Guys, you could create the same examples for the SW prequel trilogy or hell - pretty much any sequel.
Give us some Terminator examples.
Guys, you could create the same examples for the SW prequel trilogy or hell - pretty much any sequel.
Give us some Terminator examples.
No need for spoilers.
1. Yep, Bruce was freeing the other prisoners.
2. Bruce fixed the auto pilot. That was Bruce's way of telling Lucius that he was alive, and Alfred really did see Bruce.
3. I'll let this be answered by someone on the IMDB FAQ about the film.
...but we are initiated, aren't we Bruce?
Initiated in getting friendzoned like a bunch of chumps!
I could, but I won't.
But it does prove that the most uninspiring parts of sequels are where they lazily lift the format of the first film because it worked.
what are you guys even talking about?
I could, but I won't.
But it does prove that the most uninspiring parts of sequels are where they lazily lift the format of the first film because it worked.
Which of part of TDK or TDKR are copying the format of BB? Callbacks =/= replicating plot structure.
Which of part of TDK or TDKR are copying the format of BB? Callbacks =/= replicating plot structure.
SW prequel talk? Sorry man, The Hobbit thread is down the hall.
It's in the room where Peter Jackson's talent used to be.
Hobbit's great and easily superior to TDKR. Sorry duder.
Hobbit's great and easily superior to TDKR. Sorry duder.
Another better comeback line for Batman at the final fight.
TDKR is the worst out of BB and TDK. The 2 movies are so much better. Bane is such a shitty villain.
Wrong on all accounts. TDKR is quite literally a masterpiece, along with TDK.
To build a cohesive narrative with a plot that, on the surface, sounds completely ridiculous and make it come off even semi-believable and realistic like Nolan was able to do is a monumental achievement in and of itself.
There's that word again.
Go ahead.Replicating plot beats/interactions and then shuffling them into different places. You don't want to get me started on TDKR using BB as a crutch.
I haven't seen The Hobbit yet, but it would have to shit the bed something fierce to be more disappointing than TDKR. It would have to pull a Prometheus-level mud pie.
burns your soul doesn't it?
Go ahead.
TDKR references Begins a few times for obvious reasons, but I feel that all the best parts of the movie are scenes that were different from anything that happened in Begins. Bane's introduction, Batman's return, escaping the pit, both Bane fights, etc.
I thought the only part that Nolan relied on nostalgia was when Ra's haunted Bruce as he was passed out from the pain. A very necessary and cool scene i'd add. Not only because it was good to see Ra's again, but also because they used the opportunity to play with the idea that he's immortal, which was good fanservice.And I agree. The parts where we get unnecessary Begins flashbacks as an attempt to imbue scenes with some sort of import and poignancy are completely ruined by how lazily/clumsily those scenes come across. When Nolan relies on nostalgia to do all the work it ends up ringing hollow.
Then outside of the intelligence-insulting flashbacks, you have shit like Blake re-enacting Bruce's ascendance into the Batman that not only uses that nostalgia as a crutch, but ends up undermining the original scene.
TDKR is the most disappointing because I never thought Nolan could be so sloppy/lazy.
It undermined what that scene meant to Bruce as a character. Bruce was finally confronting and embracing his fear, becoming it.
What the fuck do bats have to do with JGL? It's a cheap bit of nostalgic repetition that let's audiences know that JGL is going to be the next Batman, but doesn't make a lick of goddamn sense for that character outside of that. My point is that these nostalgic callbacks to Begins are lazy and cheap and thus feel forced, not that they don't make sense.
It undermined what that scene meant to Bruce as a character. Bruce was finally confronting and embracing his fear, becoming it.
What the fuck do bats have to do with JGL? It's a cheap bit of nostalgic repetition that let's audiences know that JGL is going to be the next Batman, but doesn't make a lick of goddamn sense for that character outside of that.
I don't see how it cheapens what happened to Bruce at all. Why does it need to make sense for the character? They wanted to show he was going to become the next batman and what better way to do that than showing him going through the batcave and the same thing happening. It doesn't mean that he is overcoming his fear in the same way that Bruce does. The bats coming out had different meaning for each character.
TDKR had some problems but that scene and frankly the whole end to the movie were pretty much perfect to me.
Obviously the bats would be explained through Bruce, inspiring him to make the bat his symbol. For his successor to also be heavily linked to bats would be way too coincidental. His potential, will, and similar reasons for fighting crime should be enough for him to be worthy of carrying on the symbol.It undermined what that scene meant to Bruce as a character. Bruce was finally confronting and embracing his fear, becoming it.
What the fuck do bats have to do with JGL? It's a cheap bit of nostalgic repetition that let's audiences know that JGL is going to be the next Batman, but doesn't make a lick of goddamn sense for that character outside of that. My point is that these nostalgic callbacks to Begins are lazy and cheap and thus feel forced, not that they don't make sense.
Obviously the bats would be explained through Bruce, inspiring him to make the bat his symbol. For his successor to also be heavily linked to bats would be way too coincidental. His potential, will, and similar reasons for fighting crime should be enough for him to be worthy of carrying on the symbol.
No, lol. Why wouldn't it mirror Bruce becoming Batman? He went into the batcave, a cave filled with Bats, and they swarmed him before he made his ascension.So you agree the bat scene that mirrors Bruce's was unnecessary?
No, lol. Why wouldn't it mirror Bruce becoming Batman? He went into the batcave, a cave filled with Bats, and they swarmed him before he made his ascension.
How else could it have played out?
Every single flashback in the movie was unnecessary. It showed absolutely no faith in the audience and felt shoehorned in to lazily give context to what was happening. Make no mistake, I'm not saying I have a problem with callbacks to Begins. I'm saying I have a problem with how sloppily Nolan handled those callbacks to the point of them feeling unnatural and breaking my engagement with what was going on in the film.
TDKR was Nolan trying to pull a T2 to Begins' T1, only he ended up making T3.