Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight Rises completes
not only his personal trilogy focusing on socialite Bruce Wayne and his
alter ego, Gotham City's caped crusader, but also a cycle of popular
culture that began in May 1939 when Batman was added to Detective
Comics' pantheon of superheroes
Batman's creator Bob Kane and his fellow comic-strip artists were all admirers of Fritz Lang's
German movies, the forerunners of film noir, but this did not prevent
them from becoming the object of a ferocious assault by Eisenhower-era
moralists bent on suppressing horror comics during a crusade led by the
psychiatrist Fredric Wertham. His 1954 book, Seduction of the Innocent, attacked Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson's menage as a covert celebration of homosexuality. Ten years later, however, when Susan Sontag's seminal essay Notes on Camp promoted kitsch and the idea of "it's good because it's bad", Batman became a TV series in garish comic-strip colour and was followed by a tongue-in-cheek film version and a revival of the low-budget 1943 Batman serial, all 15 chapters being shown back-to-back to open London's latest super cinema.
By 1989 the comic strip had been elevated to the status of "graphic novel", and Tim Burton
invited us to give up our search for the inner child and find our dark
sides in Michael Keaton's Batman, a Hamlet-like malcontent. Then, in the
wake of 9/11, Nolan followed his complex Memento and Insomnia by
reviving a now-moribund franchise. To misquote Scott Fitzgerald, he
embarked on the search for the soul of the dark knight where it is
always three o'clock in the morning. In 2005's Batman Begins he provided a new account of the creation myth, adding some kung fu, a touch of Da Vinci Code conspiracy and a dash of Bond to Kane's 1939 account of Bruce Wayne's orphaning. It was followed in 2008 by The Dark Knight, in which Heath Ledger
takes the story to exhilarating heights of terror as the demonic Joker,
an implacable enemy of Batman and mankind, part Lucifer, part Loki,
part Osama bin Laden.
On either side of The Dark Knight, Nolan made The Prestige and Inception,
films of exceptional brilliance, more individual in being free of the
particular expectations of a franchise, but still pursuing personal
preoccupations about identity, masks and lethal, morally confused games
that also figure in the Batman films. The intellectually challenging
final film, The Dark Knight Rises, sets out to reconcile issues
raised in the first two. It brings Wayne's story to a suitably epic
conclusion while at the same time offering the dramatic imbroglios,
action set pieces, twists and surprises the form demands. To keep the
franchise on ice rather than consigning it to the morgue, The Dark Knight Rises necessarily weaves a certain ambiguity into the ending.
In a spectacular opening, far superior to the not dissimilar pre-credit sequence Roald Dahl devised for the 1967 Bond movie You Only Live Twice,
a plane used by the CIA for extraordinary rendition of alleged
terrorists is hijacked in mid-air by a larger aircraft. Liberated by the
manoeuvre is Bane (Tom Hardy), a muscular menace wearing a half-mask
containing a voice box and an analgesic device that eases his constant
pain. He's an associate of the League of Shadows, the ancient eastern
conspiratorial cult to which a mysterious stranger (Liam Neeson)
initiated Bruce Wayne in Batman Begins and which Wayne renounced as a gang of fascistic vigilantes.
Physically Bane resembles Hannibal Lecter and Darth Vader, and the
artificial voice box makes his speech difficult to follow. This
introduces a problem that runs through the film (or at least the version
shown to the press last week). Perhaps for inscrutably perverse
reasons, though more likely a fault in the balance between speech and
Hans Zimmer's hyper-percussive score, much of the dialogue is
unintelligible. This would be all right in most epics (who wouldn't want
John Wayne's line "Truly this man was the son of God" lost by
thunder?), but not here.
Christian Bale
has never been more baleful than as the crippled Wayne, eight years as a
recluse in Wayne Manor, tended by the faithful family butler and
surrogate father, Alfred (Michael Caine).
Having taken the rap for the late Gotham DA, Wayne is the disgraced
hero in exile, much like Philoctetes, the Greek archer who Ulysses must
entice back to end the Trojan war. Having started in this classic role,
the film's dramatic arc transforms Batman into a self-sacrificial Sydney
Carton, and indeed there are numerous evocations of Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities, including the parallels drawn between the chaos of Gotham City and the reign of terror that followed the French revolution.
What
faces Gotham is a nihilistic movement spearheaded by Bane and assisted
by capitalist interests and bankers. It starts with an assault on the
Stock Exchange, continues with the theft of a nuclear device, and leads
up to a familiar countdown to annihilation. Bane represents himself as a
liberator but he's really a destroyer, a deceiver of a weak, easily
misled populace. The contemporary parallels are clear, though the
underlying politics are somewhat confused. One supposes that Nolan's
views are not unlike Shakespeare's (or Dickens's) – a loathing of people
acting as a mob, a deep suspicion of politicians and a belief in the
preservation of social order in a fluctuating world.
Anyway, Bale
remains a strong moral presence. The established figures around him,
mostly played by British actors – Caine's Alfred, Morgan Freeman's
equivalent of Bond's Q, Gary Oldman's Commissioner Gordon – do their
standard stuff. Of the newcomers, Joseph Gordon-Levitt (who has a strong
resemblance to Heath Ledger) is excellent and endearing as an honest
young cop, and one would guess he'd be a significant figure were the
franchise to be renewed. The new female leads, Marion Cotillard (rich
philanthropist) and Anne Hathaway
(Catwoman in all but name), have little to get their claws into. The
special effects are often breathtaking, especially an overhead view of
Gotham City in meltdown. The production designers have done a first-rate
job. Wally Pfister's photography is uncompromisingly Stygian. A pity
about the dialogue, but I'm sure something can be done about it, and
maybe it works in the Imax form for which it was made. That being said, The Dark Knight Rises has an intelligence, epic thrust and visual grandeur far beyond its present box-office rival, Joss Whedon's Avengers Assemble.
www.guardian.co.uk
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2 comments:
Good review. What a shame yours was not the Guardian's 'first' review of this film; instead we got Xan Brooks taking us through most of the plot.
I would like to say too how offended I was at Xan Brooks, Peter Bradshaw and Catherine Shoard's smug dismissal of commenter's objections to Brooks' review as the misled, knee-jerk reaction of 'fanboys' on their 'Guardian Film Show'. Brooks' review was plainly full of spoilers and, ok, you all work together and feel the need to defend each other professionally but that went too far.
Great review!
Chris Nolan ended his trilogy in style. Chris Bale was at his best as Bruce Wayne and Anne was great as Selina as well.
Check out my review .
Cheers!
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