I think where I disagree with your assessment is that you find it to be a failure, when I'd agree that more in depth characterization would be nice, I just don't know where they would have fit it in.
Personally, I would have fit it in during the screentime where Blake is having a two minute drive through explosions or the silly "Have to rush through the hospital to save the Commissioner", maybe given Blake and Gordon some time to talk about things that matter...but then we'd have less explosions for Blake to drive through and less running and shooting.
Oh ya, and it felt pretty obvious to me that Blake had researched it, the way it was performed. Like Bruce, he seems to have an obsession with justice, and would be the same way about judicially researching things, at least from that scene alone.
If you're referring to Bruce's identity, there's absolutely no reason to believe that. Blake never references any reason to believe Bruce is Batman, other than "I felt your secret orphan pain and realized you were Batman".
I think you guys missed my point. I wasn't asking these questions, I'm more than capable of coming up with the answers myself. My point was that these are the very same kinds of "problems" that apper in TDKR and yet people have found a way to explain them because they liked the direction of both BB and TDK.
Here's the thing. Saying “The other two films had the same types of issues and flaws” is not a valid excuse for shoddy or lazy filmmaking. Its only a valid statement if you're comparing the quality of the filmmaking from film to film. Which, in context, people aren't doing when they discuss TDKR's flaws on its own.
In the case of TDKR they don't like direction the film took so therefore they have trouble explaining these "problems" away.
It depends on which problems you're referring to. I've only seen a few issues mentioned here in this particular thread, and they all have to do with extraneous characters like Foley, Dagget, and a lack of Gotham's "voice" and some muddled theme work, all of which are very real issues with the film. I don't really see that as people just not liking a direction the film took. Unless the direction the film took that they didn't like was "flawed".
They've taken Nolan's pseudo realism... a bit too literally and now they can't just accept that Bruce would be capable of this or that.
I think you really have to discuss each issue people have with the film separately. Not group all issues people have with the film together as “This is the issue people have”. Because its just not that simple.
There are certainly a few fans who have nitpicked to find "plot holes". But the majority of people who have problems with TDKR, and who continue to discuss them, have issues with the quality of the writing and structure of the film as a whole, not just with plot holes, minor plot holes, etc.
blake isnt the problem in tdkr,the problem is that he is the only character who seeks the truth and tells it,every other character lies and is found out in one way or another and its the huge accumulation of lies and reveals that drags the film down.
I’d tend to agree. Gordon’s lie gets uncovered and he just gives Blake a speech about how sometimes you have to work outside the system. Batman’s gets uncovered and no one seems to care.
The film never really deals with the consequences of either of these revelations, and neither Gordon nor Bruce ever get any real resolution in terms of what they did. In a franchise that has been about the heroes "learning" things, I don't think Bruce and Gordon learned much about their actions regarding Dent.
You say that Bruce questioning himself about leaving Gotham to Blake is irrelevant to wrapping up his story. Bruce Wayne as depicted in this trilogy is an incredibly focused man, an incredibly honourable man, and the most morally firm and incorruptible man we as an audience could ever imagine.
Umm...no.
He lacks focus at several points in the storyline.
He is not incredibly honorable, because he's telling lies right and left.
He is not the most morally firm and incorruptible in the least. In fact, he's rather wish washy with his morals in some regards.
Blake looking at the gun melodramatically and throwing it away is nothing but foreshadowing at it's clunkiest, although maybe I should have expected that given the lug headed portentousness in Alfred's speech about the cafe. If he's a cop who understands the importance of being armed while the city faces a terrorist threat why throw away the gun in the first place? It's a piecemeal measure to make us think "Oh wow! He's just like Bruce!"
Its definitely supposed to be foreshadowing to a point.
Its also a chance for the writers to use melodrama, the Nolans' stock and trade. Its the biggest moment they could give JGL at that point. Later on, they'll have him scream "You idiots! You blew it up! You killed us!" etc like a spastic teenage girl.
John Blake is not the root of the issues in TDKR, but because he intersects with so many characters and themes, he may be the best EXAMPLE of the film's issues. A lot of melodramatic ideas, many of which are forced into the film and franchise, some of which have weight, none of which are very well explored. I thought Blake had potential as a character. I still enjoy watching the film and his role in it.
He’s not the worst character in the franchise, and in fact, he has some of the better moments. The basic idea is a solid one. But its very thinly written and not terribly interesting, and ultimately somewhat unsatisfying in its exploration of themes and concepts, which describes a lot of whats in TDKR.
On another note, why hasn’t this been merged with the John Blake thread?