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The Dark Knight SPOILER THREAD

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SuperAndroid17 said:
Paul van dyk remix of dark knight single

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-z_.../showthread.php?threadid=502752&forumid=11&s=

holy shit , CD 2 special edition ROX!!!!!!

Ordered from amazon

dIsc: 2
1. Bank Robbery (Prologue)
2. Buyer Beware
3. Halfway To Hong Kong
4. Decent Men In An Indecent Time
5. You're Gonna Love Me
6. Chance
7. You Complete Me
8. The Ferries
9. We Are Tonight's Entertainment
10. A Watchful Guardian
11. Why So Serious?(The Crystal Method Remix)
12. Poor Choice Of Words(Paul van Dyk Remix)
13. Gunpowder And Gasoline(Remix by Mel Wesson)
14. Rory's First Kiss(Remix by Ryeland Allison)

sORRY if old
Yes, this has been #1 on my christmas list for a while.
 
SuperAndroid17 said:
Paul van dyk remix of dark knight single

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-z_.../showthread.php?threadid=502752&forumid=11&s=

holy shit , CD 2 special edition ROX!!!!!!

Ordered from amazon

dIsc: 2
1. Bank Robbery (Prologue)
2. Buyer Beware
3. Halfway To Hong Kong
4. Decent Men In An Indecent Time
5. You're Gonna Love Me
6. Chance
7. You Complete Me
8. The Ferries
9. We Are Tonight's Entertainment
10. A Watchful Guardian
11. Why So Serious?(The Crystal Method Remix)
12. Poor Choice Of Words(Paul van Dyk Remix)
13. Gunpowder And Gasoline(Remix by Mel Wesson)
14. Rory's First Kiss(Remix by Ryeland Allison)

sORRY if old

I'm tempted but.. 45 bucks for CDs... even if TDK is a bit much.
 
SuperAndroid17 said:
Paul van dyk remix of dark knight single

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-z_.../showthread.php?threadid=502752&forumid=11&s=

holy shit , CD 2 special edition ROX!!!!!!

Ordered from amazon

dIsc: 2
1. Bank Robbery (Prologue)
2. Buyer Beware
3. Halfway To Hong Kong
4. Decent Men In An Indecent Time
5. You're Gonna Love Me
6. Chance
7. You Complete Me
8. The Ferries
9. We Are Tonight's Entertainment
10. A Watchful Guardian
11. Why So Serious?(The Crystal Method Remix)
12. Poor Choice Of Words(Paul van Dyk Remix)
13. Gunpowder And Gasoline(Remix by Mel Wesson)
14. Rory's First Kiss(Remix by Ryeland Allison)

sORRY if old

Listening to the samples, I may not actually buy this. The regular tracks sound like extended material from the regular soundtrack, and to be honest after watching TDK a couple more times I don't find any particular theme that is missing from the original score release.
 
My bad if this has been discussed before.

Since Harvey is dead, isn't Batman the one who killed him, even inadvertently?

So Batman did break his one rule that night, like Joker said?

If so, seems like a good comparison to the end of Batman Begins, where even the whole "...but I don't have to save you" can be argued as negligence.
 
jett said:
Listening to the samples, I may not actually buy this. The regular tracks sound like extended material from the regular soundtrack, and to be honest after watching TDK a couple more times I don't find any particular theme that is missing from the original score release.

The music that accompanies the final scene in the film with Batman riding off/cut to credits sure as shit isnt in the original score. The melody appears throughout the score, but that particular, rather bombastic arrangement is never heard, shamefully.
 
Solo said:
The music that accompanies the final scene in the film with Batman riding off/cut to credits sure as shit isnt in the original score. The melody appears throughout the score, but that particular, rather bombastic arrangement is never heard, shamefully.

You haven't seen that in a long time have you? :P The arrangement of the two themes used in that scene is really not that different. The first part is actually in the begginning of "A Dark Knight", the rest is the usual Zimmer Batman theme.

Of course if you really want this particular edit of the two themes(which really it's just one playing after the other) you'll have to get this new album. :P
 
BeautifulMemory said:
So Batman did break his one rule that night, like Joker said?

What?! The Dark Knight isn't perfect?! lololo

But I guess the rational is that Batman killed Harvey to protect the innocent, nearly getting killed in the process. It was that pesky conveniently placed ledge that is to blame.
 
Buckethead said:
What?! The Dark Knight isn't perfect?! lololo

But I guess the rational is that Batman killed Harvey to protect the innocent, nearly getting killed in the process. It was that pesky conveniently placed ledge that is to blame.

What the fuck are you talking about? Batman breaking his one rule is the whole point. The Joker won, like Gordon said.
 
BeautifulMemory said:
My bad if this has been discussed before.

Since Harvey is dead, isn't Batman the one who killed him, even inadvertently?

So Batman did break his one rule that night, like Joker said?

If so, seems like a good comparison to the end of Batman Begins, where even the whole "...but I don't have to save you" can be argued as negligence.

Yes for TDK related questions. But as for BB, Ras chose to sat there and close his eyes when the train fell. He could've tried to saved himself, but he didn't.
 
jett said:
What the fuck are you talking about? Batman breaking his one rule is the whole point. The Joker won, like Gordon said.

No he didn't.

That would have defeated the entire concept of the movie. If people saw the monster that the Joker created in Harvey, then he would have won by unravelling their hard work.
But then Batman takes all the heat thus becoming "the hero that Gotham deserves" and all that. Gordon's comments were cynical and frustrated, however Batman cleans up all the mess by looking like the bad guy. "They'll hunt him....because he can take it".

>> The Joker tries to prove to Batman that the people aren't worth saving. The people then make the hard decision that the Joker said they would never make: Thus Joker doesn't win.
>> Then Mr. J tries to get Batman to crack and kill someone out of malice, etc and convince him "the only way to live is without rules", Batman sticks to the code.: Again, Joker doesn't win.

The Joker claims "I'm not a monster, I'm just ahead of the curve". The entire movie he preaches his misguided philosophy and actually thinks he's justified in it. Then he explains this to Batman in the Interrogation scene and says something like "I'll show you" when he's talking about " These people...they're only as good as the world allows them to be".

Then after the boat/ferry scene, The Joker and his philosophy is defeated. Then he proves that HE IS just a monster. Even his "ace in the hole", Harvey, ends up not serving the purpose that The Joker wanted him to.

Batman is incorruptible yet he takes the blame for Two Face's murders. Thus the end message is: "heroes make hard choices, take the heat, even if they don't deserve it".

I mean I guess you could make the argument that The Joker won but it seems like it undermines the entire concept of the movie. I think he may have had *temporary* results, but Batman stayed true. He's permanent, firm, incorruptible.

Discuss. :P
 
Grimm Fandango said:
Ugh I know the Blu-ray will have features missing for a double dip later but I need it now.


It's 100% going to happen, there is not even audio commentary on this version, that just screams super delux 3 disc version coming 09 or 10


I am also worried about this but I like the movie too much to wait that long to own it
 
Ken Masters said:
It's 100% going to happen, there is not even audio commentary on this version, that just screams super delux 3 disc version coming 09 or 10


I am also worried about this but I like the movie too much to wait that long to own it

hasn't happened for Begins so i wouldn't be too sure.
 
Ninja Scooter said:
hasn't happened for Begins so i wouldn't be too sure.


If this movie gets nominated for best picture then it's guaranteed another release, plus Warner Bros. will milk this baby for all its worth
 
Ken Masters said:
If this movie gets nominated for best picture then it's guaranteed another release, plus Warner Bros. will milk this baby for all its worth

sure but that doesn't mean Nolan or the cast are going to contribute anything meaningful to these re-releases like commentaries or deleted scenes.
 
Ninja Scooter said:
sure but that doesn't mean Nolan or the cast are going to contribute anything meaningful to these re-releases like commentaries or deleted scenes.

I find that sad. The movie deserves it and it's insulting to the fans if the crew doesn't feel obligated to do it.
 
BeautifulMemory said:
My bad if this has been discussed before.

Since Harvey is dead, isn't Batman the one who killed him, even inadvertently?

So Batman did break his one rule that night, like Joker said?

If so, seems like a good comparison to the end of Batman Begins, where even the whole "...but I don't have to save you" can be argued as negligence.


i think its intent.

was his intent to kill harvey? or to save the boy? when he dove at harvey was it to push him off the ledge to his death? or to just push harvey so he can seperate him and the boy?
 
Buckethead said:
No he didn't.

That would have defeated the entire concept of the movie. If people saw the monster that the Joker created in Harvey, then he would have won by unravelling their hard work.
But then Batman takes all the heat thus becoming "the hero that Gotham deserves" and all that. Gordon's comments were cynical and frustrated, however Batman cleans up all the mess by looking like the bad guy. "They'll hunt him....because he can take it".

>> The Joker tries to prove to Batman that the people aren't worth saving. The people then make the hard decision that the Joker said they would never make: Thus Joker doesn't win.
>> Then Mr. J tries to get Batman to crack and kill someone out of malice, etc and convince him "the only way to live is without rules", Batman sticks to the code.: Again, Joker doesn't win.

The Joker claims "I'm not a monster, I'm just ahead of the curve". The entire movie he preaches his misguided philosophy and actually thinks he's justified in it. Then he explains this to Batman in the Interrogation scene and says something like "I'll show you" when he's talking about " These people...they're only as good as the world allows them to be".

Then after the boat/ferry scene, The Joker and his philosophy is defeated. Then he proves that HE IS just a monster. Even his "ace in the hole", Harvey, ends up not serving the purpose that The Joker wanted him to.

Batman is incorruptible yet he takes the blame for Two Face's murders. Thus the end message is: "heroes make hard choices, take the heat, even if they don't deserve it".

I mean I guess you could make the argument that The Joker won but it seems like it undermines the entire concept of the movie. I think he may have had *temporary* results, but Batman stayed true. He's permanent, firm, incorruptible.

..everlasting. =P

Ok good post, but if you're going to argue whether or not Batman broke his rule, I think you should argue it from the point that Harvey's death was accidental. Let's face it, Batman didn't rip his head off, shoot him in the face, stab him with razor blades... he tackled him, and in turn accidentally killed him while trying to save Gordon's kid. Seriously, Batman gets the job done but he's a little reckless too. He stabbed the Joker in the face with his arm blades (He could have died) He through him off a high rise construction building (He could have missed when he tried to save him) ect. Harvey's Death was totally unintentional. So did Batman break his one rule? I dunno, what was his one rule anyways? I don't kill (intentionally?) or I don't kill (directly, or indirectly, accidental or not) in the process of being the Goddamn Batman. I mean he fucking crushed those people in the truck when he was in that underpass chasing the Joker and jumping in front of flying RPG missiles. He could have broken Scarecrow's neck landing on his van, or shot stray pedestrians when he was blowing up fucking cars everywhere on his batpod, who knows. So if Batman's one rule is not to ever kill directly and intentionally, then I don't think he broke his rule. If his rule is to NOT kill ever, accident or not, recklessness or not... then he broke his rule killing Harvey, and thus learned the truth (like the Joker said he would) which is.... _______________________ (<--- Draw your own conclusion).
 
Buckethead said:
No he didn't.

That would have defeated the entire concept of the movie. If people saw the monster that the Joker created in Harvey, then he would have won by unravelling their hard work.
But then Batman takes all the heat thus becoming "the hero that Gotham deserves" and all that. Gordon's comments were cynical and frustrated, however Batman cleans up all the mess by looking like the bad guy. "They'll hunt him....because he can take it".

>> The Joker tries to prove to Batman that the people aren't worth saving. The people then make the hard decision that the Joker said they would never make: Thus Joker doesn't win.
>> Then Mr. J tries to get Batman to crack and kill someone out of malice, etc and convince him "the only way to live is without rules", Batman sticks to the code.: Again, Joker doesn't win.

The Joker claims "I'm not a monster, I'm just ahead of the curve". The entire movie he preaches his misguided philosophy and actually thinks he's justified in it. Then he explains this to Batman in the Interrogation scene and says something like "I'll show you" when he's talking about " These people...they're only as good as the world allows them to be".

Then after the boat/ferry scene, The Joker and his philosophy is defeated. Then he proves that HE IS just a monster. Even his "ace in the hole", Harvey, ends up not serving the purpose that The Joker wanted him to.

Batman is incorruptible yet he takes the blame for Two Face's murders. Thus the end message is: "heroes make hard choices, take the heat, even if they don't deserve it".

I mean I guess you could make the argument that The Joker won but it seems like it undermines the entire concept of the movie. I think he may have had *temporary* results, but Batman stayed true. He's permanent, firm, incorruptible.

Discuss. :P

Joker won in both of those instances. Both the ferry and Dent.

Even if the people on the ferry didn't blow each other up, all of them still saw the darkness within themselves. They're now aware of it. They no longer can just ignore it, or pretend it isn't there or whatever rationalizations the ignorant masses use these days. Joker got in their heads. That's all that matters. The boat blowing up would have been the icing on the cake.

Regarding Dent, the man still went ballistic. Joker still got inside his head. That's all that matters.

Both times, Joker won. He forced everyone to play by his own rules. Play his own game. Hell, he even forced Batman to play, with his "You're going to have to choose" in the interrogation room.

Make no mistake. Joker totally won.

Also, I don't believe that Batman remaining stoic is relevant. Over the course of the movie, Joker didn't want Batman to change, because Batman was just too much fun the way he was. ;-)

Plus, testament to Joker's brilliance...and I find this very fucking awesome...in Batman Begins, remember Bruce's flight back? How as a man, he can be destroyed, but as a symbol, he is virtually untouchable?

Man, Joker destroyed Batman's symbolic stature to Gotham. Right down to Gordon having to take an axe to the Bat-signal. Throughout TDK, people wanted Batman to turn himself in. Dent was taking lots of heat in the press conference. Joker turned Gotham AGAINST Batman.

That's a pretty huge Joker win in my book.
 
The Blue Jihad said:
Joker won in both of those instances. Both the ferry and Dent.

Even if the people on the ferry didn't blow each other up, all of them still saw the darkness within themselves. They're now aware of it. They no longer can just ignore it, or pretend it isn't there or whatever rationalizations the ignorant masses use these days. Joker got in their heads. That's all that matters. The boat blowing up would have been the icing on the cake.

Regarding Dent, the man still went ballistic. Joker still got inside his head. That's all that matters.

Both times, Joker won. He forced everyone to play by his own rules. Play his own game. Hell, he even forced Batman to play, with his "You're going to have to choose" in the interrogation room.

Make no mistake. Joker totally won.
Thats totally deep.
 
The Blue Jihad said:
Plus, testament to Joker's brilliance...and I find this very fucking awesome...in Batman Begins, remember Bruce's flight back? How as a man, he can be destroyed, but as a symbol, he is virtually untouchable?

Man, Joker destroyed Batman's symbolic stature to Gotham. Right down to Gordon having to take an axe to the Bat-signal. Throughout TDK, people wanted Batman to turn himself in. Dent was taking lots of heat in the press conference. Joker turned Gotham AGAINST Batman.

That's a pretty huge Joker win in my book.
You just went balls deep.
 
Also, at the beginning of the film Gotham was feeling very optimistic about its chances fighting crime with its new hero, Dent, and Batman. The look of Gotham was much brighter and cleaner than it ever was in BB. By the end of the filim, Gotham was back to its old gritty self, and the city was in chaos and exodus.

Joker's goal was to take a giant shit on everyone's hopes that they could restore order to the city, and through the imagery of Gotham and the chaos of the Gotham residents, it is clear that Joker won.
 
The Blue Jihad said:
Even if the people on the ferry didn't blow each other up, all of them still saw the darkness within themselves. They're now aware of it. They no longer can just ignore it, or pretend it isn't there or whatever rationalizations the ignorant masses use these days. Joker got in their heads. That's all that matters. The boat blowing up would have been the icing on the cake.

This, exellent post. The people on the ferry didn't blow each other up, not because they didn't want to or out of some misguided sypmpathy to not kill. We saw how the vote went, most chose yes. The Joker was a 100% right, they were all cowards, even those that voted no, didn't try to stop the yes-voters from pushing the button, nobody spoke up. The bald guy came close to doing it, but even he was a coward, they want to get out of the situation but they don't want the guilt to be on them, even if all had voted yes.

The only thing Joker hadn't counted on was fear holding everybody back, but his point was made, even if Batman never uncovers the truth about what really happend on the ferries, those people will always remember the monster inside of them, especially those so called civilized people that were debating/making excuses on the value of a humanlife.
 
The Blue Jihad said:
Plus, testament to Joker's brilliance...and I find this very fucking awesome...in Batman Begins, remember Bruce's flight back? How as a man, he can be destroyed, but as a symbol, he is virtually untouchable?

Man, Joker destroyed Batman's symbolic stature to Gotham. Right down to Gordon having to take an axe to the Bat-signal. Throughout TDK, people wanted Batman to turn himself in. Dent was taking lots of heat in the press conference. Joker turned Gotham AGAINST Batman.

That's a pretty huge Joker win in my book.

Holy shit, man. Game of the Year.
 
The Blue Jihad said:
Joker won in both of those instances. Both the ferry and Dent.

Even if the people on the ferry didn't blow each other up, all of them still saw the darkness within themselves. They're now aware of it. They no longer can just ignore it, or pretend it isn't there or whatever rationalizations the ignorant masses use these days. Joker got in their heads. That's all that matters. The boat blowing up would have been the icing on the cake.

Regarding Dent, the man still went ballistic. Joker still got inside his head. That's all that matters.

Both times, Joker won. He forced everyone to play by his own rules. Play his own game. Hell, he even forced Batman to play, with his "You're going to have to choose" in the interrogation room.

Make no mistake. Joker totally won.

Also, I don't believe that Batman remaining stoic is relevant. Over the course of the movie, Joker didn't want Batman to change, because Batman was just too much fun the way he was. ;-)

Plus, testament to Joker's brilliance...and I find this very fucking awesome...in Batman Begins, remember Bruce's flight back? How as a man, he can be destroyed, but as a symbol, he is virtually untouchable?

Man, Joker destroyed Batman's symbolic stature to Gotham. Right down to Gordon having to take an axe to the Bat-signal. Throughout TDK, people wanted Batman to turn himself in. Dent was taking lots of heat in the press conference. Joker turned Gotham AGAINST Batman.

That's a pretty huge Joker win in my book.

The ferry incident, as you say, does give the Joker a victory for those who experienced it ("the darkness within themselves"). But, as for the rest of Gotham, that the people on board the ferries didn't kill each other, that example speaks volumes. The Joker may be right about people, for now, but the rest of Gotham doesn't have to know that--just like Gotham doesn't have to know Dent's true fate.

Therefore, there is hope for Gotham, and that's all Batman could ask for. I call that a wash.
 
bathhouseterror said:
The ferry incident, as you say, does give the Joker a victory for those who experienced it ("the darkness within themselves"). But, as for the rest of Gotham, that the people on board the ferries didn't kill each other, that example speaks volumes. The Joker may be right about people, for now, but the rest of Gotham doesn't have to know that--just like Gotham doesn't have to know Dent's true fate.

Therefore, there is hope for Gotham, and that's all Batman could ask for. I call that a wash.

Granted, the ferries were isolated in that regard. However, that absolutely doesn't exonerate the rest of Gotham. I point to Joker's on-air phonecall, where he threatens to blow up a hospital if Mr. Reese isn't dead within the hour. There was quite a bit of insanity there, as I recall. Including shots taken, cars rammed, angry mobs, etc.
 
bathhouseterror said:
The ferry incident, as you say, does give the Joker a victory for those who experienced it ("the darkness within themselves"). But, as for the rest of Gotham, that the people on board the ferries didn't kill each other, that example speaks volumes. The Joker may be right about people, for now, but the rest of Gotham doesn't have to know that--just like Gotham doesn't have to know Dent's true fate.

Therefore, there is hope for Gotham, and that's all Batman could ask for. I call that a wash.

In the end Batman didn't break at all, he just took up the burden even further. All that effort and Joker didn't gain anymore traction on Batman, it just became nullified because Batman still did the selfless act of allowing people to see him vilified for the sake of others. Hurting people is a lot easier than saving people, but in the end Batman still stopped Joker.

Gordan's speach is all that really needs to be said on that matter.
 
You know, at the end of the debate, you really gotta give it up to Goyer and the Nolan brothers for making such an incredibly well-thought script and story. It's five months later and we're still trying to analyze it.
 
joshuagor44 said:
You know, at the end of the debate, you really gotta give it up to Goyer and the Nolan brothers for making such an incredibly well-thought script and story. It's five months later and we're still trying to analyze it.
Nah. Don't get me wrong, TDk is full of metaphors and themes, but they're presented to us in a fairly straight forward manner. I think some of you guys are kind of overdoing it now, "OMG DID U NOTICE HOW AT THE BEGINNING EVERYTHING WAS OPTIMISTIC AND THEN AT THE END IT WAS ALL PESIMISTIC? WOW THATS DEEP" its like, no shit thats point was pretty forced at the end of the film.
 
thats why the third movie will be so awesome...if it picks up on these themes and expands on batman himself.

dark knight was more about the city and on a wide scale all the characters the introduction of batman affected.

the third hopefully will be more like begins and back to how bruce/batman are dealing with the madness within.
 
joshuagor44 said:
You know, at the end of the debate, you really gotta give it up to Goyer and the Nolan brothers for making such an incredibly well-thought script and story. It's five months later and we're still trying to analyze it.
I think you have to give it up to GAF's fanaticism.
 
i have yet to see this thing, but what the fuck are you people discussing that's taking 137 pages?!

this must be the deepest film ever made
 
The Blue Jihad said:
Joker won in both of those instances. Both the ferry and Dent.

Even if the people on the ferry didn't blow each other up, all of them still saw the darkness within themselves. They're now aware of it. They no longer can just ignore it, or pretend it isn't there or whatever rationalizations the ignorant masses use these days. Joker got in their heads. That's all that matters. The boat blowing up would have been the icing on the cake.

Regarding Dent, the man still went ballistic. Joker still got inside his head. That's all that matters.

Both times, Joker won. He forced everyone to play by his own rules. Play his own game. Hell, he even forced Batman to play, with his "You're going to have to choose" in the interrogation room.

Make no mistake. Joker totally won.

Also, I don't believe that Batman remaining stoic is relevant. Over the course of the movie, Joker didn't want Batman to change, because Batman was just too much fun the way he was. ;-)

Good argument. I don't think the Joker won with the Ferries though. The Joker is as much a terrorist as he is a sadistic masochist, and social psychological commentator. He was ready to blow up those two ferries right after he learned they couldn't do it themselves. His point was to ultimately prove that when pressed...those people were just as dark and ugly as he was, and that before the clock ran down one (or both of them) would be gone. He still wanted to kill those people if it didn't happen. In the end he wasn't able to prove that they had it in them to kill one another. Batman's message won there when he said they city showed him it was full of good people - even if there was those on the boats who voted yes.

The Joker definitely got into Dent's head, he wanted to corrupt him and he did...he brought him down. Ultimately though I think he probably planned on killing him, the corruption and psychological attacks were most likely brought on after he learned of his disfigurement. It was win - win for the Joker though. He would still get to kill one of them - however, Harvey wasn't exposed to the public. Dent was a figure of justice and hope to Gotham. Instead of Gotham seeing the monster and criminal that Dent had become (This was most likely a huge motivator for Joker to corrupt Dent), Batman and Gordon used him as a martyr. The city still had their symbol of hope even if he had died.

Batman traded his symbol, for Dent's.

The Blue Jihad said:
Plus, testament to Joker's brilliance...and I find this very fucking awesome...in Batman Begins, remember Bruce's flight back? How as a man, he can be destroyed, but as a symbol, he is virtually untouchable?

Man, Joker destroyed Batman's symbolic stature to Gotham. Right down to Gordon having to take an axe to the Bat-signal. Throughout TDK, people wanted Batman to turn himself in. Dent was taking lots of heat in the press conference. Joker turned Gotham AGAINST Batman.

That's a pretty huge Joker win in my book.
Awesome. Yes. The Joker totally destroyed Batman's symbol to the people, but I don't think it was directly, and in turn Batman made a willing decision to trade his symbol in so the people would have their hero. He wasn't forced too, it was a decision he made to further show how viable he really is (and invaluable). I don't see why we - or anyone else - needs to debate over who won in the end. Neither the Joker nor Batman won, they both won some, and lost some. The Joker destroyed Batman's symbol, and Batman resurrected Harvey's. They traded blows, jabs, career setbacks (lol) in the end like they always do, and they'll come out to tumble and battle with each other again....like they always do.
 
The joker wasn't trying to win anything. His goal was to fuck shit up, and if he didn't, he'd just try again another day. That's Joker, baby.
 
SpeedingUptoStop said:
The joker wasn't trying to win anything. His goal was to fuck shit up, and if he didn't, he'd just try again another day. That's Joker, baby.

That's my point. I don't think there is much sense arguing who won what. They both succeeded and both failed at certain things.
 
http://www.aintitcool.com/node/39348

Some notes from a TDK Release Event with Nolan

-If he made a third film, it would be for no reason but the continuation of story. He is currently looking into where the story would go and if it needs to go there. He maintained that it's very hard to make a movie of this scale (and specified he wasn't asking for our sympathy, drawing a laugh from the crowd) - it's two hard years and you gotta love it. One of his biggest fears is getting halfway through making a film and realizing it's unnecessary and he doesn't want to make it anymore. If there is a third story that needs to be told, there will be a third film, but nothing is set in stone or a given.

-There is no 3 hour cut anywhere - no deleted scenes. He, John Nolan & David Goyer would cut scenes before they ever made it to the screen in what Nolan calls an "aggressive editorial approach." Their criteria was that every scene needs three reasons to be in the film or it's out. This made for a difficult time in the editing suite as every single scene was essential and could not be removed.

-The videos shot by the Joker were in fact shot and mostly directed by Heath Ledger. For the first video, Wally Pfister came in and checked the lights, the sound guys set up a few extra mics, everyone hid around the corner and they let Heath play. Ledger had been planning to direct and was an incredible collaborator with a great mind. Nolan trusted him implicitly. Ledger's work on the first video was so fantastic that Nolan wasn't even there for the second video shoot with Anthony Michael Hall. He gave Ledger the camera and said "do whatever you want." Apparently every take Ledger did was different, but always in line with the story and always fantastic. Where are those on the dvd, Mr. Nolan?!!
 
You missed the best part!

And you heard it here first - on December 18th, Chris Nolan is doing a live commentary with 100,000 Dark Knight Blu Ray owners. He will host the screening and answer questions as it goes on. With 100,000 people, it will most likely get a little crazy and who knows if Chris Nolan will tell me how exactly the Jim Gordan thing works (trying to keep this post spoiler free...), but it still sounds pretty damn cool to me. In Nolan's words, "It'll be interesting to see what it's like...the potential of it is very exciting." (Note: It had previously been announced that at some point Nolan would do a commentary, but only tonight was the date of this chat confirmed)

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