Rating:
*****/*****, or 10/10
Superb
sequel to the excellent Batman Begins (2005). The already dark
and sombre atmosphere of its predecessor is carried on in this film
as the vigilante Batman (Christian Bale) is confronted with his
ultimate nemesis, the insane criminal mastermind named simply the
Joker (Heath Ledger (1979-2008) in his penultimate screen role,
undoubtedly the most memorable character he has played in his sadly
all too brief career). Continuing to step up his game in his
master plan to bring chaos to Gotham City, the Joker unleashes a reign
of terror on the town: in response, Batman is forced to use ever more
desperate tactics to ensure the city's survival and order, aided by
the relentless district attorney Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart) who is
waging his own war against organized crime. However, even the pair of
them can't stop the Joker from killing one person too many, the woman
they both love (Maggie Gyllenhaal), with dire consequences to both
Dent – turning him into the villain Two-Face – and Batman
himself, who must take the fall for Dent's undoing so Gotham's laws
he established stay in effect. Ledger's eerie and psychotic but in a
twisted manner surprisingly amusing bad guy is a perfect counterpart
to Bale's overly gritty and brooding Caped Crusader: after all, 'why
so serious?', since this is still a comic book adaptation. However,
of all the comic book adaptations done so far, this one deserves to
be taken the most serious considering the gripping story, the
compelling performances by the lead actors (Ledger was posthumously
awarded with an Oscar) as well as grand established actors in
supporting roles (among them, Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine and Gary
Oldman) and some edge-of-your-seat action scenes, including a night
time freeway chase involving a truck and Batman's fan favorite
vehicle gadgets, the Tumbler and the Batpod. Partially shot in IMAX,
Nolan's preferred cinema format: on the home video releases, this
leads to changing aspect ratios that tell you what was and what
wasn't produced using IMAX cameras. Nolan would conclude his epic
threesome of Batman films – dubbed the Dark Knight trilogy
due to the overwhelming success of this film – with The Dark
Knight Rises (2012), a formidable flick in itself, but no match
for this movie, which in the mind of many (including myself) remains
the finest superhero film of them all.
Starring:
Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Aaron Eckhart
Directed
by Christopher Nolan
USA:
Warner Bros., 2008
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