Umm....I going to go out on a shaky limb here.
Dark Knight was good. It was action packed. It was disturbing to cheer for the Joker. It was entertaining. It was fun to sit and cheer with the fanboys in a crowed summer blockbuster theater. It wasn't that great and that fantasic. It was what you want from a summer blockbuster.
Don't read this as MULLY HATES THE DARK KNIGHT, because I don't. This was a fun, dark movie. DK wasn't Spiderman 3, but it also wasn't Citizen Kane or Godfather 2 either. It was not the best movie ever (link), which IMDB hailed, but it also wasn't anything resembling Ewe Boll.
My reason's are contained in Spoilers:
Off point: A great article from The Wall Steet Journal comparing Batman to George W Bush. ... It's actually neither a pro- or anti- Bush article.
Dark Knight was good. It was action packed. It was disturbing to cheer for the Joker. It was entertaining. It was fun to sit and cheer with the fanboys in a crowed summer blockbuster theater. It wasn't that great and that fantasic. It was what you want from a summer blockbuster.
Don't read this as MULLY HATES THE DARK KNIGHT, because I don't. This was a fun, dark movie. DK wasn't Spiderman 3, but it also wasn't Citizen Kane or Godfather 2 either. It was not the best movie ever (link), which IMDB hailed, but it also wasn't anything resembling Ewe Boll.
My reason's are contained in Spoilers:
- Great acting? Bale, great playboy socialite, not a great Batman. Everyone says the voice was overdone, so I'm not going to go into that...but it was. I've said this from the beginning of the Batman franchise, most were good Bruce's, but not Batman's. Maybe it was the suit that made the Batmen look bulky and slow...too slow.
Ledger was awesome. AWESOME. I couldn't wait to see the Joker in the next scene...but that was the problem altogether.
The Batmobile: The Batmobile (in this series of the movie) was developed by Wayne Enterprises for a defense contract. So, it had to be displayed and developed by people. Why was the accountant guy the ONLY one on the planet who knew anything about it besides Morgan Freeman? Wouldn't some one from the government know about it? Some one besides the accountant from from Wayne Enterprises? Someone put the tires on the thing. Someone touched the batmobile prior to it hitting the streets Batman style.
The "Bat-cycle"- Laborious! When that thing had to take a turn...it took a TURN! The cycle was barely mobile. The tire was huge! A regular motorcycle should have came from the rear...it would have fit at least 4 crotch-rockets. I doubt the bat-cycle could have done the 180 wall turn.
Why did Maggie G thank Bruce Wayne's apartment was "the safest place in the city?" The Joker had already been there and breached his security.
I did not care that Rachel (Maggie G) died. That scene was suspense-less. I didn't feel Harvey Dent's pain in seeking revenge. I didn't feel for him at all, in fact, I couldn't wait for him to become Two-face.
Near the beginning of the movie, when Batman and the knock-off batmen where fighting the scarecrow, Batman, after getting thrown off the vehicle, jumped about 2 stories down onto the traveling van...and DESTROYED it. The van stopped in his tracks (that was the beginning and end of scarecrow in this movie)...later in the movie when Joker pushes Maggie G out the window in Bruce's apartment, Batman dives after her. They fall and fall and fall about 40 or more stories. Batman didn't appear to throw a cable or didn't attach a safety line or even use his fluttering bat wings, they just fell. Maggie G was on top of Batman. Batman landed on his back on a vehicle. They fell roughly 40 stories and landed on Batman's back which landed on a car. $3,000,000 body armor or not, that would kill both of them.
The mayor had eye liner on.
Off point: A great article from The Wall Steet Journal comparing Batman to George W Bush. ... It's actually neither a pro- or anti- Bush article.
When heroes arise who take those difficult duties on themselves, it is tempting for the rest of us to turn our backs on them, to vilify them in order to protect our own appearance of righteousness. We prosecute and execrate the violent soldier or the cruel interrogator in order to parade ourselves as paragons of the peaceful values they preserve. As Gary Oldman's Commissioner Gordon says of the hated and hunted Batman, "He has to run away -- because we have to chase him."