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| Roger Ebert |
“Batman” isn’t a comic book anymore. Christopher Nolan’s “The Dark Knight” is a haunted film that leaps beyond its origins and becomes an engrossing tragedy.
It creates characters we come to care about. That’s because of the performances, because of the direction, because of the writing, and because of the superlative technical quality of the entire production. This film, and to a lesser degree “Iron Man,” redefine the possibilities of the “comic-book movie.”
“The Dark Knight” is not a simplistic tale of good and evil. Batman is good, yes, The Joker is evil, yes. But Batman poses a more complex puzzle than usual: The citizens of Gotham City are in an uproar, calling him a vigilante and blaming him for the deaths of policemen and others. And the Joker is more than a villain.
He’s a Mephistopheles whose actions are fiendishly designed to pose moral dilemmas for his enemies.
The key performance in the movie is by the late Heath Ledger, as
the Joker. Will he become the first posthumous Oscar winner since Peter
Finch? His Joker draws power from the actual inspiration of the
character in the silent classic “The Man Who Laughs” (1928). His
clown’s makeup more sloppy than before, his cackle betraying deep
wounds, he seeks revenge, he claims, for the horrible punishment his
father exacted on him when he was a child. In one diabolical scheme
near the end of the film, he invites two ferry-loads of passengers to
blow up the other before they are blown up themselves. Throughout the
film, he devises ingenious situations that force Batman (Christian
Bale), Commissioner Gordon (Gary Oldman) and District Attorney Harvey
Dent (Aaron Eckhart) to make impossible ethical decisions. By the end,
the whole moral foundation of the Batman legend is threatened.
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Batman and The Joker engage in a battle of wits in “The Dark Knight.”
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Because these actors and others are so powerful, and because the
movie does not allow its spectacular special effects to upstage the
humans, we’re surprised how deeply the drama affects us. Eckhart does
an especially good job as Harvey Dent, whose character is transformed
by a horrible fate into a bitter monster. It is customary in a
comic-book movie to maintain a certain knowing distance from the
action, to view everything through a sophisticated screen. “The Dark
Knight” slips around those defenses and engages us.
Yes, the special effects are extraordinary. They focus on the
expected explosions and catastrophes, and have some superb, elaborate
chase scenes. The movie was shot on location in Chicago, but it avoids
such familiar landmarks as Marina City, the Wrigley Building or the
skyline. Chicagoans will recognize many places, notably La Salle Street
and Lower Wacker Drive, but director Nolan is not making a travelogue.
He presents the city as a wilderness of skyscrapers, and a key sequence
is set in the still-uncompleted Trump Tower. Through these heights, the
Batman moves at the end of strong wires, or sometimes actually flies,
using his cape as a parasail.
The plot involves nothing more or less than the Joker’s attempts
to humiliate the forces for good and expose Batman’s secret identity,
showing him to be a poser and a fraud. He includes Gordon and Dent on
his target list, and contrives cruel tricks to play with the fact that
Bruce Wayne once loved, and Harvey Dent now loves, Assistant D.A.
Rachel Dawes (Maggie Gyllenhaal). The tricks are more cruel than he
realizes, because the Joker doesn’t know Batman’s identity. Heath
Ledger has a good deal of dialogue in the movie, and a lot of it isn’t
the usual jabs and jests we’re familiar with: It’s psychologically more
complex, outlining the dilemmas he has constructed, and explaining his
reasons for them. The screenplay by Christopher Nolan and his brother
Jonathan (who first worked together on “Memento”) has more depth and
poetry than we might have expected.
Two of the supporting characters are crucial to the action, and
are played effortlessly by the great actors Morgan Freeman and Michael
Caine. Freeman, as the scientific genius Lucius Fox, is in charge of
Bruce Wayne’s underground headquarters, and makes an ethical objection
to a method of eavesdropping on all of the citizens of Gotham City. His
stand has current political implications. Caine is the faithful butler
Alfred, who understands Wayne better than anybody, and makes a decision
about a crucial letter.
Nolan also directed the previous, and excellent, “Batman Begins”
(2005), which went into greater detail than ever before about Bruce
Wayne’s origins and the reasons for his compulsions. Now it is the
Joker’s turn, although his past is handled entirely with dialogue, not
flashbacks. There are no references to Batman’s childhood, but we
certainly remember it, and we realize that this conflict is between two
adults who were twisted by childhood cruelty — one compensating by
trying to do good, the other by trying to do evil. Perhaps they
instinctively understand that themselves.
Something fundamental seems to be happening in the upper realms
of the comic-book movie. “Spider-Man II” (2004) may have defined the
high point of the traditional film based on comic-book heroes. A movie
like the new “Hellboy II” allows its director free rein for his
fantastical visions. But now “Iron Man” and even more so “The Dark
Knight” move the genre into deeper waters. They realize, as some
comic-book readers instinctively do, that these stories touch on deep
fears, traumas, fantasies and hopes. And the Batman legend, with its
origins in film noir, is the most fruitful one for exploration.
In his two Batman movies, Nolan has freed the character to be a
canvas for a broader scope of human emotion. For Bruce Wayne is a
deeply troubled man, let there be no doubt, and if ever in exile from
his heroic role, it would not surprise me what he finds himself capable
of doing.
RATING: 4 Stars
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Roger Ebert, a Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic, is a syndicated columnist based at the Chicago Sun-Times.
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