Film Grade: A
At last.
The highly anticipated finish to the Dark Knight trilogy is here and expectations have been wildly high.
There are two camps of fans for this film — you’ll either be
disappointed or deliriously pleased. Disappointed fans expected a film similar to
The Dark Knight, the same clever
psychotic scheming seen in Joker and more of the same gripping action. If
you’re in that camp, know that this film is different from its predecessor. The Dark Knight Rises is more morally
themed and grimly realistic, but in my opinion, one of the best finales to a
trilogy … just about ever.
Set eight years after Batman’s last public appearance, Bruce
Wayne has gone into a self-inflicted hermitage within his home, out of touch
with his business, his friends and himself. Until the juggernaut villain, Bane,
appears out of nowhere and threatens Gotham City in a way Joker never did. The
nearly three hour film packs punches, heart-gripping lines, moral speculations,
several incredible characters and ties up all possible loose ends — with a few
twists, in classic Nolan style.
Despite the temptation, I’ll not spoil the film for those
who haven’t seen it. But know that this film is nothing short of a cinematic
work of art, and being a Nolan film, is invariably well done. The acting
especially is impressive, given the fact that eight of the leading actors
(Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Gary Oldman, Tom Hardy, Marion Cotillard,
Morgan Freeman, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Anne Hathaway) are Oscar winners or
nominees or have some related highly acclaimed film award.
Christian Bale, as always, gave a magnificent performance as
Batman, but it was Michael Caine who brought me to tears a few times. Alfred
shows in this particular film an enormous amount of heart and depth, being
Bruce’s father figure and voice of deep wisdom.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt did a phenomenal job playing the
idealistic cop, John Blake. Blake is heroic in his own right because while Gotham
crumbled, it would have been easy to “duck his head”, as one character puts it,
to get by. But Blake doesn’t just have ideals, he lives by them. Blake at one
point faces guns point-blank so others might live. And Nolan doesn’t leave
Blake’s character as a mere symbol, he explores Blake’s heart and motives.
Anne Hathaway, by rights, was adequate for Selena Kyle. She
had several points where she did a fine job, but sometimes looked as if she
were trying too hard to be her Catwoman predecessors, rather than giving her
own touch to the character. She did handle herself well with the stunts and
worked the catsuit to her advantage.
Tom Hardy is no newcomer for Nolan films; for Inception he was nominated for several
Best Supporting Actor awards, and his acting chops, both physically and
emotionally, were well cast for the role of Bane. As Bane, Hardy is an
intimidating monster, with bone-crushing brawn and a merciless look in his eyes.
Yet he has the ability to be as sensitive and emotionally genuine as a romantic
lead. The shot where Bane had tears in his eyes was gripping.
As cinematography goes, Nolan outdid himself, and there were
few things that bothered me about the film. One was that Bane was hard to
understand with his face mask in a few scenes. The running time was unusually
long. And while the film was not disturbing like the last one, it was violent.
Sometimes brutally. Rises
is violent in a bone-crunching way, fitting Bane’s form. I don’t condone the
violence and neither does Nolan. He doesn’t seem to glorify it, but shows how
the violence was a product of Gotham’s disordered people, a result of their
inability to hold virtue in high esteem.
In all, I consider Rises
a fantastic film. Those of you who
are disappointed, remember that The Dark
Knight could not and would not be replicated, or topped in any way on purpose.
Nolan, out of respect for Heath Ledger, would not touch any aspect of Joker’s
story, nor would he try to create a similar film. He did not want the same kind
of action, or the same psychotic villain. He purposely
chose Bane to face Batman because he was stark contrast to Joker.
He wanted Rises to
finish the series with a more moral touch and symbolic note. To use a line from
The Dark Knight, this film was not
the movie that audiences wanted. It was the film audiences needed.
Let me explain. Gotham, in a way, represents us viewers. As
a general culture, we have lost the ability to recognize real virtue when we
see it. Batman symbolizes virtue and he carries out virtuous acts when it’s
unfashionable to do so. Batman lives a lie, shouldering Harvey Dent’s crimes so
Gotham can have the hero it wanted, some kind of hope. Because in a dark world,
there must always be a light to look toward.
Like Gotham, we idolize those who don’t deserve to be that
light for us. We idolize celebrities, lying politicians. We eat up whatever
they feed us through media, without thinking critically. Yes, we are Gotham. We
celebrate Harvey Dents and forget the real heroes quite often — from everyday
heroes to the Good Lord himself.
This was the film we needed to see. We need to see a
reflection of our world where evil seems to win and virtue is unrecognizable.
And we needed to see that good still
wins and that heroes still exist,
despite it.
That virtue, that black and white picture of good and evil, is
clear in this film. Batman refuses to use guns or kill cold-blooded, Catwoman’s
ambiguity is shown in its true colors — virtue is still virtue, even when no
one believes in it or abides by it. Even when darkness seems to shroud all
hope, there is always something to fight for. Heroes sacrifice themselves for
the lives around us. That’s why superheroes are so popular. They remind us of
virtue, that doing the right thing, even if it costs our lives, is how good
wins.
Batman reminds us that we too can be that hero. “Anyone can be a hero. Even a man who put a
coat around a young boy's shoulders to let him know the world hasn't ended.”
1 comment:
Brilliant study of the film, Nolan and his message through his art.
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