Monday, July 23, 2012

The Dark Knight Emerges (***Spoilers ahead!***)




"A hero can be anyone, even a man doing something as simple and reassuring as putting a coat around a young boy's shoulders to let him know the world hasn't ended."


Rarely have these words echoed more soundly than after all the events of this past weekend.  We remember those in Aurora who died, some protecting loved ones and even complete strangers.  We denounce those who failed to bring a pedophile to justice.  Batman's last words resonate in our own world at a time when heroes are both emerging and disappearing.


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I promised myself I would not mention the Penn State scandal because I am just as tired of hearing about it as the rest of you probably are.  Regardless of where you stand on the issues (gun control, due process, NCAA sanctions, etc.), let us take a minute to remember the victims from both these tragic moments.


I was watching the movie Bobby yesterday, and this speech from Robert Kennedy played over the last eight minutes.  I was moved by it because 1) RFK is one of my favorite politicians and 2) I think, like Batman's quote, it rings more true now than ever.


I rarely speak politics, but this may come up later when our discussion of The Dark Knight Rises (TDKR) turns toward brief commentary.  [I say discussion because I hope you will comment (unlike on my last post), even if it's simply to add your outrage or agreement.]


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Let me just tell you where I stand on TDKR right off the bat.






That's right, TDKR gets my highest rating.  See my last post for a reminder of my critique system.  A 4-star movie can still be imperfect.  I can count on one and a half hands the number of perfect films I know. And even if TDKR were on the cusp of being perfect, the very few garbled lines from Sean Conne... er, Bane will keep me from assigning it as such.


It really wasn't a problem for me, despite being half-deaf.  I just need something to offer those who were not impressed by this motion picture.  If this film isn't a master class on acting, then it should be one on screenwriting, cinematography, editing, and self-awareness.


I will not recall the plot (like one of my traditional reviews).  Hopefully, if you're still reading, you've seen my spoiler warning, which serves another purpose in making sure I don't have to bother with the story.  That could take another hour of my time given the film's 165-minute running time.


Alas, the acting will not have to be defended here.  Unless you're Rex Reed, the film critic I am most at odds with both as a film critic and a filmgoer.  Even from those who are disappointed with Christopher Nolan's finale to the Dark Knight trilogy, the acting receives almost universal praise.


So where do most people find fault with this movie?  The screenplay.  "The fault, dear moviegoer, is not in the screenplay, But in yourself, that you are misguided."


Lord knows how much that last paragraph will get me into trouble.  "Pretentious," "arrogant," "off his rocker" they'll say.  But I don't see how anyone who watches the film with their expectations put aside would find this screenplay anything less than pretty good.  Expectations are only natural to have for a film like this and, furthermore, a filmmaker like Christopher Nolan. But I say that, indeed, Mr. Nolan gave us a product consistent with his story, vision, and previous films (including The Dark Knight, another 4-star film that is imperfect).


One criticism is the lack of a "compelling, complicated villain."  While Heath Ledger's Joker is one of cinema's all-time great villains, another villain like him would become tiresome in this film.  He represented chaos and anarchy in the last film.  He was no match for Batman physically.  His effectiveness came from his unpredictability, lack of cause, and mental prowess.  And Batman "won."  Yes, it took Batman pulling a Sydney Carton and eight years of reclusiveness, but the Joker lost.  


So we've seen Batman take on an enemy like that (maybe a second one, if we count Ra's al Ghul and ignore his cause).  What we haven't seen is an enemy that can cripple Batman physically.  We get that in Bane.  He represents the ultimate evil in my mind: evil with a cause.  Or so we think.  Is it just out of "love" for Miranda Tate/Talia al Ghul--whatever that means for him?  Or has he brought into The Process... er, League of Shadows? Whatever it is, he's compelled by something bigger than himself.  And that makes for the best of villains.


Another criticism of the writing was that the Nolan's introduced too many new characters and resorted to convention, using flashbacks and what-not. The Nolan's use of flashbacks is both reserved and consistent with Batman Begins. The Dark Knight saw an absence of this technique but that film had the advantage of dealing with a particular, brief, and fairly linear time in the life of Bruce Wayne/Batman.  What BB and TDKR were up against was that their stories covered many different times from the perspective of numerous characters.  And flashbacks can be very rewarding for viewers who pay attention or remember key scenes from the previous two films.  They offer a less boring way to advance or paint our characters (of the utmost importance for my sense of story) while offering emotional payoff to viewers.  (Can we all agree that whoever said "you don't have to see the first two"--this includes Mr. Nolan--sort of missed the mark?)


As for too many new characters, I can only offer the following:  since this story is about BW/Batman, this allows us to get a glimpse into his perspective.  If he's been Howard Hughes-ing for 8 years, what better way for the audience to understand this by having us play catchup along with him.  Also, it's only natural for new players to come into our lives.  Where were you 8 years ago?  Who were you with?  I know for us younger generation, we're in the midst of great change (graduating from all sorts of levels of schooling, trying to enter the workplace, starting new families, etc.).  So maybe some of you are past all that.  Or maybe some of you lead remarkably consistent lives.  Regardless, it happened from BB to TDK, and it happened from TDK to TDKR.  So, even if conventional screenwriting tells us to combine characters when necessary or to avoid flashbacks when possible, I hardly count these examples in TDKR as not having good reason for breaking these rules.


(On a side note:  in my screenwriting class, I was taught to avoid expository dialogue.  While this is a very good rule and the Nolan's violated it a few times in the movie, they sure know how to do it better than most.)


As for character's being inconsistent or their motivations shifting on a dime, that's really not something I can defend with 100% conviction, as it will depend upon each viewer.  In one of the few expectations/predictions I make for movies (and, more rarely, one that proved correct), I had a feeling Catwoman would realize the Bane/Talia plot was too evil, violent, and wrong.  The movie IMO gave us enough glimpses to see just why Selina Kyle had her turnaround.  And if you didn't buy these reasons, how about the fact that she just wanted to help a guy she had a thing for, the same guy whose life she had completely ruined?  Again, the whole issue with character motivations and driving action is usually a contentious point, one that is usually a matter of opinion.


How about the ending (aka, the last hour)?  If you felt it was predictable, I was taught one of the signs of good screenwriting is that the story usually has an ending that feels both unlikely and inevitable.  Again, just a matter of personal preference really.  If you felt things just happened too conveniently, I say that the script did an excellent job of setup/payoff.  We see details, hear dialogue, etc. that presents the information early on and comes about naturally.  [Like the autopilot thing;  it's not like they just said at the end, "Oh, hey, I discovered an autopilot feature you didn't tell me about."  We aren't so dumb to have to be shown everything.  We saw various other scenes where Bruce Wayne/Batman was making preparations or setting up schemes, so it doesn't require a wild leap of logic to assume that the autopilot was fixed.  And (I can't remember) if he did in fact lie about its functionality at the end, wouldn't it make sense for his grand scheme?]  If you felt that the social themes in the movie were lame--the good rich people open orphanages and all is right--, then I'd say that Nolan has gone on record (sorry I don't have a link for this claim) as saying while real-life social parallels may be present, they weren't intentional.  That may come across as a copout, but if true, then Bruce Wayne's legacy more than comes full circle.  It carries on the vision his parents had for Gotham.  It makes him a powerful symbol like the Batman.  For Nolan, the lynchpin of the trilogy comes early in BB.  (Read the link for an explanation.)


If we accept or recognize that scene's importance, then the ending is spot on.  Like Inception, the ambiguity at the end doesn't matter.  In Inception it really doesn't matter if the top keeps spinning. The point is, Cobb doesn't care.  He has let go.  (You see, Leo gets his chance to pull a Rose from Titanic.)  He is finally with his children, the thing he's wanted the most.  It's real enough for him.  Same with Batman.  Batman becomes an incorruptible symbol.  Not just someone to impersonate (hence why they included the scene of the copycat Batmans in TDK).  If someone carries on the symbol, that's fine.  If John Blake decides to become Robin, Nightwing, etc., that's fine, too.  But Bruce Wayne realizes what is important is for people see that true heroes are willing to do whatever it takes in the face of evil or for the love of an ideal or for whatever saccharine message you took away from the movie.


Those are the main criticisms I've read.  I beg of you to please give me some feedback.  Were these responses reasonable?  Terrible?  Any other points about the screenplay I didn't mention?


I focused on the screenplay because I have seen almost no criticisms about acting, technical aspects, etc.  Wally Pfister and Hans Zimmer were both at the top of their games.  The same could be said for Lee Smith (editing), keeping me engaged and coherent for all 165 minutes.  One note:  Wally Pfister will probably be absent from future Christopher Nolan ventures.  This is important because of Christopher Nolan's distinct visual style in his films.


Let us consider for a moment Nolan's place in the history of cinema.  I said after Inception he was our generation's Alfred Hitchcock. After TDKR, I am preaching it. By this, I mean he has his distinct visual style, storytelling methods, filmmaking techniques, familiar casts, and story types.  Most of his films are big on deception, both with regard to characters and the audience.  Sound like Hitchcock?  People like Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, Clint Eastwood, Woody Allen, and Ridley Scott are all great auteurs, but most of their films (especially their greatest ones, except Eastwood) have come before my generation was born. Tim Burton is really hit or miss for me.  David Fincher has to live with Alien 3 and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, otherwise his resume is right up there.  Quentin Tarantino may be the epitome of present-day auteur and the best dialogue writer of them all, but his films are also hit or miss for many folks. I can't really think of anyone else, so in addition to being my generation's Hitchcock, he is currently our generation's best filmmaker.


Does that make The Dark Knight trilogy the best of our generation?  What about all-time?  It's hard to compare genres, so this is tough.  Let's start with the original Star Wars trilogy.  For my money, The Dark Knight trilogy easily bests this.  The Empire Strikes Back is not the same movie for me that it is for most people.  Talk about a movie that suffers from pacing and expositional dialogue.  Those Dagobah scenes are the cure for insomnia.  The parallel action scenes/ending in Return of the Jedi is one of my all-time favorite movie moments and an obvious influence for Nolan's Dark Knight trilogy.  And while Star Wars is better than BB, the weaknesses of the second installment do that series in.  What about The Godfather trilogy?  In one of the few tired, borrowed lines I'll offer in this post, Part III really is that detrimental to the trilogy as a whole.  Here's a case where too many new characters becomes cumbersome.  They are to be expected given the time jump from Part II to Part III, though. But they are cumbersome in that we just don't care.  So much is at stake for the Corleone family in Parts I & II; not so much for Part III.


What about the LOTR trilogy?  Fans of the books are divisive about its merits.  That doesn't really concern me here.  It's a important debate, about how books and movie adaptations should function together, if at all. (Plus, what are we to do with the Extended Editions?) What does concern me is this:  the high points in the LOTR trilogy are at times better than the highs for the Dark Knight trilogy, but the low points for the Dark Knight trilogy are for the most part better than the lows for LOTR.  Admittedly, both trilogies offer very few lows.  But since the number of better highs for LOTR don't outnumber the highs in the Dark Knight trilogy by a great number, the standard then becomes which trilogy is better at its worst.  And for me, I can tolerate the Dark Knight trilogy lows more than those in LOTR.  Maybe it's because the story lows are steeped in a more relatable way.  Since story is so important, that's infinitely more weighted than the inconsistency in Gotham from BB to the latter two Dark Knight movies.  And I can't really hold the Rachel Dawes casting discrepancy against the trilogy, since it was in fact an upgrade in acting.  Maggie Gyllenhaal may sound more whiny, but at least she doesn't sound like she's just reciting lines.  So, for me right now, the Dark Knight trilogy is my favorite film trilogy.


A few other thoughts:


*The Stock Exchange scene took on a whole other dimension after hearing about the Aurora shooting.  While the incident admittedly never entered my mind after arriving at the theatre, it's chilling and devastating fallout was ever present during that scene.


As a matter of fact, Lisa Schwarzbaum had a very interesting article about how on-screen violence is becoming very disturbing for her.  I can't say I agree 100%, because like Christopher Nolan said, the movies theatre is a place I love to go, simply for the fact that we are removed, even if only for 80 or 180 minutes, from the world that surrounds us, transported to worlds as far away as other universes and galaxies or as near as our imagination.  I tend to remove myself from real life when I watch a film like this (the moment above aside).  But movies are great because they offer insight into the human condition.  From the depths of despair and evil to the peaks of greatness and heroism, they do in fact require some part of engagement (visceral and intellectual) from us. While she brings up some good points but without going into further detail, I do ultimately think it's a knee-jerk reaction.  What do you think?


*Maybe the ending to TDKR wasn't so original... Exhibit A.


*Sally Ride passed away yesterday. A very important figure for the space program.  I've always been a fan of NASA and space exploration.  So, I wanted to give a quick remembrance to one of the premiere figures for space programs.  Like the ones that give us this.  Or this.


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That's it.


In an attempt to get this all published today, I may have left out some key points or topics. (Although, unlike my last post, I wrote down about a page and a half of notes to reference while typing this.)  That's inevitable with a post like this.


I thank you for taking the time to read all this. I gave it my all, even if that meant some of the pseudo-political stuff at the beginning, so thank you for bearing with me.  I believe every link posted is important to my post/our discussion; please give them a view.


Whether we are in complete agreement or whether I have offended you to the core or whether we simply disagree, please let me hear from you.  I feel strongly about this movie, but I am not out to change minds or convince people they are wrong.  That's not what I am about.  I just enjoy a good old fashioned movie dialogue. 


P.S.  Tell your friends and invite them to join the conversation.


P.P.S.  I don't think I ever explicitly came out with it, so let me set the record straight: The Dark Knight Rises > The Dark Knight > Batman Begins for me, although I can't say right now how large the gap is between TDKR and TDK.

10 comments:

  1. I admit I had forgotten where you posted reviews, but I'm glad you reminded me. I thoroughly enjoyed your review, and I find myself completely agreeing and not offended. In fact, some of the review was very similar to our conversation on Friday, which I feel is now complete. Well done good sir.

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  2. OK, well, since I basically agree with you on every single point (and trust me, that's a rare blogosphere experience for me, especially when it comes to film discussion), and since you chose to focus on aspects of the film other than acting, I'm just going to gush about Anne Hathaway for a moment.

    When I first heard that Hathaway had been chosen to play my personal favorite Gothamite, once I had finished my 10-minute happy-happy-joy-joy jig, I started to wonder: can Anne pull this one off? Her frigid, brittle turn in Brokeback Mountain aside, Hathaway is known basically as America's Sweetheart. To say that Selena Kyle is a complex character is an understatement. In a city full of costumed freaks who are all clearly good or evil, Catwoman shifts sides and allegiances on a dime. She can be called many things, but sweetheart is not one of them.

    During her first five minutes or so on screen during DKR, I was worried. It seemed to me that she'd stepped straight off the set of Devil Wears Prada, donned a maid's uniform, and scurried into Wayne Manor, tail tucked between her legs. Uh oh.

    Then she says "Oops." WIth one syllable, her entire demeanor changes, and the audience realizes that sweet, bumbling Anne Hathaway was all an act. BRILLIANT! I never should have doubted you, Anne.

    Halle who?

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  3. I loved this review. I think you have done your homework, and done your best to take an objective view point. I am, however, disgusted that you didn't include the Pirate of the Caribbean or The Matrix trilogies in your discussions of great film trilogies (LOL).

    The performances in this film moved me. The camera angles, lighting, and the many monologues were powerful and connected and resonated with me. The plot, however, did not. Once again, it felt like the nature of humans to lean towards anarchy was championed by the villain and ultimately failed thanks to the work of the dedicated few (Extremely Similar to TDK).

    Point of contention one, for me, lies in the story structure following when Bane breaks Batman's back (at least he actually did in the comics). In 5 months, Bruce Wayne, on a prison diet with no proper PT, heals from a catastrophic back injury to the point where he can duel Bane again. Honestly, everything in that "5 month" period felt rushed and peripheral to reaching the ending.

    Point of contention two, for me, lies in the resolution of Bane's arc. In a matter of two scenes, Bane changes from the psychotic mastermind to love sick minion who is so unimportant he merits a death by simple "bat-grenade-to-the-chest". No final epic villainous speech, no dramatic death from a powerful batman karate chop (KA-POW!). It's just BOOM. Bane's dead. The unstoppable physical titan is dead, quick, we've got 15 minutes to get to the storybook ending before people leave the theatre.

    I thought it was a great movie, totally worth the outrageous ticket prices of today. It was far from a perfect movie, and just like the 'Star Wars' trilogy, I felt the second film of the Franchise was by far the strongest.

    Thanks for your hard work. This was a wonderful read.

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  4. I absolutely agree with everything you mentioned. And as cK said in the second comment, as soon as Hathaway said "Oops" I felt the chills crawl up my arm. She changed in an instant. Not to mention, the music change was superb as well (thanks, Hans!). I, for one, fully trusted Nolan's choice of Hathaway as Catwoman the day we first read the rumors. The rest of the acting was top-notch. Michael Caine just about brought me to a single, manly tear twice throughout the movie. Unfortunately, I felt that Tom Hardy wasn't allowed to shine as much as Inception or Warrior. Granted, he had a mask covering the majority of his face for the entire movie, I still felt like his acting was a little more comical than Hathaway or Bale. In particular, his monologue in front of Black Gate felt off. It almost seemed like they reshot that scene? I can't quite pinpoint my distaste with his role, but I still love him as an actor.

    I've seen the movie three times. That's what I love about Nolan movies. They -require- more than one viewing, or else you'll be left with questions about glaring 'plot holes' that are revealed to be anything but upon further viewings. Bane's motivation was always to help Talia, we simply didn't fully grasp that until she revealed herself. I actually read a good opinion piece on IGN of all places that explained numerous 'inconsistencies' with the movie that some people had with the movie. Selina Kyle never wanted widespread chaos, she simply wanted to...redistribute the wealth, similar to Robin Hood (as Bruce Wayne pointed out in the movie).

    And oh hellz yeah this is definitely a definitive film trilogy of our generation, along with LotR. Both are the epitome of story-telling, acting, editing, effects, and scoring.

    One thing I think a bunch of people have a problem with is distinguishing between the emotional closure of having main protagonists die and allowing -ourselves- to go on without the characters we've grown to love throughout the adventure. Many people expected Bruce to die (me being one of them). However, I understood why Nolan decided to allow Bruce Wayne to continue on without actually being...Bruce Wayne. Kyle and Wayne were actually after the same thing, effectively. Wayne figured that the only way to escape was through death, but Alfred was able to convince him otherwise.

    And I absolutely believe that Nolan might come back to Batman at some point in the future. Yes, this trilogy is closed. But there is plenty he could still explore as well as another billion dollars to be earned. ;)

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  5. Great comments so far.

    Nick: That initial conversation sparked many of these ideas. Glad you were a part of it.

    Clif: Count me surprised that we agree on so much. Comics aren't in my blood/background, and I tend to have very polarizing views given how much of a role these characters/stories can play in one's life.

    And the whole act Selina was pulling at the Wayne Manor party was perfect. We got to see a pretty good spectrum of Ms. Hathaway's acting chops.

    Ben: I must admit that when I watched the movie, it didn't dawn on me that his back recovery only took five months. I can be pretty oblivious that way.

    However, I got the feeling that the prison doctor he met had some element of mysticism about him. Not really supernatural remedies, but more along the lines of adapting very efficiently to his environment. After all, he's spent his entire life tending to such circumstances. Not really an excuse for the film, just my reasons for why that never bothered me.

    I will admit the Bane story arc only bothered me slightly in his quick demise. The whole "he was doing it for Talia" worked for me, because it grounded this formidable character. No matter how menacing or powerful you might be, we all have people that can control us. We got to see that with Bane.

    In that moment Talia became our biggest problem/concern, but his sudden demise did catch me off-guard; however, I reject the notion that his character deserved more than that (like in the following link: http://popwatch.ew.com/2012/07/21/batman-bane-catwoman-that-ending-time-to-talk-about-the-dark-knight-rises-but-only-if-youve-seen-it/).

    John: I think it's Bane's facial expressions during his outing-Harvey-Dent monologue that bother me.

    Christopher Nolan's films certainly merit more than one viewing. I remember when I saw "The Prestige" and "Memento" for the first time; each time, I immediately wanted to watch the movie again. Not just because I was like "huh" after both, but because there are layers to his characters/stories. So much that I say one viewing is not enough to unwrap them all.

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  6. Man oh man. Where to start. Thanks for, almost literally, pouring our your heart and soul into this writing. I wouldn't necessarily consider you a "fan boy," so it's nice to have another objective point of view to read.

    As you saw in my post, we agreed on a lot of things concerning TDKR. I can't say enough how much I enjoyed Hathaway and Caine's acting. It will be a shame if Michael Caine doesn't get nominated for some sort of acting award.

    I get where Nolan was going with giving Batman less screen time in this movie, but I don't have to like it. The recovery scenes in the prison were very reminiscent of BB, which made it feel a little rehashed for me at that point.

    Addressing Ben's comment, I feel like, as with all movies unless they are documentaries, at some point you have to suspend disbelief, even if just a little, so the story can carry on. Wayne's recovery time being included in that.

    I think Bane's quick demise was appropriate. I was never attatched to him as a villain the way I was with the Joker. I truly believe if Heath Ledger had not passed, the Joker's story would not have been over. Bane served his purpose; it was time to move the story along.

    I don't know if I'm ready to jump on your "greatest trilogy ever" bandwagon, but I will hop aboard the "Nolan Express." I'm hoping his sphere of influence is far reaching enough to help another certain super hero find his way back to the world of excellent movies. I definitely believe you are right on the money about his vision and "signature" being in every film he makes. I've grown to expect it, and find that to be one of the things I enjoy the most about his movies.

    I don't know if I'll see it again in theaters (2 kids can do that to you...time and money wise), but I do believe, just like all his other films, it will require multiple viewings to bring my thoughts full circle. Thanks again for your commentary!

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  7. I meant to post this earlier, but work got in my way.

    Like everyone else: I agree with a lot of what you wrote and disagree with most (if not all) critics of the film... but we knew that from "The Great TDKR/Scour Twitter and IMDB for Various Other Things Summit" this past weekend.

    I will say that while I understand why she might have written it, I disagree with Schwarzbaum on violence growing at the films. To me at least, the hand-to-hand violence was no worse than previous batman films (which was not complained about) and certain aspects that could have caused it to be as brutal as she plays it off was never quite shown on screen (broken bones; neck breaks if I remember correctly; for example) so it's almost less violent than she makes it sound.

    Also, OMG HANS ZIMMER DID IT AGAIN. It's the first soundtrack I've bought, which I think says a lot about it.

    Congrats on another great entry, and surpassing me with the longest blog post of the summer. I enjoyed it a lot (the former, that is).

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  8. I think your worries for causing offense are not necessary. Nothing you wrote could be take terribly offensive (well unless you are adie hard star wars or LOTR fan). However, the political dialogue, social ramifications, themes on justification, salvation, psychology, and legacy are all what make this movie so good. That and that Nolan translated those so well. I think a movie like this should spur us to look inward and around and reflect on the truth of the film and what Implications the themes might have on us practically.

    Like the recent discussion on banning certain types of weapons and Bruce Wayne's concern with releasing the nuclear reactor. He decided that whatever good would come out of it was outweighed by the potential for evil.

    If a movie like this has not caused offensive discussions, then it has not done its job.

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  9. I was interested to hear what other people said about the movie so I enjoyed reading your post.

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  10. Well done sir. Wonderful thoughts. Where as I hold the old gods of such immaculate trilogies as Star Wars and LOTR and would never incur their wrath by saying such things, I do agree that this is the first trilogy i would put in the same atmosphere as them.
    As a comic reader as well as a movie goer I bring different things to the table. Nolan used some fantastic source material for this trilogy. In fact much like The Avengers specific pictures were also frames of a comic book which i loved.
    Since it is a comic book movie I have these things to say to Ben: if suspension of disbelief would allow you to believe such things as a pit prison a man is able to climb out of then you shouldn't have issue with the back healing. This is a different world here. And seriously, how many comic's have you read? No villain ever actually dies. Also, Rhas AL Ghul is notorious for his immortality via Lazarus pools all over the world, it's no strech for Bane/Talia to use one too.
    As a person who was inspired by batman from a very early age I was horrified at the prospect of his death and was so present in the story that the thought of the autopilot didn't occur to me. From the moment when BW said the quote at the top of your blog to Gordon til the credits I wept. Why? Because to me and many others batman is the symbol Nolan sought for him to become in this trilogy. I felt something about batman i haven't felt since the first time i read the Knightfall comic arc (one that TDKR is based off of). This time was way different. Never before in my memory has batman experienced redemption or release from the guilt and responsibility laid on him by his parents murder. Sure Batman has be killed or banished or broken or shamed or anything else you can think of. He has never put down the cowl a redeemed and fulfilled man. That was the crowning achievement of this film.

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