Continues from my last post:
Abominari said:"It's just a comic book movie!" But I do want to address a few of the points you make:
Why is this so unbelievable? The Joker comes out in a school bus, gets right into line with the other school buses (a huge line -- it stretches for blocks) and drives off. The police are far enough down the street that they would very easily miss one truck joining in the yellow-orange procession, and there are, at this point, no helicopters. The other bus drivers would give him the space because, A) they may or may not be carrying children, and B) this isn't The Fast & The Furious, and even with this dude coming out of the bank it wouldn't make sense to deliberately create a collision.FERABADISTHEBEST said:-First scene. Joker leaves the bank with a school bus, like if it was a mastermind plan. Well, why the other bus drivers let him an space to leave, instead of stopping, thinking about why the **** is one of their buses leaving a bank? And no, they aren't Joker's goons, you can clearly hear the voices of the kids. The police arrives just when Joker is leaving, why don't they go after him? People in the streets or in the bank would tell them he had just left the bank with a school bus, and I doubt that it is very hard for the police to find a line of buses with a guy driving one of them that looks like a clown and has millions of dollars. With all the cars and helicopters that the police has they should easily find the bus, that I doubt is the fastest thing to drive in a big city with a lot of traffic like Gotham. Nothing of that is explained and the scene is just ridiculous because of that IMO. Its like if the cops thought: "One of the most dangerous criminals has just left the bank with a school bus hidden among other school buses? Genius! There is no way we can get him now!
Second, I don't know if you've ever lived in a city, but people aren't exactly the open, communicative folk you'd see in a Frank Capra movie. People on the street won't just run up to the cops and point fingers and say, "He's over there! He's one of those buses!" And even getting inside the bank, the first thing that happens won't be the police asking, "What did he drive and in what direction?" Upon entering the building and carefully moving through a fair cloud of smoke (courtesy of the grenade left in the manager's mouth, who'll be found wounded and in need of an ambulance), they'll have to expend considerable effort disarming the people sitting on the floor. This will probably require calling in the bomb squad, unless the cops want to just start chucking explosives into the vacant end of the lobby. Questioning won't be in any depth until the detectives arrive. And so on.
Even if it takes, say, five minutes for someone to let out that the Joker drove off in a bus, at that point they could easily have dispersed the line and be scattering around the city. Who knows how far Joker had to drive before hitting his waypoint to switch vehicles with the loot? Even if it takes one minute, the police will have to call in for backup to make any realistic effort to hold up the buses, and the traffic (which you've noted) in Gotham would make this just as difficult for the cops as Joker.
So anyway, I thought the robbery bit was well done.
You already got it: he's a ninja. This is how he disappears within a single breath on rooftops, or appears suddenly in the vault of a bank without being noticed. The goons were watching the boss, and so was everyone else.And when Batman appears in the party, where does he come from? Because he appears in front of Joker from nowhere. I know he is a ninja, but the penthouse is really big and has a lot of light, Joker and Rachel are almost in the center of the room. and none of Joker's goons sees him coming? WTF?
Not his style. He doesn't kill indiscriminately, not just for the sake of killing. Especially with the cops: he wanted them alive so Bruce/Batman/whomever would find that their uniforms had been stolen. Joker likes to give up the moves he's just made, because that's how he plays his opponents....and could be killing everybody in the party...
-Why The Joker doesn't kill the cops when he steals their uniforms to kill the mayor?
Don't know. Either the one issuing the orders (if any -- we never see Gordon say any such thing and this guy seemed to be Gordon's immediate subordinate) felt that said cop would be able to stand guard, unyielding, in what was mistakenly believed to be a "secure environment," or the cop positioned himself there because he was ultimately looking for a fight. At any rate, had there been no cop with him there would have been no need to move him: they could easily keep an eye on him, what with the glass windows on two sides of the room. But everyone else became distracted by the fat guy in the holding cell.Why the **** the police left only one cop with the most dangerous criminal of the city in a room? Why didn't they take him to the cage where he was before with all the cops watching every move he made? There is not to be a genius to think about it.
I think it's fair to call this one a simple plot device. Or maybe it's procedure to keep the Joker there until his directions can be confirmed. That way, if he's lying he can be immediately questioned again with audio recording.
They're just little ferries. They probably make dozens of trips a day, are staffed with a skeleton crew, and whomever is responsible for checking/loading the lower compartment was probably one of Joker's goons, or at least paid off or murdered. A ferry of that size wouldn't need round-the-clock monitoring of its machinery.And how the **** nobody on the freighters saw the gasoline/explosives before leaving the city?
That's just the way it was edited. Gordon talked to them.suddenly, in the same scene, the cops go after Batman even before Gordon says a word about it. Why the **** do they go after him if nobody has still said that Batman was who killed the people that Harvey killed?
FERABADISTHEBEST said:I think some of you didn't understand what I was talking about. I don't say the movie has to be completely realistic, I know it is a movie about a guy who dresses like a bat and it is fiction, even if Nolan wanted to make it the most realistic possible. I am talking about the screenplay, which doesn't matter how unrealistic the movie is, it has to make sense to make the movie believable and coherent, even if it is a movie like Lord of the Rings with elves, dragons or whatever, if the characters are constantly acting in a way that doesn't make sense or the plot is not well constructed, the viewer wont "believe" the movie, which should be one of the ultimate goals of a good writer or director, to make the viewer completely "enters" in the story of the movie and someway "believes" that what he/she is watching makes sense even if it is about a fish who has lost his son (Finding Nemo). I don't know what is so hard to understand about that, although seeing how some of you doubted if the post about the poster with a burning building with the bat on it was a joke or not, and seeing how others say that The Joker isn't mad/crazy/insane when there is not to be an expert psychiatrist to see that guy is not the greatest example of sanity... I don't know what to think (Well, I do know, but I'll not say it to don't piss off some of you even more after reading this post).
First, I have lived in Madrid, biggest city in Spain with terrible traffic, around 10 years, so I know what is to live in a big city (Now I live in Seville, that is a little smaller, but is one of the most important cities in the country, although is not comparable with L.A. or NY). For you, Gotham police must be incredibly incompetent, because if an school bus crashes against a bank in a normal city, a lot of people would see it and would call the police. When the bus left the bank and the police arrived, dozens of people would go to warn the police about what happened, and they have radios, walkies, cell phones, they would ask for more units to search the buses because the police doesn't know if there are kidnapped kids in them, so the main objective for the police should be to find those buses, that like I said, shouldn't be very hard for them with all the things the police has today. I guess you know that police cars, ambulances, firemen cars, have sirens to warn other cars and make the traffic is not an obstacle for them, something that an school bus hasn't. And the police can use traffic cameras, have helicopters, etc, which they would use to find as fast as possible all the buses and make sure that the kids are safe. And if you watch the movie again, you'll see there are no spaces between the buses except for Joker's bus. That should have been explained some way, because a normal driver would stop and would think why the **** there is an school bus leaving from a bank and would call the police to make sure the kids on his bus will be safe, instead of continuing like if nothing happened. Nolan could have made that scene a little better.Abominari said:"It's just a comic book movie!" But I do want to address a few of the points you make:
Why is this so unbelievable? The Joker comes out in a school bus, gets right into line with the other school buses (a huge line -- it stretches for blocks) and drives off. The police are far enough down the street that they would very easily miss one truck joining in the yellow-orange procession, and there are, at this point, no helicopters. The other bus drivers would give him the space because, A) they may or may not be carrying children, and B) this isn't The Fast & The Furious, and even with this dude coming out of the bank it wouldn't make sense to deliberately create a collision.FERABADISTHEBEST said:-First scene. Joker leaves the bank with a school bus, like if it was a mastermind plan. Well, why the other bus drivers let him an space to leave, instead of stopping, thinking about why the **** is one of their buses leaving a bank? And no, they aren't Joker's goons, you can clearly hear the voices of the kids. The police arrives just when Joker is leaving, why don't they go after him? People in the streets or in the bank would tell them he had just left the bank with a school bus, and I doubt that it is very hard for the police to find a line of buses with a guy driving one of them that looks like a clown and has millions of dollars. With all the cars and helicopters that the police has they should easily find the bus, that I doubt is the fastest thing to drive in a big city with a lot of traffic like Gotham. Nothing of that is explained and the scene is just ridiculous because of that IMO. Its like if the cops thought: "One of the most dangerous criminals has just left the bank with a school bus hidden among other school buses? Genius! There is no way we can get him now!
Second, I don't know if you've ever lived in a city, but people aren't exactly the open, communicative folk you'd see in a Frank Capra movie. People on the street won't just run up to the cops and point fingers and say, "He's over there! He's one of those buses!" And even getting inside the bank, the first thing that happens won't be the police asking, "What did he drive and in what direction?" Upon entering the building and carefully moving through a fair cloud of smoke (courtesy of the grenade left in the manager's mouth, who'll be found wounded and in need of an ambulance), they'll have to expend considerable effort disarming the people sitting on the floor. This will probably require calling in the bomb squad, unless the cops want to just start chucking explosives into the vacant end of the lobby. Questioning won't be in any depth until the detectives arrive. And so on.
Even if it takes, say, five minutes for someone to let out that the Joker drove off in a bus, at that point they could easily have dispersed the line and be scattering around the city. Who knows how far Joker had to drive before hitting his waypoint to switch vehicles with the loot? Even if it takes one minute, the police will have to call in for backup to make any realistic effort to hold up the buses, and the traffic (which you've noted) in Gotham would make this just as difficult for the cops as Joker.
So anyway, I thought the robbery bit was well done.
He is a ninja, not a wizard, he has to come from somewhere. Like I said, in previous Batman films with similar scenes, he appeared from somewhere, like a glass in the roof. The party is in a very big place with a lot of light and a lot of people, and The Joker is in front of the eyes of a lot of people because he is almost in the center of the place, with all his goons around him. And Batman is a really big guy dressed like a bat, and nobody sees him coming? I repeat that Nolan should have shown how Batman enters in the party like in previous movies, not just make him magically appear there, because any intelligent viewer will think: "How the **** has Batman suddenly appeared there?" I would have accepted the ninja thing in the last scene with Two-Face, where it is dark and there is almost nobody and no walls, so he could have used a gadget to reach Two Face and save Gordon's family without killing Harvey. When he does the ninja thing in the bank, only Gordon and the corrupt cop are in the vault, and the rest of the cops could be busy with another things, and Batman could use his ninja abilities to get in the bank with nobody seeing him. The same in the rooftop where is the bat-signal, he could just jump from it while Gordon and Dent are distracted.Abominari said:You already got it: he's a ninja. This is how he disappears within a single breath on rooftops, or appears suddenly in the vault of a bank without being noticed. The goons were watching the boss, and so was everyone else.And when Batman appears in the party, where does he come from? Because he appears in front of Joker from nowhere. I know he is a ninja, but the penthouse is really big and has a lot of light, Joker and Rachel are almost in the center of the room. and none of Joker's goons sees him coming? WTF?
That is just your opinion, because in the movie I don't remember The Joker saying he doesn't like to kill indiscriminately. In fact, he does it several times in the movie, you should watch it again. He even enjoys telling the cop in the interrogation room how many cops he has killed. And his objective was killing the mayor dressed like a cop, letting the cops alive was stupid because could ruin his plan (yes, he has plans, even if he says he hasn't, and yes, he is mad, even if he says he is not), and later he kills a cop that just ask to his goon to move the truck when he goes after Dent, when it was unnecessary.Abominari said:Not his style. He doesn't kill indiscriminately, not just for the sake of killing. Especially with the cops: he wanted them alive so Bruce/Batman/whomever would find that their uniforms had been stolen. Joker likes to give up the moves he's just made, because that's how he plays his opponents....and could be killing everybody in the party...
-Why The Joker doesn't kill the cops when he steals their uniforms to kill the mayor?
Joker should be this way:Abominari said:Don't know. Either the one issuing the orders (if any -- we never see Gordon say any such thing and this guy seemed to be Gordon's immediate subordinate) felt that said cop would be able to stand guard, unyielding, in what was mistakenly believed to be a "secure environment," or the cop positioned himself there because he was ultimately looking for a fight. At any rate, had there been no cop with him there would have been no need to move him: they could easily keep an eye on him, what with the glass windows on two sides of the room. But everyone else became distracted by the fat guy in the holding cell.Why the **** the police left only one cop with the most dangerous criminal of the city in a room? Why didn't they take him to the cage where he was before with all the cops watching every move he made? There is not to be a genius to think about it.
I think it's fair to call this one a simple plot device. Or maybe it's procedure to keep the Joker there until his directions can be confirmed. That way, if he's lying he can be immediately questioned again with audio recording.
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In a cage.
Come on, you live in USA, you know how is security there when there is a terrorist alert. And a lot of citizens are using the freighters because they think is a safer way to leave the city, you can see even people of the army there, wouldn't they register every corner of the freighters? Much more when Joker said he was going to put explosives everywhere, and that is the reason everybody wants to leave in the freighters. Just because he doesn't mention the freighters they trust he will not put explosives there? Ridiculous.Abominari said:They're just little ferries. They probably make dozens of trips a day, are staffed with a skeleton crew, and whomever is responsible for checking/loading the lower compartment was probably one of Joker's goons, or at least paid off or murdered. A ferry of that size wouldn't need round-the-clock monitoring of its machinery.And how the **** nobody on the freighters saw the gasoline/explosives before leaving the city?
Bad edited. Doesn't make sense.Abominari said:That's just the way it was edited. Gordon talked to them.suddenly, in the same scene, the cops go after Batman even before Gordon says a word about it. Why the **** do they go after him if nobody has still said that Batman was who killed the people that Harvey killed?
You have not mentioned everything I wrote, so I'll guess you agree with the rest of things I said.
And I don't know why some of you seem to think I hate Batman and this movie, when I've been posting on this thread a lot. If I hated this movie or Batman I wouldn't waste my time posting here. I just think there are some things that are wrong in the movie and that annoys me a little.


