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(2005) rt: 140m ****
Director: Christopher Nolan
Starring: Christian Bale, Katie Holmes, Michael Caine, Liam Neeson,
Morgan Freeman, Gary Oldman, Ken Watanabe, Rutger Hauer
I've never been a comic book guy.
Sure I had my fun with baseball cards and the Sunday Los
Angeles Times funnies, but I've always found dudes who read
comics to be kinda creepy. My perspective has changed somewhat in
the past couple of years as friends of mine whom I love and respect
have come out of the closet and admitted to their collections and
avid readership. I've even delved into one or more graphic novels
just to see what all the hubbub is about. I must say that I still
don't get it. Now TV I get, and this is where the vast majority of
my Batman exposure comes from. Whether it was the Batman cartoon,
The Superfriends
or the live action show with Adam West, I always liked Batman for
the very fact that he was just a normal dude with a fancy suit and
a belt full of gadgets. There were no radioactive spiders or red suns
to cloud the reality factor with this guy. Despite finding this a
great plus, I never really knew the back-story on this Bruce Wayne
guy. I got from the first Tim Burton Batman
that his parents were killed and this made him want to fight for justice.
Beyond that I knew very little. Batman Begins answered any
and every question (just about) that I'd want to ask about why Batman
is Batman. It's so comprehensive and well done that it honestly makes
me embarrassed for the others who have tried in the past (and it takes
a lot for me to feel bad for that hack, Joel
Schumacher). It makes you realize that all the other directors
took completely the wrong tack when approaching the subject matter.
Batman may be a comic book hero, but that doesn't make it necessary
to treat him like a goofball. The director of this version, Christopher
Nolan, plays it completely straight and manages to make not only a
great comic book movie, but a good film as well. This is
a long way from Memento for
Mr. Nolan, but he pulls it off as if he's been doing action/adventure
movies for years. The fact he can swing so wildly from tense indie
film to bleak drama (Insomnia),
to this grand scale action movie is quite impressive, and will undoubtedly
have the offers flooding in. Likewise for Christian Bale, who's been
one of those weird actors who seems to have everything going on, but
just hasn't broken through in the screen idol kind of way so many
other good-looking dudes have. I honestly find him a little distracting.
It seems as if he has a mouthguard in his grill at all times, and
he always seems to be covering up an accent by talking like a radio
dj. That's just me, of course, but given the fact the only part of
Batman that is visible when he's wearing the suit is his mouth, I
kind of started to fixate on it. Regardless, Bale does a good job
as Batman, and even seemed to bulk up for the role (especially after
dropping like a million pounds for his movie, The
Machinist). Unfortunately Katie Holmes' character is just
such a goodie-goodie, do-gooder, good for nothin' whatever that you
just want her to shut the heck up half of the time. She's damn lucky
she's cute (and dating Tom Cruise). It's also odd seeing Liam Neeson
in a very similar role that he played in Star
Wars: Episode I. He's like Bruce Wayne's Jedi master. He
teaches him all sorts of cool ninja-like fighting techniques (much
of them with swords) and tells him to overcome his fears in order
to gain strength. Sound familiar? Anyhow, this is all the stuff I
had no idea about Batman. I thought all of his power came from that
darn belt, but it turns out he's actually trained in the mystical
Eastern arts. It also turns out that all the cool gadgets come from
a Q-like character (James Bond reference) who just so happens to work
for The Wayne Corporation--in this case played by Morgan Freeman.
His whole bat obsession comes from a traumatic childhood experience
when he falls in a well and is swarmed by bats. Who knew? So it turns
out that there is no one bad guy in this version of the film; there
are many. Gotham city is aswarm with evildoers, and Batman/Bruce Wayne
is out to stop them all. Of course that's impossible and is one of
the many lessons Bruce learns in his dalliance. Oh, and the new batmobile,
despite looking kinda hokie in the commercials, turns out to be supercool.
the chase scenes with the thing are absolutely amazing. I could have
watched two hours of just that. The coolest part of the film is the
twist on the superhero myth. Which is the true man and who is truly
wearing the mask, Bruce Wayne or Batman? It isn't that interesting
out of context, but watch the movie and you'll realize that there
is something deeper going on here that really reaches places above
and beyond the usual superhero action flick. See it just to see Gary
Oldman play a normal schlub and Michael Caine play the best Alfred
ever. [MF, screening] |
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