Monday, September 28, 2020

Batman & Mr. Freeze: SubZero Review

 

Out of all the Batman films that have come out during my entire lifetime, this is the first movie that I saw when I was a child. I feel it’s more poetic since this is the last entry for the Bat-centric month of September. I remember my parents and I were in the local Blockbuster and the cover caught my eye. I enjoyed it since it had both Batman and Robin. As well as being entertaining.

Now, 20 some years later, I think it’s a weak follow up after Mask of the Phantasm. It barely reaches feature length. Meaning that its an hour and 10 minutes long. I think its interesting that it was supposed to be a tie-in with the live-action film Batman and Robin. To put it bluntly, Warner Bros. delayed SubZero since they probably didn’t want the film to be associated with the stinker. Both films had the villain Mr. Freeze and Batgirl but the animated one was way more mature than the George Clooney one. SPOILERS will appear in the review.

1.      Story

The film is fairly simple, Mr. Freeze is living quietly in the arctic with an Inuit boy and his wife Nora, I'll elaborate on her. A submarine crashes into the abode and causes Freeze to kill those aboard the sub.

Meanwhile in Gotham, Freeze finds his old associate Gregory Belson who bargains with him to help cure his wife. They both research that the wife has a rare blood type and finds that Barbara Gordon, Batgirl, has the same blood Freeze's wife has. I kind of found it odd during the moment Belson and Freeze were finding blood donors, Barbara just so happened to be the same height and have the same blood as Nora.

As Barbara and Dick Grayson, Robin, are out at a club, Mr. Freeze crashes the party and kidnaps Barbara. Batman and Robin mount a rescue mission and attempt to stop Mr. Freeze. I feel that the film should have been in the animated series as a two-part episode. Since the stakes are high but not something that involves Gotham.

There’s only so much to talk about the plot since it lacks the levity of what Phantasm had.

2.      Mr. Freeze

Aside from the Joker, the villain Mr. Freeze had his entire origin rewritten in the animated series and has been considered one of the best Batman villains. In the comics prior, he appeared as an atypical zany villain that was part of Batman’s rogues who wasn’t supposed to be taken seriously. When the animated series came out, showrunners Paul Dini and Bruce Timm changed the character's origins drastically. Which can still be seen in different medium such as video games and in the stinker Batman and Robin.

Freeze was a scientist who had a wife named Nora who was suffering from a disease. He cryogenically frozen her until he found a cure. He was turned into the villain when a shady humanitarian pushed him into chemicals which made him only survive in the bitter cold. While he never craved domination, he only resorted to extreme acts of violence to find a cure for his wife. He appeared in three episodes in Batman: The Animated Series and in one episode in the spinoff Batman Beyond.

He demonstrates the violence, but he isn’t alone in the movie. As I mentioned before, Gregory Belson was an associate for Freeze. He assists with helping him when the villain tempts Belson with a clump of gold. It’s established that Belson was in financial hole that he takes the gold and helps Freeze.

3.      Bad CGI

I know that the film was released in ’98, but I feel that the use of CGI was really forced. I find it hard to believe that Disney, who pioneered CG with computer animation made the use of computer imagery and traditional animation coalesce. Although, it looks half-assed and inconsistent in this one. For instance, the beginning has the submarine be CGI including the arctic environment. When it breaches Freeze’s home there’s a shot where the top of submarine is a matte painting.  

Now, I can understand that the budget isn’t in the millions, but I don’t understand the insistence of implementing CGI. I would’ve liked it if it had played it straight with just having it be traditionally animated. I think the worst example is when the dynamic duo are about to takeoff to rescue Barbara. The Batplane looks okay, but why is Alfred CG’d? When he appears, he looks stiff. I wonder if they tried to animate him traditionally, but it didn’t look quite right. That’s just my theory.

Overall

            As a direct to video movie, its okay. Most of the complaints I have are just mainly on the visual aesthetics. Such as the film having a 1940s vibe but clashing with the 90s. I would’ve wanted to be just as good as Mask of the Phantasm. Though I can see why it was originally supposed to be a tie-in with a lesser movie. It’s a good Batman movie but not one of the best.

            Batman and Mr. Freeze: SubZero gets a 3 out of 5.

Saturday, September 26, 2020

State From The Top #3

     Howdy everyone, it's that time again to let you guys know what I'm planning to do for October. A thought occurred that the holiday called Halloween is on the last day of that month. So, I thought, why not review some horror movies. Not just basic horror movies, but the ones that redefined the genre and are beloved. 

    So here's the plan. I am going to do the unthinkable and do two reviews in one week. Now, I'll do an Underrated Gems in the first day of October, but I have yet to pick which one exactly to talk about. I plan to do it where each week will consist of a decade. The second week will be about the 60s and continuing to the 90s. With the last day being dedicated to one for the 2000s.

    This might be a challenging endeavor for me since I'm going to inundate myself with so much horror that I'll be numb to any startling thing. If anything were to happen such as a change in schedule, you'll be the first to hear it. With that, here's the schedule

October 1st- Underrated Gems: Drag Me to Hell

October 5th- Psycho

October 9th- Rosemary's Baby

October 12th- Halloween

October 16th- The Exorcist

October 19th- The Thing

October 23rd- A Nightmare on Elm Street

October 26th- Jacob's Ladder

October 30th- Scream

October 31st- Hereditary


Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Underrated Gems: Batman: Mask of the Phantasm

 


            So when creating the Bat-month schedule, I initially forgot that the month had one more week. With that, you guys are getting two Batman animated films that I watched growing up. For now, I will talk about the caped crusader’s first animated film Batman: Mask of the Phantasm. SPOILERS will appear in the review.

            To give a short background on this movie, I have to talk about the animated series the movie is based around. Batman: The Animated Series is considered by many to be one of the best animated series ever. It resembled the old Superman shorts from Paramount and Fleischer Animation Studios. By giving Batman a noir and art deco feel in Gotham City. It felt very mature without it feeling adult. It’s surprising that it was geared towards kids, such as myself when I saw it syndicated on Cartoon Network.

1.      Story

The film mirrors the series since it feels like an extended episode. So the film starts off as Batman breaks a gangster meeting. One of them escapes and encounters a new vigilante, The Phantasm. While never named in the movie, it kills the gangsters one by one. Leaving many including the police to believe that Batman is responsible. Thankfully, another subplot deals with Bruce Wayne’s youth when he was dating via flashback.

The use of the flashbacks shows how Bruce wanted to maintain a normal life and being a vigilante. We see a very personal look on Bruce that we’ve never seen so far during the Tim Burton films that came out earlier. Kevin Conroy voices and he does a great job playing Bruce Wayne. This is probably the most emotional we've seen Bruce in any Batman film. Until he gets triggered by Superman when he says his mother's name. 

What I didn’t like was how Batman’s main villain, The Joker, was used. Mind you, Mark Hamill voices the clown prince of crime so perfectly. I felt it was too convenient that he was the bodyguard for the gangsters that were hustling Andrea’s father. No joke, there's a scene where Batman took a photo from Andrea's apartment, he notices one of the gangsters looking like The Joker by drawing a smile.  I feel that it is my main complaint, I would’ve want it where Batman is going against the new vigilante without being hold back by an established villain.

2.      Bruce and Andrea

While the best moments include Batman. The scenes that have Bruce and Andrea are just tragic. It feels refreshing to see Bruce Wayne be happy. I feel that in a sense of fate either a thunderstorm or a swarm of bats always have to knock the couple from being realized. Aside from that, when they are their alter-egos, they are near similar.

 For Batman, the reason he fights crime is that he doesn’t want to see another young boy lose his parents as he did. For Andrea, she dons the costume to kill the gangsters who murdered her father. The scene where Bruce finally dons the batsuit shocks his butler Alfred in horror, as he looks nearly like the Phantasm. As I mentioned, it would’ve been better if they both met more than once. 

3.      Why did it bomb?

To say that Walt Disney animated films dominated the nineties is massively an understatement. Warner Bros. animated films struggled severely in making a profit. The movies they released were mixed in terms of reception. Both Mask of the Phantasm and The Iron Giant are beloved by many but, were marketed so poorly that they bombed financially. Warner tried to match Disney’s princess formula with Quest for Camelot  and Thumbelina but failed miserably.

            Lastly, it was requested that at the last minute Warner wanted the film to be released in theaters. Which is another reason why it bombed. I feel that it should not have been marketed to kids. At least to a teenage or young adult audience. Hell, it opened with the Warner Family Entertainment logo with Bugs Bunny. Talk about a tone shift times ten.

4.      Overall

With that being said, Batman: Mask of the Phantasm is probably the best Batman film in animation and live action. It manages to show a personal Bruce Wayne being tortured with a life he wants to have but can't. It’s an animated film that deserves to be watched and is a great companion piece to the DC Animated Universe.

Batman: Mask of the Phantasm gets a four out of five.

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

The Dark Knight Rises Review

 


I always felt that the series was originally going to be a two-part saga. It felt obligatory to Christopher Nolan that he at least make a final entry, just to have a trilogy under his belt and rake in more cash for Warner. I consider this one to be the weakest of the bunch. Mind you it’s not bad or a slog. Although, it was always a hurdle to try to outdo The Dark Knight, especially have a villain that can make an impact just like the Joker. With that The Dark Knight Rises is a good conclusion to a trilogy that is considered the best. SPOILERS will appear in the review.

1.      Story

The film takes place eight years after the events of The Dark Knight. Commissioner Gordon instates a law called the Dent act which imprisons all criminals without hearing to jail. Amid that, a domestic terrorist with connections to the League of Shadows named Bane invades Gotham City to “liberate” it from the affluent. Unbeknownst to the civilians, he brings a bomb that will destroy the city.

            Meanwhile, earlier Selina Kyle steals fingerprints from Bruce Wayne in exchange for an expunge system to wipe her criminal record. The fingerprints were used in connection with Bane to blow up parts of the city and to not let any civilian to leave.

            Between the three of the films, this one was very plot heavy. Extremely interconnected due to Bane and having to know who exactly the League of Shadows are. Though I feel that it is a downgrade with what happened in the last one as Joker just subverting everything and being unpredictable. That’s what I think is missing, the unpredictability and a villain who actually puts Batman through the ringer. Bane does so but, well I’ll elaborate it.

2.      Bane

The entire marketing showed Bane being a formidable villain. It was a near impossible job to outdo Joker. Tom Hardy does a good job portraying the villain. They somehow made his iconic mask which in the comics is a luchador-esque mask into a breathing apparatus. For most of the film, he looked as he commanded his own army.

My favorite scene of him includes his first fight with Batman. The fighting is very gritty with no music playing. Batman tries everything but he couldn’t beat Bane. I was not expecting the scene of Bane breaking Batman’s back to ever make its way into the silver screen. They did it and, it looks silly. I think it works in the comics since, the villain was juiced up with a drug called venom, which is how he got his ungodly strength. But when you have a series grounded in reality, I just couldn’t buy a very buff man picking up another man and breaking his back.

I might as well include the character Miranda Tate in Bane’s tab since she goes by the name Talia al Ghul. Watching it the first time, I had no idea who the character was, mind you I didn’t read the comic books or the animated series or watch Batman Begins. Watching it now, there are subtle clues to her real motives. One scene in which Bruce, Lucius, and “Miranda” visit Wayne Enterprises new reactor. When mentioned that the reactor can be turned into a weapon, a music sting and subtle face tic that Talia has, made it clear that she is the bad guy.

It would’ve been appropriate to have Talia be introduced in the sequel instead of just being the new CEO of Wayne’s company for the sake of the movie. I guess I have so much grievance on Bane since I wanted him to be better than Joker. Hell, he gets killed by Selina. I guess that’s why I feel that this is the weakest in the trilogy.

Lastly, Talia’s character played by Marion Cotillard, she was actually the antagonist in Nolan’s film Inception, I feel that she got herself typecast in Nolan’s filmography.

3.      The Dark Knight Formula

After watching the trilogy in order and pondering about it, I noticed the formula in terms of how it handles villains and other story threads. For the villains, it always has someone who is working for someone and gets deposed of. In Begins, Falcone works with Ra’s, gets turned insane by Scarecrow. The Dark Knight has Lau working with the Mob, along with Gambol getting killed by the Joker. This one has Daggett working with Bane, getting killed by him through strangulation. Not that its bad to repeat, but it was something that I noticed and actually paid attention to.

It’s something brief that I felt should be warranted attention.

4.      Suspension of Disbelief

The third act of the film is where I originally had some problems. Not the final fight or the Gotham City PD going against Bane’s army. It’s after when Batman gets the bomb away from Gotham when it blows up in the sea. There’s a moment where the audience is left to assume that Batman/Bruce died. I for one would’ve liked if Bruce sacrificed himself to the city as one last noble act. But, when Lucius goes to R&D to make sure if the Bat vehicle still had autopilot problems, the workers told him it was repaired. Thus, making any attempt or interpretation of Alfred seeing Bruce with Selina a hallucination obsolete since Bruce wasn’t piloting the Bat.

I feel that the entire picking apart the final moment feels like a nondebatable situation to accept regardless of how anyone feels. It’s not so much as how exactly Bruce tracked down Alfred and be within sight of seeing his butler, but more on Alfred having to see Bruce finally have a comfortable life without being Batman. As well as having Wayne escape from the pit and making his way to the isolated Gotham. It’s established in Begins that he managed to travel around without any money and be able to survive before joining the League.

One last thing is Bruce having a motorized knee brace giving his knee strength to break concrete. It was dumb, but hey it’s a comic book movie not a work of art.

5.      The Trilogy as it is

Without a doubt, The Dark Knight Trilogy belongs to a very exclusive club in terms of best three film series such as the original Star Wars Trilogy, Back to the Future, and The Lord of the Rings. Each film keeps the stakes high and makes this interpretation of Batman so beloved. Christopher Nolan had a vision he wanted to tell and managed to pull it off successfully. I don’t think any superhero, or any future interpretation of the caped crusader can’t come close to what Nolan did. Sure, another actor can be better than Christian Bale, but the overall grounded realism and believability can’t be matched.

6.      Overall

This one is a good conclusion to a Batman story. It does falter on some points but, the overall emotional investment with the characters and the story makes it a worthy final chapter of Batman’s adventure. I still believe that The Dark Knight was supposed to be the final movie in the saga, though it just felt right to have a third movie. Rises didn’t try to be bigger than the last one, which manages to be good with its sum of its parts.

The Dark Knight Rises gets a four out of five. 

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

The Dark Knight Review

 


When the sequel was announced, there was some hype for it. I was interested in watching it since it had the Joker on it. Mind you, I didn’t watch Batman Begins to realize that it was part of the plan. When the death of Heath Ledger popped up in the news, the hype started to pick up. After the movie came out, some students in my middle school became Batman fans and a few dyed their hair green. It was quite literally, the talk in the cafeteria. With that, The Dark Knight is one of the best sequels and one of the best Christopher Nolan films he has made. SPOILERS will appear in the review.

1.      Story

The film picks up where the last one left. The criminal underworld of Gotham is afraid of the Batman. Until an unknown called the Joker, starts to subvert the mob and test the limits of the dark knight. While that’s the main framing story, it’s probably the most complex in any comic book film. Due in large part that the Joker is, no pun intended, a wild card. Since Bruce believes that he is just a regular criminal, the Joker continues to defy his expectations. I’ll elaborate further on the character.

 The subplots involve Bruce Wayne believing that the new District Attorney Harvey Dent to be the new hero that Gotham deserves. There’s a scene where Harvey and Rachel are out for dinner. Rachel is now played by Maggie Gyllenhaal. Bruce appears with a date and starts to have dinner with his friend and Dent. Bruce talks but when Harvey speaks throughout, he thinks that he can be the successor to him in terms of delivering justice.

Amid all that, Harvey doesn’t like the fact that Jim Gordon has crooked cops working with him. I’ll elaborate more when I talk about the Joker. Speaking of.

2.      Joker

This character changed how comic book villains are done in film. Played by Heath Ledger, he is the most intimidating adversary and antagonist I have seen. His leitmotif is the most haunting composition in the film. The ending moments of the interrogation in the police department, where he tells Batman the location of Rachel and Dent, shows just how twisted he is. By giving the wrong location and sending Batman to rescue Harvey. The music piece appears when Harvey is pleading to Rachel, shows just how dirty the Joker is.

Like I mentioned earlier how he subverts the mob, he, as stated in the film, is all for chaos. He could care less about the money and literally burns it when he brings in the man who was keeping all of it in Hong Kong. He even tests the Batman. Everything the Joker does in terms of killing and assassination attempts, Batman introduces new ways that from his view are ways to stop him but are many red flags. Such as when Lucius Fox says that his sonar tech that he developed was being used to find where Joker is. He threatened to leave and want no part of the operation since he believed it was unethical.

Lastly, the villain changed Harvey. During the assassination attempts, Dent kidnaps one of the Joker’s henchman. We start to see the twisted side of Dent by playing chance on the henchman. It is even exacerbated when Harvey gets injured and the Joker visits him in the hospital. Triggering Harvey to be an opposite of the Joker, by having him be an opposite of chaos and being the one to restore order.

Overall, Heath Ledger’s Joker won him an academy award posthumously. He absolutely deserved it. There were attempts to recreate this interpretation such as in the animated series “Young Justice” but it just didn’t work. Years later, Joaquin Phoenix would win an academy for best actor in, well Joker. Heath’s interpretation of the antagonist was and is a zeitgeist in the Batman rogue’s gallery.

3.      2008, for better and worse.

When the film came out in 2008, another film would also come and altered the comic book genre. Iron Man came out of nowhere and no one would’ve anticipated what that film was leading to. I will always attest that in terms of comic book films, 2008 brought in change that will bring the genre to be taken seriously. The Dark Knight brought the genre to be considered legitimate and Iron Man began with the idea of an interconnected universe.

Now for the worse, I always guessed that Warner Bros. saw how successful Nolan’s trilogy was doing in terms of box office numbers and critical reception and took in the wrong lessons. Such as giving director Zack Snyder the keys to adapt Superman. The overall darkness approach that worked with Batman doesn’t apply to the Kryptonian. More so on DC’s interconnected universe which at the beginning had a surface area level of a brooding and dark tone. Someday I’ll review Man of Steel, for now let’s continue.

4.      Pros

With all that said, this is one of my favorite films. It never feels that is dragging or just slow, stuff keeps happening and its kinetic as hell. I love the new batsuit. Finally, Batman can move his neck. To put in perspective, the previous films from the late 80s through the 90s had the suit with no neck movement. Making Batman move like a tank and making the movement weird in fight scenes.

The copy that I have on Blu-Ray contained scenes that was filmed on IMAX cameras. The whole bank robbery and police escort chase successfully utilized the cameras. My favorite scene has to be the bank robbery. It’s a simple setup but I love how it builds and shows who the Joker is. As well as how he thinks. The fact that the Joker tells the robbers to kill the other robbers just shows how the villain could care less about them.

5.      Cons

Like any film, this one was not perfect. It’s shocking how The Dark Knight is beloved by a lot including myself, but I have some legitimate criticisms of it. First, I feel that most of Harvey scenes when he was Two-Face could have at least been saved for a sequel. I feel that the whole movie hinged on the Joker and when he was captured a second time, the film could at least gain some closure and cut to credits. With Two-Face, it feels like padding to squeeze out the last remaining plot thread.

The ending as well is where I have issues. After Batman saves Gordon’s young boy from Harvey, Batman tells Gordon that the public can’t know what Harvey became. That everything that had happened to the city was because of the Batman. I never really understood why he went with that thinking. I mean, it would be one thing to tell the public that Harvey was corrupted by the Joker. Or that everything that had happened was just the Joker. I feel that it could’ve been rewritten or thought out more clearly.

6.      Overall

So, this movie is rightfully one of the best sequels in cinema. It’s hard to be a sequel with expectations to be bigger and better than the first one. I think since there wasn’t any lofty hopes with this one that when it came out, it was beloved on opening night. Christopher Nolan and screenwriter David Goyer changed a genre that has warranted to be taken seriously. Without a doubt, this is one of the best Batman movies of all time.

The Dark Knight gets a Five out of Five.


Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Batman Begins Review

 

      Batman has quite a cinematic journey. People tend to think that Michael Keaton was the first actor to portray the caped crusader. In actuality, Adam West was the first when he starred in Batman: The Movie. The film acted as a feature length extension of the Batman series that was airing in the sixties. There wouldn’t be another Batman film for twenty-three years. Tim Burton and Warner Bros. released Batman in 1989. This adaptation portrayed the dark knight as a gritty hero. Most people had a notion of the great detective as a campy superhero, when in reality, his comics were dark and gritty.

       Burton’s film was a massive success and was part of a loaded ‘89 summer blockbuster which included hits such as Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and Dead Poets Society to name a few. The financial achievement of the adaptation prompted an animated series to be created. The sequel Batman Returns was the start of the slow downturn of Batman films. While it was well received with critics, it made less than the first one. The film was littered with Burton’s macabre motif that may have contributed to the low box office.

       Since the series was a money maker at Warner, the executives decided to give Joel Schumacher a shot to direct the next sequel. Batman Forever was quite literally the exact opposite of the former two. For instance, Gotham City was now more colorful, and the villains were way over the top. The overall feel and tone of the sequel is inconsistent of what had come before. The film contained aspects that made it more family friendly and harkened back to the Adam West series.

       Eventually, the success of the series can only go so far. Batman and Robin is considered one of the worst comic book movies of all time. The failure of the film was not entirely the director’s fault. Behind the scenes, the executives wanted Schumacher to make the sequel more “toyetic”. Meaning that the studio wanted to make toys to sell to kids. Hilariously, the villain Poison Ivy says this exact quote which only projects the studio’s want by saying, “I’m a lover, not a fighter. That’s why every Poison Ivy action figure comes complete with him!” The film was a disaster and an unintentional parody of the series. It promptly killed the franchise.

      There would be years until the next Batman will make its way back into theaters. Warner tapped director Christopher Nolan to direct a new Batman film. He started making a name for himself with the mind-bending film Memento. Batman Begins managed to save the brand’s image and reinvent the hero. There will be SPOILERS in the review.

1.      Story

            Since it has Begins in the title, the film is a reinterpretation of the Batman origins. The film starts with a nonlinear approach by switching from Bruce’s youth to him getting training with a group called the “League of Shadows”. What is interesting is that this is the first time we see Batman get an origin story. For Batman in ’89, we get flashbacks of Bruce’s parents death but never a concise look of just how the inspiration came from.

            When Wayne makes it back to Gotham, I feel that it is more interesting. We see just how Bruce is different from the affluent side of the city. As well as using his company to equip himself to be the caped crusader. Even throw in a shell company to at least be realistic with the film’s approach. We have the usual villain pop up. Although, I feel that it was too convenient that Scarecrow is in cahoots with Ra’s Al Ghul. 

2.      Grounded Realism.

            To put it in perspective, this was literally the opposite of Fox’s X-Men series and Sony’s Spider-Man series. It really utilized the grounded realism so perfectly. The gear and tech make this Batman so realistic. When Bruce was training with the league. I felt that most of what the members used, prompted Bruce to emulate the same weapons that the league was using. Like I mentioned earlier, the way Bruce gets most of the suit was a bit ingenious. Since, I would hardly believe that he would create the batsuit from raw materials. Just the fact that the Wayne Company would have the suit gathering dust made sense for Bruce to snoop around.

            Now, the batmobile is a tank of a car. I feel that it tried to be different from what came before, but amplifying to eleven. Hell, it’s called the Tumbler. The other interpretation of the car looked streamlined up until the Schumacher films where the batmobile looked phallic.

3.      What I liked

            The movie is probably one of my favorites in terms of comic book movies in the 2000s. It must’ve been a massive hurdle to reinvent an iconic character. Christian Bale is my favorite to portray the playboy and the Batman. While he’s not living in an ostentatious lifestyle, I really like how he’s humble and attempts to regain his company from corporate hacks. The supporting actors do a really great job. Michael Cane and Morgan Freeman own the roles as Alfred Pennyworth and Lucius Fox. Gary Oldman does a good Jim Gordon, finally looks like his character from the comics. For the villains side, Liam Neeson is a pretty good formidable villain. He has depth and reasons as to why he wants to wipe out Gotham City.

            Speaking of, the overall feel of Gotham City feels right. I really like the brownish color scheme that captures the vibe of the city, even in the section of the city called The Narrows. That place feels like it was built on a set because of just how tight the buildings and the ground look. Speaking of, parts of the movie was made with miniatures. In the final fight scene, the train derailing was all practical.

            Batman is an intimidating character. The moment where he stops the drug peddlers in the port is probably the best scene in the film. The level of tension and anxiety when Batman knocks out the lights and snatches the goons work to create the level of fear and anxiety. The voice works. I didn’t have a problem with it despite the jokes that popped up later in time.

4.      The Bad

            One of the biggest missed opportunities was with Scarecrow. He could’ve been a real threat to the dark knight. He only got a few minutes of screen time. The way he gets defeated is such a travesty. Rachel Dawes played by Katie Holmes tases Scarecrow. A promising villain, wasted. Like I mentioned earlier, I felt that it was too convenient that he is working with Ra’s Al Ghul to subvert Gotham. Speaking of which.

            Throughout the film, Liam Neeson plays the character “Ducard”. We see who we are led to believe as Ra’s Al Ghul played by Ken Watanabe. When the temple for the League of Shadows goes up in flames, Ra’s died. Then in Bruce’s party scene, we see that Neeson plays the actual Ra’s Al Ghul. Including another decoy that has the iconic moustache. I felt that it got irritating since the need of decoys.

            The overall use of fear in the dialogue gets a bit mind-numbing. Compounding that the villain Scarecrow’s bit involves fear toxins which he sprays.

5.      Overall

            With all my complaints out of the way. This is probably one of the most unexpected and unique takes on a beloved comic book icon. I felt bad for myself since I watched The Dark Knight first before delving into this one. Overall, this is one of the best origin stories I have ever seen and easily in one of my favorite Christopher Nolan film    

Batman Begins gets a four out of five. 


Juno Review

          I feel that the 2000s is the last great era for the teen/high school films. While the whole teenage experience is so much complex ...