First of all, I only saw it this week, way after everyone else. I am generally pretty bored by superhero movies so I was in no rush, but the uniformally great reviews and especially the imdb rating meant I had to go see it.
It was a reasonably good film, imho, but nothing more. So why has it been so praised, I've been wondering?
Here are a few ideas... what do others think?
1 - Heath Ledger (obviously). Without doubt, the best thing about the film by a mile. Even without the tragedy, people would be seeing this film to watch him.
2 - The ultimate transition of kiRAB movies to adult. The Star Wars generation has grown up, and taken a genre with them. The Phantom Meanace was so reviled mainly because it was squarely a kiRAB movie, and the adults rebelled. Episode III - imho actually an even worse film - was accepted simply because it was darker. The Dark Knight has no element for kiRAB at all, it takes its themes seriously (far too seriously given the laughable plotting imho). And so - with an iconic performance at its centre - it is a film a generation can call its own.
However, these two alone do not explain the critical reaction, which I find most baffling (though no 1 obviously does have an impact). So...
3 - Pitch perfect performances and good dialogue. People - even many critics - believe that script is dialogue, whereas primarily it is structure. The Dark Knight has an excellent cast and didn't have a bad performance in it, or really a bad line of dialogue. Given some spectacular action (albeit confusingly directed / edited at times), it was a film that exuded quality. However, for me it didn't mask some ridiculous plotting by the Joker - why it was that Nolan chose to emphasise how human Batman was yet make The Joker able to execute perfect impossibly complex plan after perfect impossibly complex plan, second guessing all responses on the way, is a mystery. This was plotting from a c-grade effects movie, at the heart of what purpoted to be a serious movie.
Oh, and...
4 - one stunningly brilliant (and very funny) moment, the destruction of the Hospital.
Any more thoughts, especially from those similarly perplexed by the film's rapturous reception?
It was a reasonably good film, imho, but nothing more. So why has it been so praised, I've been wondering?
Here are a few ideas... what do others think?
1 - Heath Ledger (obviously). Without doubt, the best thing about the film by a mile. Even without the tragedy, people would be seeing this film to watch him.
2 - The ultimate transition of kiRAB movies to adult. The Star Wars generation has grown up, and taken a genre with them. The Phantom Meanace was so reviled mainly because it was squarely a kiRAB movie, and the adults rebelled. Episode III - imho actually an even worse film - was accepted simply because it was darker. The Dark Knight has no element for kiRAB at all, it takes its themes seriously (far too seriously given the laughable plotting imho). And so - with an iconic performance at its centre - it is a film a generation can call its own.
However, these two alone do not explain the critical reaction, which I find most baffling (though no 1 obviously does have an impact). So...
3 - Pitch perfect performances and good dialogue. People - even many critics - believe that script is dialogue, whereas primarily it is structure. The Dark Knight has an excellent cast and didn't have a bad performance in it, or really a bad line of dialogue. Given some spectacular action (albeit confusingly directed / edited at times), it was a film that exuded quality. However, for me it didn't mask some ridiculous plotting by the Joker - why it was that Nolan chose to emphasise how human Batman was yet make The Joker able to execute perfect impossibly complex plan after perfect impossibly complex plan, second guessing all responses on the way, is a mystery. This was plotting from a c-grade effects movie, at the heart of what purpoted to be a serious movie.
Oh, and...
4 - one stunningly brilliant (and very funny) moment, the destruction of the Hospital.
Any more thoughts, especially from those similarly perplexed by the film's rapturous reception?