Film and TV
The Dark Knight
W ITH a record-breaking
opening weekend in
America tucked under its
utility
batbelt,
Christopher
Nolan's dark,
brooding sequel
swoops onto
these shores
amidst a storm
of hype and
feverish anticipation.
No film
could live up to
such expectations
but The
Dark Knight
soars
tantalisingly close, probing the inner
demons of Gotham's favourite crimefighter
as he duels with his most
famous adversary.
The death of Heath Ledger from an
accidental overdose of prescription
medication casts a long shadow over
Nolan's gloomy picture, adding a tragic
dimension to The Joker.
Ledger's powerhouse portrayal of the
demented clown with an unquenchable
thirst for anarchy is being tipped for an
Oscar.
Certainly, it's a dazzling performance;
a far cry from Jack Nicholson's camp
trickster in Tim Burton's Batman .
However, he is not the film's most
intriguing or affecting villain: that honour
belongs to Aaron Eckhart as the fatally
flawed district attorney Harvey Dent,
whose metamorphosis into
vengeful Two-Face is riveting.
Nolan builds on the solid
framework of Batman
Begins to deliver even
more eye-popping action
sequences including a
high-speed chase on the
Bat-Pod through Gotham,
which reaches a crescendo
with an 18-wheeler
flipping end over end.
The director shot many of these
set pieces with IMAX cameras - a
first for a major feature film.
On the gargantuan canvas of
these special cinemas, The Dark
Knight leaves you breathless.
Having vanquished The
Scarecrow (Murphy), millionaire
Bruce Wayne (Bale) continues
his crusade against crime aided
by Lieutenant Jim Gordon
(Oldman) and District Attorney
Harvey Dent, who is romantically
involved with old flame
Rachel Dawes (Gyllenhaal).
Crime figures soar when
deranged criminal mastermind
The Joker declares
war on the man in the cowl.
As the people of Gotham
turn against their saviour,
Bruce relies on loyal
butler Alfred (Caine)
and Wayne
Enterprises technical
genius Lucius Fox
(Freeman) to stop him
falling into the abyss.
The Dark Knight opens
with a nerve-shredding bank heist that introduces the character of The
Joker and steadily cranks up
the tension.
Nolan and brother
Jonathan, who cowrote
the script,
don't waste a
single second
of the 152-
minute running
time; this is a
lean, muscular
and
extremely
violent battle
between
good and
evil.
The
Joker's
opening
trick (making
a pencil
disappear)
sets
the grisly tone for the rest of
the film.
Casualties are high, even
among the principal cast, interspersed
with terrific confrontations
between an increasingly
conflicted Batman and his
adversaries.
Bale is somewhat squeezed
out of the frame - there could
have been more scenes of
Bruce wrestling with his conscience
- and a pivotal action
sequence involving Batman's
new sonar-imaging lenses is
horribly disorienting thanks to
strobing computer effects and
Lee Smith's hyper-kinetic editing.
However, these are minor
blemishes on an otherwise
thrilling adventure that echoes
Harvey's prophetic words: "You
either die a hero... or you live
long enough to see yourself
become the villain."
11:36am Friday 25th July 2008
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