item in that. Thought i'd seen similar in other versions.
Not sure exactly how long cos I tend to get the comics way after they came out.

Thought there was at least an element of flirtation in thee tv series, though which way Batman swings in that might not be obvious or help the matter.

Stevolende, Wednesday, 8 August 2012 11:44 (eleven years ago) link

Interview with the costumer that talks about some cut scenes, including stuff explaining Bane:

http://m.gq.com/entertainment/tv/blogs/the-stream/2012/08/style-reconnaissance-the-dark-knight-risess-lindy-hemming-on-banes-sweet-jackets-alfreds-old-man-arm.html

Fiendish Doctor Wu (kingfish), Wednesday, 8 August 2012 12:57 (eleven years ago) link

Lindy Hemming: I don't think they know where the prison is, but it doesn't really matter...it could be in Northern India or it could be in Afghanistan or it could be in Northern Pakistan, but it's in the roof of the world.

Well this makes Bruce's ability to zip back to shutdown Gotham City without a dollar in his pocket even more impressive.

da croupier, Wednesday, 8 August 2012 13:02 (eleven years ago) link

http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/714f131866/bane-after-batman

easy joke but i love it

da croupier, Friday, 10 August 2012 20:11 (eleven years ago) link

Saw this yesterday - I enjoyed it! I wasn't expecting to. Didn't really expect to. Bane had seemed a poor choice villain for a concluding film (surely you want someone more iconic), and I found both previous films impressive but tiring, to slightly different degrees.

But Bane worked for me as a figure of super-competent and direct brutality, at least initially. I liked the quick destructive directness of his chaos. I even quite liked his voice, esp as an almost parodic emulation of Bale's absurd growl (one of the things that has irritated me most about the films). I agree with everyone who's said Bane's conversion to Miranda's butler was disastrous; she was roundly dreadful as character and actor, and his relegation to protective beefcake rather than a grotesque combination of mastermind and brutal thug was bizarre and idiotic. That combination of fearlessness and super-competent strength fit in well with him climbing out of the pit and the change makes a retrospective nonsense of the rather impressive 'You only adopted the darkness, I was born in it' speech. In all other respects this film was the equivalent of a juggernaut going through a long slo-mo crash, grinding its way through all obstacles, sparks flying out everywhere, until it comes to a halt just before the hospital or cliff edge - did Nolan really want a totally pointless twist that much? It almost mattered, but by that stage there were only a few more steps to get to the finale so it didn't have time for it really to take the wind out of the sails.

I don't really agree with Soto upthread where he says that Wayne/Batman/Bale is null. I think as much as can be expected for a comic book superhero, the humanising of Batman in a context of Wayne's specific attributes worked. In fact it worked far better than I expected, in that I didn't really mind that long sections of the film didn't have any Batman in. It seems reasonable to see BB as illustrative of the building up of Wayne's psyche, TDK as the analysis of that psyche, and TDKR as looking at Wayne himself and the death of Batman. As others have pointed out, everyone seems to know who Batman is, this is about Wayne/Batman coming together, not being kept apart, so much that like someone else upthread, I was surprised when they did the reveal to Gordon (not much of a detective are you?). But, yes, I liked Bale in this, the vulnerability of age suited him as both Wayne and Batman well. Can never quite stop hearing him going LA-DA-DA-DA-DA when I see him on screen, but you need a bit of light relief in a Nolan film.

I thought BB was quite boring, mainly because I don't buy Batman in the context of international conspiracy, esp not some ninja gentlemen's club - now Ras Gul was a shit villain - he always seems better as a fighter of exotically loopy gangsters rather than international mystical terrorists, and that's a bit of a problem here as well.

TDR was clearly much much better, but I was surprised at how angry I felt at the whole panopticon thing being used once and once only at the end. Surprised because I didn't think the politics wd offend me, but the 'it's ok in certain circumstances' combined with the generally pompous nature of Nolan's films, had me leaving the cinema very angry, and I didn't expect to be bothered by politics in a comic book film (shd I be worried that it was the pragmatism, not the crypto-fascist tyranny of violence that annoyed me? No, this is a superhero film, cftv is what it's all about).

But any politics here were so totally confused as to have no meaning, I think. I admit feeling slightly uneasy where you've got the police running into a civvy mob, where the police represent decent humanity, and the civvies represent yahoos. (There's another line isn't there? 'We've got 300 men down there', '3000 police men'. Because they are better than people.)

I'm not really that interested in plot holes (felt the same about the picking at Prometheus - admittedly a film so bad by the end that it deserved to have any threads that led you to its climax unraveled and held up to scorn). I don't mind because it doesn't really seem to me to be important that it's inexplicable how people get from one place to another. It's necessary to have Bale climbing out of an impossible pit, so he can confront his demons, discover Bane's weakness, and get back to Gotham to do something about it. I think films that try to make good these gaps are often laborious, tho in films dealing more in realistic scenarios it becomes more important. Nothing about the plot holes destroys the universe.

(There is one disastrous exception to this, so brutal that it offends decency, which is the Indiana Jones Crystal Skull movie, where, to take the most egregious of many examples, at one point Ford is desperately riding on a motorcycle beside a train which has his son in and without any rational conclusion to the scene it suddenly cuts to them sitting in a smalltown bar having a chat. At the very least in an action movie you need to take the action to a conclusion).

I'd generally no more complain about some of the logistics and motivations of the film than I would Wayne's butler Alfred being able to get the same table at a busy Florentine bar every year. What can destroy the universe are things that offend the poetry of the piece - here the Bane/Miranda thing being a huge example (sorry, it feels ugly to use the word 'poetry' in relation to something so monolithic and unrelenting). But I think generally Nolan gets it exactly right, which is why despite all the many annoyances and absurdities, the film works. I didn't like Inception (probably hadn't helped that I'd just read a book - The Arabian Nightmare - that dealt with the same subject much much better, and in fact is briefly referenced in the film). But for all the pompous seriousness that does so much to make his films laughable, I liked The Dark Knight Rises. There was one bit where it all became too much and I actually burst out laughing, which is where the statue is unveiled of Batman. I was trying to work out why I'd found it automatically so silly, and was reminded of the Wallace Stevens essay 'The Noble Rider and the Soul of Words', where he talks about Verocchio's statue of Bartolommeo Colleoni, the Venetian condottiero, (superhero/villain types of the age, rite?). I couldn't remember what he said, so I had a quick look after I got back:

What man on whose side the horseman fought could ever be anything but fearless, anything but indomitable? One feels the passion of rhetoric begin to stir and even to grow furious; and one thinks that, after all, the noble style, in whatever it creates, merely perpetuates the noble style. In this statue, the apposition between the imagination and reality is too favorable to the imagination.

I'd probably reverse that for the Batman statue - in a Hollywood film, about a children's comic book hero, as a symbol it was too favourable to reality - there was a high seriousness to it which was laughably absurd. And although that seriousness is what marks Nolan's Batman films, it's also what makes them rather silly, and sometimes a little dangerous (as with the panopticon). And I wonder as an aside, whether that seriousness allowed the genuine evil of the Colorado cinema shootings to take the form it did in the person it did.

But I liked it! I liked Catwoman, and Catwoman/Batman scenes, I liked Batman fighting in the snow, the massive destruction of Gotham, the airplane scene at the beginning, the Dickens, and I liked especially Alfred drinking Fernet.

And, fuck you all, i really liked the end bit where you saw Bale and Hathaway together - I was pleased for them, wanted to see it on the screen.

Fizzles, Sunday, 12 August 2012 09:44 (eleven years ago) link

That combination of fearlessness and super-competent strength fit in well with him climbing out of the pit and the change makes a retrospective nonsense of the rather impressive 'You only adopted the darkness, I was born in it' speech.

The climbing reminded me more of the third Indiana Jones film where its not about strength or agility but about a wishy-washy conception of faith and will to pull you through so in that sense he was born in, and lived in darkness of that impossible pit. I would be interested to see how Bane is transferred from the comic, and one more positive is that a comic book film has actually made me interested in reading the comic itself. I'd probably end up like one of those comic book fans you read about who totally hate these films tho'.

I think the slight twist falls in line with the feeling that this isn't the usual comic book film. Another example of that is Wayne/Batman almost always on the back foot and really almost always losing the war for long periods. In the prev film the Joker causes such mayhem and destruction with Batman only really 'winning' him in the end, and with the people's help (they don't push the trigger). Batman, in the last two films, really gives them a helping hand more than saving the day on his own, a very collaborational relationship.

Loved that it took itself so seriously but if I were to unpack that its again in opposition to the other comic book films and I'm not sure how long you can take that. I saw the re-boot of Spiderman last night and emo-ness was more laughable (I liked it very much though).

Thank you for not being bothered by plot holes.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 12 August 2012 12:05 (eleven years ago) link

there aren't really any good comics with Bane in them

Number None, Sunday, 12 August 2012 12:10 (eleven years ago) link

good post fizzles

Author ~ Coach ~ Goddess (s1ocki), Sunday, 12 August 2012 14:46 (eleven years ago) link

^^^

contenderizer, Sunday, 12 August 2012 16:32 (eleven years ago) link

this movie was pretty terrible, i was pretty surprised at how shitty it was

tauheed & cambria (J0rdan S.), Sunday, 12 August 2012 16:36 (eleven years ago) link

Fizzles’ post is great!

i saw this! my basic take is that bane and catwoman gave the movie some life but otherwise it was kind of perfunctory and joyless. it wasn’t unenjoyable but it def had more problems than the first two.

i had in my head the line from whichever newyorker bro, that movie didn’t have any unplanned or unaccountable gesture or movement, but i think i found one: a captured bat-tank driving the snowy streets, and the fat front wheels are throwing up a steady spray of snow clumps onto the front armor under the windshield. i was like huh, that’s kind of a design flaw for the winter, isn’t it?

it feels overplotted but still full of holes. things are overexplained but still not coherent or comprehensible within their own genre/conventional limits. too many people tell their life stories at odd, implausible moments. it labors to demonstrate the wrong things.

i got increasingly annoyed with this stuff. certain people seemed to figure out who batman/wayne was on no evidence, leaving those still in the dark looking totally blind and making the secret dramatically meaningless.

the mechanism of the nuclear bomb... that’s going off on an inexorable timer... but has its own trigger... which may be held by ‘anybody’... but that’s a lie... it’s the secret master of the conspiracy who has it... this stuff isn’t layered like a mystery, it just feels made-up in the third act, like the script was never read end-to-end.

sooo, the nuclear physicist is ALSO a crack market quant hacker dude? or were those different guys? and the final underground fight chamber of bane’s HQ is ALSO right below wayne’s arms garage? so, his joints are permanently wrecked and need mechanical assistance early in the movie, but a little prison workout is enough later on? he still knows how to get out of central asia and into occupied gotham in a jiffy? you can have maybe one of these clanking conveniences in a story, this thing just piles them up. i’m repeating everybody else at this point.

i did enjoy bane’s cod-jacobin declamations and appreciated hardy being nuts enough to just sell it totally. i legit-lol'd at some of it but i can't remember what now. the takeover setpieces and lurid terror-gangsta sans-culottes business were the liveliest moviemaking and the funniest for their unhinged black tory venom

goole, Monday, 13 August 2012 18:54 (eleven years ago) link

oh and the fights are bad. fighting should reveal character and story. you can't see what is different between the first and second times bat and bane fight. you can't see batman thinking on his feet to get around bane's advantages. i guess going for the mask is supposed to be that, but it is presented almost accidentally.

goole, Monday, 13 August 2012 18:56 (eleven years ago) link

and the final underground fight chamber of bane’s HQ is ALSO right below wayne’s arms garage?

They make a big thing of their finding his garage, no? They steal all his stuff (except the Bat) and fight the police with it.

Alba, Monday, 13 August 2012 20:26 (eleven years ago) link

not fair

Author ~ Coach ~ Goddess (s1ocki), Monday, 13 August 2012 20:27 (eleven years ago) link

They make a big thing of their finding his garage, no?

i must have missed this. how did they find it, exactly? and why does batman's first fight with him happen right at that spot?

goole, Monday, 13 August 2012 20:31 (eleven years ago) link

i guess it must be that, since catwoman was in on it, bane planned to have the big confrontation happen right there?

still man, idk, that's the kind of thing your great detective would have figured out.

goole, Monday, 13 August 2012 20:34 (eleven years ago) link

Sorry, not really his garage – it's Lucius's department of Wayne Enterprises, hence their being plenty of Batmobiles to go around. Anyway, the fight happens there because he gets lured there by Bane. I can't remember if it's explained how Bane works out the department's location. Anyway, Bane's men blast through the ceiling of the sewer to it right after Bane and Batman have had their scrap, I think.

Alba, Monday, 13 August 2012 20:46 (eleven years ago) link

I can't remember if it's explained how Bane works out the department's location.

right, this is the element of coincidence i'm moaning about!

goole, Monday, 13 August 2012 20:49 (eleven years ago) link

I don't think it was supposed to be coincidence. They were deliberately blasting to get to it, as I understood it.

Alba, Monday, 13 August 2012 21:08 (eleven years ago) link

Yeah, he even revels in it to Brokeback Batman. Says something like "Aren't you interested in where we've been digging?" then presses the fuse button and it turns up in WayneTech. Totally deliberate.

passive-aggressive display name (aldo), Monday, 13 August 2012 21:10 (eleven years ago) link

oh ha, that line must be one of the 35% of bane's i couldn't understand

goole, Monday, 13 August 2012 21:15 (eleven years ago) link

May as well go through your other things (not because you don't have a point with them)

certain people seemed to figure out who batman/wayne was on no evidence

Well, Blake explains how he worked it out. Bane, it's not made explicit how he did, but it's not a throwaway thing. It's like "I'm the baddy and I know your secret mwah ha ha". I guess if you want to think about it, he was with the League of Shadows and they know stuff. Actually, didn't Ra's Al Ghul and he cronies find out his identity in Batman Begins? So it's "around" in those circles. And Catwoman finds out when she hears Bane blurt it out.

the mechanism of the nuclear bomb... that’s going off on an inexorable timer... but has its own trigger... which may be held by ‘anybody’... but that’s a lie... it’s the secret master of the conspiracy who has it..

Not sure if you're saying this is a plot hole, or you just think it's silly. It all makes sense I think: the reactor it will go off anyway because its core has been removed (see above for arguments about whether such an event could really be timed to the second), which Bane didn't tell Gotham. There's also a detonator, which Bane claims is in the hands of a random member of the city's population, but as suspected, that's a lie.

sooo, the nuclear physicist is ALSO a crack market quant hacker dude? or were those different guys?

Missed this if so. I thought the main thing there was just to have Bruce Wayne's fingerprints to authorise the trades?

so, his joints are permanently wrecked and need mechanical assistance early in the movie, but a little prison workout is enough later on?

I guess this just about falls within movie logic for me – yeah, he's all worn out at the start but he finds new sense of purpose and through sheer FORCE OF WILL he gets fighting fit again. The cartilage wear might just make movement painful rather than impossible.

he still knows how to get out of central asia and into occupied gotham in a jiffy?

I can't remember how much of a jiffy the timeline requires this to be.

Alba, Monday, 13 August 2012 21:43 (eleven years ago) link

I think it's possible to make the bomb make sense, but goole's right that it's needlessly complicated, too many fakeouts and also just too much setup necessary to get it going, too much dialogue filling you in on what Wayne's relationship is to this thing, why it was never finished before, how he knows Miranda Tate - - seems like the movie could have been a LOT tighter if they'd find a way to not do all that crap.

Doctor Casino, Monday, 13 August 2012 21:45 (eleven years ago) link

Yes, I'd agree with that. I'd rather the whole thing had used something other than a ticking bomb, full stop, really.

Alba, Monday, 13 August 2012 21:47 (eleven years ago) link

But it didn't matter to me at the time.

Alba, Monday, 13 August 2012 21:48 (eleven years ago) link

oh and the fights are bad. fighting should reveal character and story. you can't see what is different between the first and second times bat and bane fight. you can't see batman thinking on his feet to get around bane's advantages. i guess going for the mask is supposed to be that, but it is presented almost accidentally.

― goole, Monday, August 13, 2012 2:56 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark

otm

WheatusVEVO (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 13 August 2012 22:31 (eleven years ago) link

Bane knows where the secret weapons stash is because investor lady/Talia al ghul has access as trusted ally/pres of company to that info and she is his sugar mommy or whatever.

O_o-O_O-o_O (jjjusten), Monday, 13 August 2012 22:41 (eleven years ago) link

you'd think Batman would be smart enough to target Bane's mask first time around anyway

Number None, Monday, 13 August 2012 22:43 (eleven years ago) link

Bane knows where the secret weapons stash is because investor lady/Talia al ghul has access as trusted ally/pres of company to that info

but doesn't morgan freeman say that all that stuff is off the books and hush-hush? hence it not being nabbed by the bailiffs when wayne enterprises goes tits up.

kmfdotm (ledge), Monday, 13 August 2012 22:45 (eleven years ago) link

you'd think Batman would be smart enough to target Bane's mask first time around anyway

mask respect mask

40oz of tears (Jordan), Monday, 13 August 2012 22:57 (eleven years ago) link

jesus christ people, Bane had yeeeears to track down the secrets of wayne enterprises. as it was, fox flat-out says they consolidated stuff from eight other locations and put them all in the vault. do you think he shipped them all himself, and moved them down there in the dead of night with no one watching?

your native bacon (mh), Monday, 13 August 2012 22:58 (eleven years ago) link


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