I realize this review is several months late but I only got
the chance to see the movie a little while ago.
However, it was well worth the wait, and it was so good that I felt
compelled to write about it. Besides, I
have Batman’s nickname as my blog handle. :-)
The Dark Knight Rises
stars Christian Bale, Anne Hathaway, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Tom Hardy, Gary
Oldman, Morgan Freeman and a whole slew of actors in a long, 165-minute epic to
a grand Chris Nolan trilogy. It’s been
eight years after the events of The Dark
Knight, and Gotham City is in a state of peace. At the end of TDK, Batman (Christian Bale) was an outlaw, a wanted masked
vigilante who took the blame for Harvey Dent’s killings so Gotham’s citizens
wouldn’t lose hope. Now, as there was no
need for Batman, he goes into hiding. As
Batman has disappeared from Gotham City, so too has Bruce Wayne, locking
himself inside Wayne Manor. Bruce Wayne
is a broken man at this point, and he has aged unnaturally fast due to the
overwhelming guilt he feels in supposedly causing Harvey Dent and Rachel Dawes’
death.
Under powers granted by the Dent Act, Commissioner Jim
Gordon has nearly eradicated violent and organized crime. While following a
lead in the abduction of a congressman from the function, Gordon's speech falls
into the hands of terrorist leader Bane. Gordon is shot in the process, and he
promotes patrol officer John Blake to detective, allowing Blake to report
directly to him. In addition, there’s a
clever cat burglar named Selena Kyle, who is a modern-day feminist Robin
Hood. All this forces a broken, rusty
old Batman to face his most physically imposing foe ever.
First of all, the title “The
Dark Knight Rises” is a bit of a misnomer since Batman simply re-emerges from his reclusive hideout
out of pure necessity. For the most
part, he falls… both as Bruce Wayne
and as Batman. As Batman, he struggles
like hell to get back into crime-fighting shape and even more when fighting
Bane; as Bruce Wayne, he struggles financially, emotionally and physically as
Wayne Enterprises goes closer to bankruptcy everyday and he is a recluse in his
own home convinced that he’s no longer needed as Batman. Bane is the one who really “rises”, as he
masterminds a hostile takeover of the city. What’s sadly ironic is that Bane,
in many ways, ended up being a blessing in disguise for Bruce Wayne. It meant that he was needed again as Batman,
and that he once again had a purpose in life.
Bruce Wayne spent so many years honing and perfecting his skills into
becoming an intimidating masked vigilante that he completely forgot how to be
Bruce Wayne! Even though he had an eight
year break from crime fighting, he never used the down time into
anything fun or constructive. He never
partied, never continued his training, and never put more time into running his
business better and it was all because his constant guilt never allowed his
emotional scars to heal. It was his
self-imposed punishment for the sins he supposedly committed.
As Bruce Wayne tries
to work himself back into crime-fighting shape to fight Bane, he finds that
he’s quite rusty. This shows both in his
confrontation with Catwoman and his fight against Bane. He didn’t use any clever tactics or any fancy
gadgetry -- it was more like watching a cage-fighting match, which was really
disappointing. As expected, he loses the
fight badly, and is taken prisoner.
Fortunately, he re-emerges (again) to save Gotham. Luckily, this time he gets an assist from an
unlikely ally in Selena Kyle/Catwoman (Anne Hathaway) and an even bigger assist
from detective John Blake (Joseph Gordon-Levitt).
This movie has a whole barrage of twists and turns and a
flurry or details that keep you engaged…
and somewhat confused and overwhelmed at times. You blink, and you will miss something important!
Considering the hype around it and how good its predecessors were, Rises had some pretty big shoes to
fill. So the big question is….. Did
it?!?! Was it everything the movie-goers
expected?!?! Did Chris Nolan tie off the
trilogy in proper fashion?!?! Was it the
biggest blockbuster of the year?!?!
Well… yes and no.
Chris Nolan did bring the series to a proper conclusion and
did bring a proper feeling of closure to the Batman series. The visual effects were also much more
stunning in Rises than it was in TDK.
But it was impossible to top the villains of TDK and Batman Begins. Tom Hardy is an imposing presence as Bane,
but he has neither the charismatic and eerie quirkiness of Heath Ledger’s Joker
nor the engaging complexity of Aaron Eckhart’s Two-Face. He also lacks the cleverness of R’as Al-Ghul
and the creepiness of Scarecrow. Also,
his takeover of Gotham didn’t quite make sense.
He frees Gotham’s inmates, holds the citizens captive with a nuclear
bomb, and expects them to believe that the city belongs to them at that “Gotham
will survive”. Give me a break! If some maniac terrorist were to take over
your city and hold you hostage, would you believe anything he says?!?! But what’s really disappointing is his
horrendous voice and his philosophical rants like “I am Gotham’s reckoning”. It takes away from any menace he does have -- he sounds like the
love-child of Sean Connery and Anthony Hopkins!
Ironically enough, his mask reminds you of Hopkins’ Hannibal Lecter! :-)
On the other hand,
Joseph Gordon-Levitt was simply outstanding as Detective John Blake. He ends up being a very central character in
the story, and he ends up doing a lot of the detective work that Batman usually
does. In many ways, he was the biggest
hero of this movie. It was, perhaps, an
intentional foreshadowing of things to come.
Anne Hathaway was also spot-on as Catwoman. She’s cunning and devious yet charismatic and
vulnerable at the same time. She was a
much-needed female presence after the passing of Rachel Dawes’ character in TDK.
Christian Bale gets a lot less screen time in Rises, but he gets a chance to show other emotions that he didn’t
in the previous prequels since Rises
is more of a Bruce Wayne story. As
Batman, he is less impressive though, since he doesn’t use enough stealthy
tactics in any part of the movie. The
rest of the supporting cast like Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman et al do their
job well but they have a lot less to do and have a lot less screen time.
Overall, the ending in The
Dark Knight Rises leaves you with a good sense of completion and
closure. Considering the circumstances,
this is probably the best way to end the series. In many ways, the legend of Batman does end,
but in other ways, Batman does live on. When
I watched Batman movies and cartoons growing up, I used to envy Bruce Wayne’s
life – he’s a billionaire playboy who gets to play with cool toys, jump off
rooftops and kick villain ass! But all
that envy completely disappeared after Rises. He was a shell of the man he used to be!
Plus, even in the previous prequels, though he’s a billionaire, he only pretends to be a playboy to throw off
people’s suspicions. Deep down, he’s an
angry, tortured soul who does a lot of pushups; the ultimate example that money
alone doesn’t buy happiness. The entire
Chris Nolan trilogy is a beautiful body of work, and what makes the Batman
series unique is that the series is that it is shot as a realistic drama rather
than a superhero movie. Not only can we
all watch and thoroughly enjoy the trilogy, but also learn a lot from it.