The Dark Knight TDK Casting Sides

lol Woj.

Ok, so lets start taking a poll....

What was everyones favorite side?

-Mine was the Brian one with the Burg/Stephens sides coming in at a tied second place.

Anjow, my copy is the one that was re-posted as a Word doc...and is apparently minus the "Brian" scene, as well as a scene during which there is a reference to "800 arrests" or something like that (unless that's the same scene), and may be missing more than that.

Care to "enlighten" me? :yay:
 
I was thinking about something... did we ever get sides for Batman Begins before the script leak?
 
It's right on Pg. 19 of the document you have.

Found Brian.

"800 Arrests", anybody...?


Does it seem to anyone else like Kennedy and Natascha is Bruce & Rachel joining Harvey & Gilda Dent for dinner at their home?

Don't have a list of the sides handy, so I'm already expecting someone to tell me that at least one of those names is listed as a side...I'll have to take that list down, and get back to ya on that...
 
I was thinking about something... did we ever get sides for Batman Begins before the script leak?
Wouldn't be much of anything. There were like what, 2 minutes in total of dialog by unknowns?

TDK surprisingly puts much more focus on the citizens from what I've gathered.
 
Found Brian.

"800 Arrests", anybody...?


Does it seem to anyone else like Kennedy and Natascha is Bruce & Rachel joining Harvey & Gilda Dent for dinner at their home?

Don't have a list of the sides handy, so I'm already expecting someone to tell me that at least one of those names is listed as a side...I'll have to take that list down, and get back to ya on that...

Natascha is the role being cast, so it's likely just a floozy of Bruce, or maybe Kennedy isn't Bruce at all.

Besides, she doens't really sound like Rachel. She might not want to show that she knows and supports Batman, but I doubt she'd randomly start a conversation about not supporting him.
 
Natascha is the role being cast, so it's likely just a floozy of Bruce, or maybe Kennedy isn't Bruce at all.

Besides, she doens't really sound like Rachel. She might not want to show that she knows and supports Batman, but I doubt she'd randomly start a conversation about not supporting him.

I'm glad you brought that up, Katsuro...because I've been starting to wonder about the names representing each side: How can we be absolutely sure that the names are the names of the actual roles in that are available for audition? Not only am I convinced that some of these names are pseudonyms for some of the main characters, but also that the names in the sides could merely represent the scene itself, not necessarily the side open for audition. I find it unusual that they would be auditioning like that for such seemingly pivitol roles within the film...after all, that's what an Academy Award-winning cast is for.:word:

Now I'm willing to bet that this has been somewhere posted before, but I'm kinda curious as to what you guys think (so sorry if I missed the discussion the first time around). I know I'm beginning to sound like the forum concpiracy theorist, but I heard a lot of talk thru the grapevine about a huge breach in security, and it makes me wonder what we have our hands on here.

I have no doubt in my mind that names were changed...and I have no doubt in my mind that at least one or two of the names that we are left to assume are sides are, in fact, main characters.

It's just all still so very confusing.

Oh, and I suppose "Chuckles" could just be an over-zealous member of Mr. J's gang...willing to kill anyone for the benefit of his crew (or just for the fun of it, who knows?). Any rate, I just wanted to point out (read: admit) that if Chuckles was merely the gang member I just described, that this role could easily be filled by a side, which doesn't lend much validity to my other argument...
 
Not only am I convinced that some of these names are pseudonyms for some of the main characters, but also that the names in the sides could merely represent the scene itself, not necessarily the side open for audition.
Well, considering the site acts as advertising for these roles (connecting these scenes to the parts that need to be practiced for the audition), I think it's a safe bet that these don't just represent the scene itself.

I find it unusual that they would be auditioning like that for such seemingly pivitol roles within the film...after all, that's what an Academy Award-winning cast is for.:word:
None of the roles listed are pivotal.

I know I'm beginning to sound like the forum concpiracy theorist,
You ain't kidding.
 
Rachel's character (or at least what we know of her from Begins) is similar to the character of Natascha in that they both seem to share in a very strong faith in the system, and vengeance & justice to them are two very different things...

Natascha is more believeable to me as Rachel (if not another main character, given the bold dialogue in that scene...Selina Kyle, perhaps?) than she is as one of Bruce's Waynes random bimbos...too strong an opinion for a bimbo, I'm afraid.

What do you guys think?
 
Rachel's character (or at least what we know of her from Begins) is similar to the character of Natascha in that they both seem to share in a very strong faith in the system, and vengeance & justice to them are two very different things...

Natascha is more believeable to me as Rachel (if not another main character, given the bold dialogue in that scene...Selina Kyle, perhaps?) than she is as one of Bruce's Waynes random bimbos...too strong an opinion for a bimbo, I'm afraid.

What do you guys think?
Don't buy it at all. The description for Natascha makes me dead certain that she's not Rachel.

KENNEDY, accompanied by a beautiful woman holding a bottle of champagne.

That doesn't at all sound like Rachel. And just because Bruce brings a gal to dinner and she's attractive doesn't mean she has to be a bimbo. Surely Wayne is more than capable of attracting women who are beautiful but not without brain matter. Especially when this is a woman he's bringing to Harvey Dent's house.

Furthermore, considering the role is up for audition, I don't really consider this point under discussion.
 
I already explained my take on the piece of writing, so this argument that I´m running from it no longer applies. I can discuss writing and I do it here all the time.
Not without resorting to veiled insults, it appears.

I don´t tease you for nothing.
Ah, but you do tease. Frequently. For no productive reason.
If I may say so, to me your "intensity" often gets in the way of your arguments, the debate becomes more about your tone than about your ideas. I say that cuz I think you could be a good, even great guy to debate with, sometimes you do have a valid point, but it turns into these long-winded rants and soon it´s much more a fight than anything else.
That's unfortunate. I was raised to believe conviction and the ability to communicate my point of view was a good thing. I don't hurl insults when I argue, and I don't tend to belittle people. I present logical arguments. If people have a problem with me believing in my argument...or following through on it, that's their problem. Again, no one has to read my posts.
Where was Falcone or any of his outfit shown not to have honor? I know he wasn't specifically demonstrated to have it, really, but I don't recall anything that said he didn't? He seemed like basically any mob boss, from what I could tell.
Where was he shown TO have any honor? You've got Falcone having a young, grieving Bruce Wayne beat up for no discernable reason (to prove a point). Later, we have Falcone smuggling god knows what for god knows who...for money and favors. I don't know how honorable that is. Not long afterward, Falcone's men (or were they Ra's Al Ghul's men?) shot a District Attorney in the back. I certainly don't see any scenes where he is honorable in BATMAN BEGINS. Do you? Hence me saying that angle of the mob is somewhat ignored.
Where does it not make logical sense?
The words and actions of the bank manager, given his situation. He's provoking someone he knows will kill him for doing so.
Honestly, it may ring false to you, but when I read it I could hear it being delivered with conviction and it sounded fine. You seem to think it has to be delivered like a speech. I don't see it that way.
I never said it had to be delivered as a speech. It's just absurd dialogue regardless.

Look. First he thinks he's dealing with a generic hoodlum... he asks him if he has any idea whose money he's stealing. It's a threat. When the robber isn't impressed by it, the manager's first reaction is to call him an idiot.
Which is the first stupid thing about this scene. Who threatens and then insults an armed robber who clearly has the balls to counter a powerful mobster?
Then he instead tries to reason with him - what makes you think the guy who hired you isn't gonna kill you, too? This guy's been around the racket, he knows how it works. But the thug isn't impressed, whips off his mask. Now the banker is scared, he knows he's dealing with... something much more sinister than he first thought. That changes things. He's scared at first.
And this is where it all goes downhill. Rather than playing with "scared" or "confused", the writers suddenly have the bank manager giving a ridiculous speech.
After the initial "what are you" he then gathers his nerve and berates the guy. He knows he's dead, but he's just... look, as a banker for Maroni, he's got protection. This isn't supposed to be happening. All that talk about honor and respect, that's what that's about - this isn't supposed to be happening to him. He's got protection, you don't mess with Mr. Maroni's bank. But he's already tried that route and Joker wasn't impressed. So all he's got is a handful of honor and respect that amounts to a cup of piss as far as the man with the gun is concerned. "What do you believe in?" It has to be a plea. Maybe an angry plea, but a plea.
And my issue is exactly this. It's lame. It's unrealistic. If he's making a plea, it's a lousy one. It's logically stupid for the bank manager to provoke a madman with a gun, and even dumber to not so subtly insult him afterward. It's just moronic on every level.

Seriously. In the hands of even an essentially competent actor, these lines are fine. Especially with a director who knows what he wants out of it.
Opinion. I think they're lousy.

You're looking at scenes out of context and accusing the writers of incompetence. Trust me, Guard, I've seen incompetence. It doesn't look like this.
I'm looking at the scene in context. I do not need it's meaning or how it fits into the story explained to me. These things are fairly obvious. And I've not accused anyone of incompetence. Only of average and in this instance, overpresentational, writing.
So, I´ve had more time to think this over and put all my thoughts together, and this is what I´m thinking...

- On it being "cliché", "not innovative or fresh": Being fresh isn´t only about completely redefining cinema as we know (we´re lucky if we can say there were two movies that got even close to that in the last two decades). There are different ways of being fresh. One of them is mixing different genres that usually don´t mix. When Batman 89 did thirties retro noir, that in itself was nothing new, but mixing it with the superhero/comic book genre was. What BB hinted at and TDK is going full on is mixing the seuperhero genre with the gritty dramas of the seventies, like French Connection or Dog Day Afternoon, and now adding in a Se7en-like serial killer drama (given the take on Joker they´re going for). In that sense, it´s okay that it uses typical elements of these genres, as it was okay for B89 to use elements from old gangster movies, it´s how all those different elements are combined together in the final product that will make it fresh (again, a recurring theme here, not judge the forest for some trees).
I'm not asking THE DARK KNIGHT to reinvent the wheel. I'm mostly referring to "the same old cliche police dialogue we've seen in a dozen movies" when I say cliche. Not the tone, the storyline, or even the characterizations so much. Cliches are often inevitable, but they need not be repetitive and stale in terms of dialogue.

- On it being "average", "plain": Making the right dialogue isn´t always about giving your character the witty zingers.
Then why the hell is this writer trying to?
In some moments, the best way to say things or to keep the story moving is stand back, restrain yourself and just be straight to the point.
I agree. The thing is, I don't see a whole lot of being straight and to the point. I see quite a bit of "embellishment" that becomes far too presentational. The judge, the bank manager...
Embellishment can become distracting, can become overwriting.
And such is my issue with the writing here. This is why I called it unimpressive. It's either boring, or predictable, or far too showy.
 
Don't buy it at all. The description for Natascha makes me dead certain that she's not Rachel.

KENNEDY, accompanied by a beautiful woman holding a bottle of champagne.

That doesn't at all sound like Rachel. And just because Bruce brings a gal to dinner and she's attractive doesn't mean she has to be a bimbo. Surely Wayne is more than capable of attracting women who are beautiful but not without brain matter. Especially when this is a woman he's bringing to Harvey Dent's house.

A beautiful girl holding a bottle of champagne? Wow, you're right! From that detailed description, there's no way she can be Rachel! How did I miss that? :whatever:

With Bruce Wayne's reputation regarding his taste in women (C'mon...you saw the girls he went swimming with in BEGINS -- call me judgemental, but I wouldn't exactly call them Harvard scholars), I just find it difficult to believe he'd all of a sudden show up at Harvey's with this seemingly respectable (sophisticated, even) woman with such a strong opinion in her dialogue for it to be played by a -- for lack of a better word -- no-namer...

Who knows...maybe his taste in women changed after BEGINS.:hyper:

I'm not saying anyone's right or wrong here...just fun to speculate.

I know for a fact the names were changed, just not why...and if you're gonna go ahead and change one thing, who's to say you won't change another?:ninja:
 
I see no reason why The Joker cannot be both cold and calculating AND a raving loon at some point. It's well within his character. I think pigeonholing him as any one kind of character is a bad idea.
 
I see no reason why The Joker cannot be both cold and calculating AND a raving loon at some point. It's well within his character. I think pigeonholing him as any one kind of character is a bad idea.

Judging from the bank scene (and assuming that it is our first taste of Mr. J in the movie), I'd say he comes off as a guy who simply doesn't give a f**k...which is clearly why they have that little bit of dialogue in there with the bank manager -- to show the audience that it doesn't matter to this man whose money this is. I'm sure there is some point later on where we'll get to see the raving lunatic we've all come to know & love.

And Guard, I agree with you in that the dialogue IS a tad contrived, but for now, the thought of Ledger delivering the line "it's rude to stare" is giving me absolute chills.
 
A beautiful girl holding a bottle of champagne? Wow, you're right! From that detailed description, there's no way she can be Rachel! How did I miss that? :whatever:

With Bruce Wayne's reputation regarding his taste in women (C'mon...you saw the girls he went swimming with in BEGINS -- call me judgemental, but I wouldn't exactly call them Harvard scholars), I just find it difficult to believe he'd all of a sudden show up at Harvey's with this seemingly respectable (sophisticated, even) woman with such a strong opinion in her dialogue for it to be played by a -- for lack of a better word -- no-namer...
Assuming those are the girl's only lines, it's not that big of a role at all. It's in the same vain as the lines from the rich lady at the hotel, or the kid at the Narrows...it gives the audience a small look into what the citizens view Batman as.

And on the small chance it is significant character, I'm saying it's Selina. Slim shot, but I'm not gon' lie, I'm grasping for any hint that she makes it to this franchise.
 
And on the small chance it is significant character, I'm saying it's Selina. Slim shot, but I'm not gon' lie, I'm grasping for any hint that she makes it to this franchise.

When I said that this was going to be one of Wayne's random bimbos, I was very tempted to say this was Selina Kyle. Highly unlikely but it would be brilliant if it was.
 
Assuming those are the girl's only lines, it's not that big of a role at all. It's in the same vain as the lines from the rich lady at the hotel, or the kid at the Narrows...it gives the audience a small look into what the citizens view Batman as.

And on the small chance it is significant character, I'm saying it's Selina. Slim shot, but I'm not gon' lie, I'm grasping for any hint that she makes it to this franchise.

Good point. Also, to see Selina somewhere within this story arc would be nice.

What is everyone's take on the "Stephen's" scene? Did Mr. J get caught on purpose as a small part of a grander scheme, or could the prisoner be Crane?
 
When I said that this was going to be one of Wayne's random bimbos, I was very tempted to say this was Selina Kyle. Highly unlikely but it would be brilliant if it was.
All I know is, the girl better be hot. Like hell-fiyah. :cmad:

What is everyone's take on the "Stephen's" scene? Did Mr. J get caught on purpose as a small part of a grander scheme, or could the prisoner be Crane?
Crane doesn't strike me as a murderer, so I'll stick with Joker. I assume it takes place near the end, hence why he's captured.
 
why would Bruce be hitting the town with homely Rachel Dawes? Rachel already squashed the reallife romance for them; and Bruce has no reason to be the playboy Bruce with Rachel as his arm candy.
 
Yeah. And furthermore, why would Rachel be asking Dent if he was Batman - especially since she already knows Batman's identity? There's just no way it was Rachel.
 
Yeah. And furthermore, why would Rachel be asking Dent if he was Batman - especially since she already knows Batman's identity? There's just no way it was Rachel.

Natasha sounds like she'd be a chick similar to the one at the table with Bruce at the hotel in BB. with the way over the top high society accent.
 
^ that's how I read it as well


Nowhere does he really appear to be a raving loon: the bank robber is certainly sadistic and sardonic, and the prisoner is provocative and sinister, but the character (if it is indeed one) could be better described as calculating than cracked.

Perhaps this marries itself more comfortably to a backstory based in mob-politics and professional criminality, rather than a tale of an ordinary man perverted by circumstance?

Agreed. I think the Jokers background is in crime and that's where his motivation and actions will begin (post-accident) but then 'the Clown' emerges over time. This aspect isn't in the slides however the 'raving loon' is a big part of the character and it would be mistreatment to ignore it. By the end of the film the crazier 'uber Joker' should be revealed in all his glory! almost like Scarecrow in BB. :joker:

Also, the raving loon he 'appears' to be will bely the cunning shark he really is. As some one already said, you can have both. They compliment each other.

The Joker's crime origins, as you suggested, also match Cop&Thug side which to me reveals alot about the Jokers origin; a 'buried' mob boss. This was also suggested in the Scriptment review a few months ago.
 
And on the small chance it is significant character, I'm saying it's Selina. Slim shot, but I'm not gon' lie, I'm grasping for any hint that she makes it to this franchise.

The vigilantes are a good enough hint for me. By movie3 the idea of people wanting to emulate Batman will be established. Without it it would seem a bit of a stretch to believe a woman without years of training from ninja masters etc etc would suit up and and establish herself as a force in the Gotham circus. Clear thinking ahead from the Nolans :up:


No way Natasha is Selina though. She's hardly the type of role you put up in the sides! Wouldn't they want the same actress in TDK and movie3 if it was her? She's a major supporting role not a bit part.

That said I think it's insanity not to include her at some point. She's just as iconic as Batman and Joker - and how else do you top the Joker in movie3? Two-Face can't do it on his own. I'm resting easy on this one.
 
I've got a theory about the point of the ferry boats. Bear with me, because my theories tend to be...rather out there.

I noticed some people complaining that Joker seems too mundane - more like a cliche horror villian than anything else - but really, the whole ferry boats gag (and trust me, that's what it'll be - they'll be a punchline of some kind) tells me exactly the opposite.

Think about it - TDK is pulling not just from the first two appearances (which this Joker seems to mirror so...I'm not sure I understand the complaints that it's not Joker but that's for another day) but the Killing Joke. From what I've read about it (haven't actually read it yet :o ) it explains something of Joker's outlook. That he thinks Batman's mission is completely pointless because the world - specifically, people - are inherently sick so why not just go with the flow?

Keeping that in mind, what if the ferry boats was his way of proving this to Batman? Say Bats thwarts him a couple of times and the Joker decides to get him back by demonstrating just how futile his whole mission is?

And he does this by showing how selfish the 'good' people are - how they'll happily chuck the prisoners under the poverbial bus to save themselves - whereas, if they were truly righteous, they'd kill themselves to save others.

Classic Joker.

Another theory is that neither ship blows up, as that's the best punchline I could see coming out of it. Batman, doubtless, tries to disarm the bombs, only to find they're obviously fake. Possibly leading up to a very personal showdown between them. I doubt Bats would appreciate being made a fool of...
 
Keeping that in mind, what if the ferry boats was his way of proving this to Batman? Say Bats thwarts him a couple of times and the Joker decides to get him back by demonstrating just how futile his whole mission is?

And he does this by showing how selfish the 'good' people are - how they'll happily chuck the prisoners under the poverbial bus to save themselves - whereas, if they were truly righteous, they'd kill themselves to save others.

Classic Joker.
I don't think that'll work with this Batman, considering how he let Ra's die in BB (seemingly) because it was for the better good. Saving others is one thing, but saving a boat-load of convicted killers? Way different.

Now of course, this could be made an exception if somewhere in TDK it's referenced that Bruce has either "changed his ways", or he regrets letting Ra's die. Then and only then, if your situation were to come to pass, would it not seem like Bats is being a huge hypocrite.
 

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