It's a form of clean energy!
Even the explosions and radioactive aftermath are clean!

It's a form of clean energy!
Are the fights actually well shot this time? Inception gave me vague hope that Nolans learning how to.
Not particularly. I think that the fight choreography is leaps and bounds better here than it has been the rest of the series, but its not shot in any kind of interesting way.
I like everything about the movie except the ending. I really don't feel like absconding away with Catwoman and leaving someone else to handle the sacrifice of being Batman as a very "Batman" thing to do. I always felt the character in both the first two movies and a number of the comics would die with the mantle, unable to let someone else make the same sacrifices while he goes on retirement. If you remove the scene at the restaurant, the ending would be perfect.
This one always get to me, from the Dark Knight: Harvey, waking up at the hospital.I can pick out a favorite scene in both TDK and TDKR with ease. BB is MUCH tougher for me, as the entire first act never ceases to blow my mind no matter how many times I see it. So for now, just TDK and TDKR:
TDK:
- "I have to save him!" Gary Oldman fucking slays me in this scene. He sounds so utterly defeated and in such despair. He feels total guilt and responsibility for what Dent has become.
TDKR:
- "RISE". One of those moments of audiovisual euphoria that makes you want to stand up and cheer along with the prisoners. Just a really epic, uplifting moment.
Not particularly. I think that the fight choreography is leaps and bounds better here than it has been the rest of the series, but its not shot in any kind of interesting way.
To be badass Internet movie critics. I sometimes wonder if people even enjoy things anymore or are they so obsessed at picking things apart and being armchair directors. Part of me wants to blame redlettermedia and people inspired by it, not realizing what he was actually doing in those videos.
Why did they show him punching the concrete wall again? Any significance?
Or maybe we don't love it as much as you.
Jesus , drop this argument. It's not like this movie defines film.
I've seen everything now. I'm not sure which crowd is more ridiculous, the "Alfred was hallucinating at the end" people or the "Where was Two-Face?" guys.
Why did they show him punching the concrete wall again? Any significance?
Why did they show him punching the concrete wall again? Any significance?
Why did they show him punching the concrete wall again? Any significance?
Or maybe we don't love it as much as you.
Jesus , drop this argument. It's not like this movie defines film.
Are you implying every movie is predictable and thus I should find them all boring?This post is boring.
Because its predictable its boring? Man, why do we even watch movies? Just keep getting bored over and over!
Love how everyone's going to have different rankings.
I thought that as time passed and I mulled over this movie more that I would find more flaws, but instead I'm finding more great and poetic moments and realising just how fantastic the ending was. Movie's going up in my mind all the time
Too busy starring in The Deadliest Catch.You know the problem with having the Man of Steel trailer before TDKR? The first thought that pops in my head when Batman is in the prison and it shows the state Gotham has become was "Goddamnit, where the fuck is Superman."
It was a nod to Nolans favourite Resi:
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Are you implying every movie is predictable and thus I should find them all boring?
But that goes against him learning near the end of the film that not being afraid to die for his cause isn't an asset and only makes him weaker.
because bane was mad as shit, and his mask was partially broken so yeah, he was mad as shit and was in pain
so in retrospect, everyones favourite moment from the series?
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"You thought we could be decent men in an indecent time"
The mood, the unbelievable score, the lighting, the hopeless sense of dread. Everything so perfectly surmised the loftier ideas in the comic in this one scene. And Eckart was the unsung hero of TDK
I like the guy asking if fox was alive. HE'S in scenes later in the film. How are people missing this? And you wonder why things have to be so literal in exposition. Even when it's very clear and told to the audience people still question it.
This should have been split into two movies, ala Harry Potter's finale. The had to cram too much stuff into too little time.
First movie - Up until the cops get trapped and Bane gives the speech in front of the courthouse or whatever it was, and Wayne in the prison.
Then the second movie would start from there.
They'd be able to flesh things out a lot more this way. Show how terrible Gotham has gotten. They'd be able to add a lot more details to flesh things out.
yeah, great scene. It gets me every time I watch The Dark Knight.
When Harvey says "why was it me who lost everything?" and Batman pauses before quietly saying "It wasn't."
This should have been split into two movies, ala Harry Potter's finale. The had to cram too much stuff into too little time.
First movie - Up until the cops get trapped and Bane gives the speech in front of the courthouse or whatever it was, and Wayne in the prison.
Then the second movie would start from there.
They'd be able to flesh things out a lot more this way. Show how terrible Gotham has gotten. They'd be able to add a lot more details to flesh things out.
This should have been split into two movies, ala Harry Potter's finale. The had to cram too much stuff into too little time.
First movie - Up until the cops get trapped and Bane gives the speech in front of the courthouse or whatever it was, and Wayne in the prison.
Then the second movie would start from there.
They'd be able to flesh things out a lot more this way. Show how terrible Gotham has gotten. They'd be able to add a lot more details to flesh things out.
Being afraid to die is fine, its what keeps people alive. But that doesn't make it right to leave behind something you've started and allow others to sacrifice instead of you when you're still capable. Even if he isn't physically capable anymore (which I could buy based on the hospital scene), he can still train his replacement and provide support. Robin is pretty much fucked, because he doesn't even have a trusty butler to stitch him back up after a run in with some dogs.
He's learning though I suppose, and it'll be interesting to see his Bond flick.I don't think Nolan's shot selection for action sequences has gotten better, but what I WILL give him props for with TDKR's action is holding a number of shots a lot longer than he did in the earlier movies. There were a number of fairly lengthy Batpod shots and fight scene shots in which I admired his restraint in not editing them to shit.
This should have been split into two movies, ala Harry Potter's finale. The had to cram too much stuff into too little time.
First movie - Up until the cops get trapped and Bane gives the speech in front of the courthouse or whatever it was, and Wayne in the prison.
Then the second movie would start from there.
They'd be able to flesh things out a lot more this way. Show how terrible Gotham has gotten. They'd be able to add a lot more details to flesh things out.
Oh yes, if there's one artistic problem the movie had is that everything looked too 'clean' even after Gotham fell.
The other is the lack of blood. The dead ex-commisioner looked like he was sleeping.
Best part of that particular scene for me is Harvey's "we thought we could be decent men, in an indecent time!" Something about that line reading and the way the music oscillates in that moment is pure magic for me.
He's learning though I suppose, and it'll be interesting to see his Bond flick.
Oh yes, if there's one artistic problem the movie had is that everything looked too 'clean' even after Gotham fell.
The other is the lack of blood. The dead ex-commisioner looked like he was sleeping.
Dude's entitled to a life. His cause was to inspire people. Not necessarily to run around in rubber suits, but to stand up to injustice.
I don't think Batman twisted Blakes arm in any way. That guy wanted to be Batman in the worst way.
He basically tells Gordon he can't work in shackles. That says it all.
I don't think Bruce would give a crap if Blake didn't take up the mantle.
..................
He's learning though I suppose, and it'll be interesting to see his Bond flick.
That sounds hugely pompous.