The Dark Knight TDK Casting Sides

I'll just skip over The Guard bore-o-thon and offer my humble opinion that these recent excerpts are obviously fake. Their syntax is completely different from that used in the (previously leaked) sides, and "earnest butler" is an absurdly candid name to give a character in one of these.
 
Are you not going to play Guardball? The rules went up on some thread or other few days ago.
 
Hey all...haven't been around in a few...

I remember hearing something thru the grapevine on a few different regarding Alfred perhaps donning the cape & cowl during one scene (does anyone remember what I'm talking about?). My first thought is that either this is that scene, and instead it is the Joker (or someone else) donning the cape & cowl in the Batcave (with Alfred at gunpoint) to try to frame Bats for something -- or -- somebody else heard that rumour before, and thought this would be a creative way to throw fanboys like me off for an April Fool's Day loop.

One thing that I find interesting is that some people (not mentioning any names, of course) first thought it outlandish that Nolan would ever go thru the trouble of using multiple names in the sides...while some of those same people are so willing to jump on the "WB April Fool's Day sides hoax" bandwagon...

It's either one elaborate scheme to throw us all off or another, it seems.

For the most part, I think all of us here have the basics covered in terms of possible outcomes for this story arc...to the point where I don't think many of us are going to be all that surprised by what we here from here on in...except casting choices, maybe.

What are you guys thinking?
 
For the most part, I think all of us here have the basics covered in terms of possible outcomes for this story arc...to the point where I don't think many of us are going to be all that surprised by what we here from here on in...except casting choices, maybe.

What are you guys thinking?

Dunno, Ryan. I think we may have some aspects of the plot worked out, but we still don't know how Joker is going to be written, very little dialogue from Batman/Bruce, no real idea about the Batman/Dent/Gordon dynamic. there's the bare bones of the plot, but nothing more. We don't even know if Two-Face is going to appear in this one or if he's reserved for part III.
 
Dunno, Ryan. I think we may have some aspects of the plot worked out, but we still don't know how Joker is going to be written, very little dialogue from Batman/Bruce, no real idea about the Batman/Dent/Gordon dynamic. there's the bare bones of the plot, but nothing more. We don't even know if Two-Face is going to appear in this one or if he's reserved for part III.

Well, if TLH and "the Killing Joke" (which seems to be what they'll draw from for the story arc, given the characters involved), I think we can at least expect the Batman/Dent/Gordon dynamic to be utilized in bringing down the Mob or the Joker, or both. I think Nolan would be foolish to not have us at least rooting for Harvey at first, to make his scarring that much more tragic to us as the audience.

As far as Mr. J goes, one way I've previously described him was as a combination between "V" (from "V for Vendetta") and Hannibal Lecter, with a touch of Tim Curry's "It", and the soulless, twisted pathology of Jigsaw of the "Saw" series; an eloquent speaker, with the mind of a genius, who can manipulate any situation with a sentence, a laugh, or a simple smile & a stare...intelligent enough to be intriguing, but f**ked up enough to never want to engage in a battle of wits with.

Though I want to believe that the "ferry plot" is Mr. J's grand scheme, the duality of it does remind me an awful lot of you-know-who...perhaps this will just serve as a metaphorical insight to what we can expect with Two-Face in the next installment.

If I had to guess, I'd say that the scarring takes place well before the end of the movie, and it gives us as the audience just enough time to soak up the incident as a tragedy just before Harv's transformation by the end of the movie. Eckhart will already be (thinking as) Two-Face by the start of the third movie, if not before the end of TDK.
 
that should have been the fake title for TDK lol
 
well. we know the others came from that site. this one wasn't. obviously. how hard it is to write something in Word, print it and write 'thug' on the top of the sheet in a sharpie?
 
Let me guess, even though I made clear I won´t read Guard´s posts anymore he still wrote a damn long-winded answer to my post that at this point literally no one but him cares about... I´m out for a while... and absolutely nothing changes...
 
I'll just skip over The Guard bore-o-thon and offer my humble opinion that these recent excerpts are obviously fake. Their syntax is completely different from that used in the (previously leaked) sides, and "earnest butler" is an absurdly candid name to give a character in one of these.

I agree. It does make one wonder if the other were fakes too, though, you know? But then, some of the scenarios inferred in the ones from Showfax are apparently accurate, so maybe the dialogue was fiddled around with as well as the names. Perhaps it was just not as noticable.
 
Let´s not forget these excerpts could be from early drafts, syntax problems and non-numbered pages are to be expected.
 
There are other reasons why they seem fake... for instance the type being nearly unreadable, while the handwritten notations are dark - the exact opposite of the previous sides, where more often than not the marker stuff was graded back and the type was always bold and plainly visible.

Also the fact that the new "sides" have the date written at the top, while the old ones do not. And what is the date at the top? 4/1/07. April Fool's.

Another clear indicator is the fact that this scene in the cave with Alfred (excuse me, "Earnest Butler") is far too close to a scene from the novel "Inferno" by Alex Irvine; a Begins tie-in novel. I highly doubt that TDK would feature a scene that is virtually ripped from a Begins tie-in novel.

Yep.

I've been following movie news online for ten years now. The first rule I learned:

BELIEVE NOTHING YOU READ ON ANY WEBSITE APRIL 1ST.

I stand by that. :up:
 
There are other reasons why they seem fake... for instance the type being nearly unreadable, while the handwritten notations are dark - the exact opposite of the previous sides, where more often than not the marker stuff was graded back and the type was always bold and plainly visible.
Could be a different scanner.

Also the fact that the new "sides" have the date written at the top, while the old ones do not. And what is the date at the top? 4/1/07. April Fool's.
True. But is the bartender scene new, really? I thought we'd heard about that one before, and that too has the 4/1/07 date on it.

Another clear indicator is the fact that this scene in the cave with Alfred (excuse me, "Earnest Butler") is far too close to a scene from the novel "Inferno" by Alex Irvine; a Begins tie-in novel. I highly doubt that TDK would feature a scene that is virtually ripped from a Begins tie-in novel.
Fair enough, though I don't think it's that shocking, and it's not like the novel was a big seller. I didn't even know it existed, for crying out loud.

BELIEVE NOTHING YOU READ ON ANY WEBSITE APRIL 1ST.

I stand by that. :up:
There's good reason to be very skeptical. But the fact of the matter is that we just don't know, and this would have to be a damn elaborate hoax since it's on a site like sidesexpress.com. I'm skeptical that anyone would go to those lengths.
 
Ooh, just remembered something else that ties in with this new side.


BOF (and a number of reports such as the one from AICN here):-

Both Christian Bale and Christopher Nolan have seen a new Batsuit & there's been a fitting.

I told this person how I didn't particularly dig the suit in Batman Begins and said it was too bulky. To this he/she replied, "Well then you'll love the new one." He/she also stated that Bats changes his suit halfway through the film - and its a major plotpoint as to the how and why this happens.

He/she sadly, had no news about the Joker's get up.


Everyone thought Batman's suit gets damaged, so he has to get a new one. But suppose he has to change it because the original one is stolen by the Joker? Whilst it could be really cheesy, it would fit the Joker's sense of humour and motivations, AND it fits in with the title of the film, and Nolan's interests in themes.

BB asked the question, WHO is Bruce Wayne? IN TDK, the question will be WHO is the Batman, a man or a lunatic? It also fits Nolan's comments that things will get worse before they get better.
 
i'm not buying it, its an april fools trick don't you see? if its in the film i will happily eat my words but it wont be.
 
It's a VERY elaborate April Fools' joke, AND where's the gag?

By now, someone should have admitted it was a gag.


AND in terms of spoilers, wouldn't something like 'GORDON GETS SHOT', 'RACHEL DIES', 'RACHEL BECOMES TWO-FACE' be bigger spoilers / gags, and better jokes?


I don't know, there might be something real about this...
 
IT's NINJA TRICKS

the gag is in how cheesy the scene would be- it's reminds me of the old TV show. Also Nolan and WB know perfectly well what we're like, they know we got to the sides and they know that we enjoy freaking out over the EVERY little detail online. It's not that elaborate, they just typed it up and released it. A juicy treat except it smells like red herring.

Oh well it leasts it shows they havn't forgotten us!:yay:
 
Yes, it's potentially cheesy...


BUT it fits a lot of the info we DO know about TDK, AND fits in with both the Joker's characterisation and Nolan's own personal traits.


From the other sides and interviews, TDK will focus on Batman, Gordon and Dent's pursuit of the Joker. There's a plot regarding mobsters in Gotham and the somoene's influence. There's references to hostage situations created by SOMEONE (not mentioned who?), there's a reference to other vigilantes inspired by Batman (and the capture of one by someone with 'a quiet voice and strange smile').

Then you have the plot of the National Guard being brought into Gotham, and the Batman being targeted (in a side with Gordon and his son).


Suppose the person doing these things is the Joker (duh)? BUT suppose they are done with all being directed at Batman (by dressing like him)? That would make him the suspect in all these situations, a bigger menace than he ever was in BB. It would also fit in with the title, The Dark Knight, and would be a story of how things have to get worse before they get better.
 
He just came back after several years in a self-imposed exile from Gotham and it clearly shows he just started learning about his company. Bruce Wayne abhorring all kinds of military weaponry and military production in the comics is just one of the many inconsistencies and contradictions between the different interpretations of the character. If not, then the comics Bruce Wayne is a class A hypocrite for not only allowing his company produce military technology, but also for utilizing it for his own war on crime in the case of which, I'd gladly welcome the ditching of such a logical discrepancy in the character. Sure, faithfulness to the source is all well and good, but not to the radical extent of which one shall have no choice but to accept the good with the bad just because. It's a comic book, not a goddamned religion.
Inconsistent, maybe. Contradictory, hardly. Bruce Wayne has almost always been shown to either hate or fear guns. He has been shown several times to be wary of any alliance with a military company. I don't know that his company produces military weaponry in the comics. I know he's produced vehicles and grapples and armor and so forth. I have yet to see Wayne Enterprises make guns, bombs, missles, etc.

As for proof, I would have dug up actual links to the posts if the Hype hadn't deleted pretty much everything from the pre-release days in the BB forum. Besides, I don't need to as I'm speaking from the personal experience of our countless encounters and from my perspective, is more than enough for me to freely express my disdain for the way you conduct yourself around this place.
Unfortunately, what you're speaking from is memory. And memories aren't that reliable. The way I conduct myself? Oh...you don't like that I question things rather than accept them blindly, and that I analyze things. But we already knew that.
Like I said, it's not just your 'questioning' I had a problem with. It was always quite apparent that you were overzealous and overly eager to pass judgment on the film even though all you had was a bloody first draft of the script. For someone who was simply 'concerned' about fidelity to the comics, you seemed to be unusually negative and resistant to any hopes or expectancy of your 'problems' being addressed in the film itself. In all my arguments with you, not once did I see you keep an open mind and wait until you've seen the damn film before firing on your endless reproach machine.
Obviously it is my questioning you had a problem with, because that's all the "Wayne Enterprises military connection" was. A discussion point. I never passed judgement on the film itself back then. I passed judgement on the script draft, which was tangible, and right there to be critiqued. The quality of the writing and the adaption based on the script. Unless you can find anything that indicates otherwise, you can spout on and on all you want about me passing judgement on the film based on the first draft, but you can't prove a thing.
Actually you did.
Once again...prove it. While I said many times I would have preferred to have seen certain things (Talia Al Ghul, a different version of Falcone, no Rachel character), I also almost always said that the deviations taken in BEGINS worked fairly well.
Otherwise there would have been no purpose in trying to prove Begins wasn't as faithful to the comics as you were touting it to be when it hadn't even achieved completion at the time.
Do you even read my posts? I just told you why I might have done that, and you seem to have glanced right over it. The only reason I ever pointed out BEGINS "unfaithful" aspects was because at the time, many people insisted on bashing the previous Batman franchise for it's "unfaithfulness", and yet excused BEGINS for taking similar kinds of liberties. I had nothing against BEGINS. I had something against people's one-sided and irrational arguments against the previous Batman franchise.
Exactly what I called your 'prematurely judgmental' attitude. In your valiant defense (and occasional patronizing) of the Burton films, you had already condemned Begins to no end in your critique.
Huh? You make it sound like I BEGINS-bashed, when I don't recall doing so. I did not ever, as I recall, condemn BATMAN BEGINS as a whole product. Ever. What I did was point out that just like the Burton Batfilms, it was not a perfect adaption, and had its share of unfaithful aspects. I pointed out things like..."if you're going to complain that The Joker had a hand in creating Batman in BATMAN, how do you excuse Ra's Al Ghul's involvement in the act in BATMAN BEGINS"?
Precisely why you seemed so reluctant towards admitting even the possibility of your 'problems' with the script being addressed in any capacity in the theatrical cut even if someone brought it to your attention, for the simple reason that it would have undermined your position at the time.
I don't believe I ever, back then, said the script couldn't or wouldn't change, and I recall hoping and saying I wished it would in some areas. It did, in some areas, and I recall recognizing those things in my review of the film and discussion of it.
One that couldn't be any truer.
Truth without proof, huh? Classic.
Pray tell, where exactly in Year One does Batman 'acknowledge' the SWAT team is corrupt?
I believe he mentions Branden and his ties to the Commissioner when he's inside the apartment complex after the bombing. I could be wrong. My copy is an hour away.
And I'm pretty sure Batman is allowed the license to engage in offensive behavior by hurting a few cops in the process of saving a life.
There's a difference between hurting someone who was attacking you to escape a deadly situation...and risking injury or serious death to someone who hasn't even attacked you to prove a point. What happened in BATMAN BEGINS is the latter.
Rachel was passing out and he was quickly running out of time. He didn't have the luxury of wasting it in outracing the cops in a lengthy game of cat'n mouse throughout the city.
Yes, time was of the essence. And yet he had the luxury of slowing down a bit to climb/run over a police car, rather than just accelerating past it and saving time?
So he used certain tactics to quickly dispose of them and shake them off his tail.
This is my point: He didn't NEED to shake them off his tail. They weren't even aware of his presence until he ran them over.
And his judgment was correct. He had cut it pretty close by the time he brought her to the cave. Any further delay and she might have not made it at all.
He cut it close because that's how the story is written. For Rachel to conveniently faint at that precise moment when he's almost home. What's your point? And he did engage in a bit of "further delay" when he essentially slowed down in the process of running over that police cruiser. Watching the film, I was kinda wondering why he didn't just run from the cops on the streets and keep running them over until he escaped. That would have been kooool.
I never said the whole Tumbler chase scene was not intended to showcase the action power of the vehicle in any way. Clearly it is. But at the same time, a lot of Batman's actions can be justified in the context of the situation.

Hey, that's great. He's taking their car out of action. My point is...he didn't need to risk their lives to do so. They weren't even aware of his presence until he ran over their car. If he zooms past...with police cars coming behind him...they're going to have to either accelerate, and join the chase, or wait for their fellow officers to pass and join the chase.

As for your point about the cops not being able to catch up to him because he was going in an opposite direction, then you clearly know nothing about how the police contain such chases. A lot of the times, patrol cars giving chase break pursuit to corner or trap the fleeing vehicle by approaching them from other directions. That was exactly the purpose of Batman disabling their vehicle.
I know police tactics well enough. I'm aware of chase procedures. However, the cops in question weren't giving chase. They were apparently just parked there waiting. They don't even seem to be aware of Batman's presence nearby. They're clearly just sitting there at the scene, as the film shows the two officers inside the car not even driving, just sort of looking up in surprise when they hear the Tumbler coming.
That is just grasping at loose straws. By the same logic, Batman should restrain himself for the simple reason that his breaking of bones and ribs of cops and criminals that often ended up in internal bleeding and ruptured organs of the victims could have easily killed them if they weren't hospitalized at the right time. Batman is not afraid of taking calculated risks and being a bit brutal if the situation calls. Even though in the comics both his allies and his enemies realize by now that he doesn't kill, they criminals still fear him because of what he has done to them in the past.
Yes, Batman SHOULD restrain himself, and generally does. Batman will do whatever it takes to minimalize contact, to avoid killing anyone. Especially, I would think, police officers who are ONLY DOING THEIR JOBS. You realize that you're comparing the possibility of broken ribs and internal bleeding to being absolutely crushed by a speeding tank? Either you can discuss the point on its own, or you can't. These aren't CRIMINALS we're discussing. These are POLICE OFFICERS.
Now that's just pathetic. Watch that scene again very closely. Those little 'bombs' were concussion mini-mines that are designed to register impact, not blow things up. That is why in the scene where the police car comes into contact with the mine, there is no fiery explosion. You just see the impact effect of the mine and then see smoke instead of fire. Which proves that it wasn't lethal as you're claiming it to be. You crying about the possibility of fire and explosions being caused by something that wasn't even an incendiary weapon clearly shows how far you're reaching here.
Fire is not the issue. The force of the explosion is. Why don't YOU watch the scene very closely? There is the clear flash of an explosion there. And the cars being tossed into the air, rolling, etc, at high speeds...can't really be argued. That's an extremely dangerous situation to be in. You realize that elements of a car can explode just because of the IMPACT from a crash, right? How else do you think that parts of cars catch on fire when they crash?
And I am still laughing at your absurdity of reproaching a fictional character in a fictional universe for what could have happened in terms of real-world possibilities. I thought after seeing so many films and reading so many comics, you should have realized by now that people are not as fragile and don't die as easily in the imaginary world as they do in the real one. You're just looking for excuses to b**ch about things.
It's not about whether people were killed or not, in the context of the film. It's about your absurd argument that what Batman did was appropriate. Personally, I think it's you who are just looking for excuses to ***** about me...since you brought this up in the first place.
Just go read Year One then. The part where he takes down an entire squad of SWAT team members by kicking the support pillar which results in the entire roof structure collapsing down upon them could have been very much fatal. They could have easily died from the impact of the debris or suffocated to death under the rubble.
And newsflash, I don't think what he does there in YEAR ONE is the most appropriate thing to do, either.
In Begins, Batman throws concussion mines in front of a single police car. In Year One, he brings down an entire floor on a whole team.
I'll leave you to decide which is more reckless and apathetic.
Dropping the roof on the SWAT team, obviously. How is that relevant to our discussion? Oh, he did something more reckless in some other comic, and so my argument that he's a bit reckless and apathetic in BEGINS is null and void? Sorry, doesn't work that way. I've seen Batman kill and torture people in the comics. That doesn't excuse what he does in BATMAN BEGINS any more.
But then again, we both know what you are going to choose, aren't we?
I don't know. Do we? I notice you skimmed over the part where I pointed out that in YEAR ONE, he's being attacked, and in BATMAN BEGINS, he isn't. Again: There's a HUGE difference between being ATTACKED (In YEAR ONE, he'd already been in a bombing, been shot, and was being shot at by multiple persons) and doing what it takes to survive...and in not being attacked, and attacking others anyway (the cops were just doing their job, and he felt the need to risk their lives...fairly needlessly. He could have evaded them in the Tumbler anyway).
He tried offensive maneuvers on the cops only twice, first when he smashed the first car outside Arkham. After that, he does his best to try to lose them by purely evasive actions - weaving in and out of traffic, launching off of parking lots, driving over rooftops and out speed his pursuers but they had him cornered from all sides. Like I said, it is easy to excuse and justify his actions within the context of the situation.
You would excuse and justify someone who attacks and risks injury and death to those who have not attacked them at all? Tell me...is it ok for an ambulance to smash into a stationary car full of kids because someone needs help in the back of it?
Of course there was 'reckless action' because the film demanded it, just like how there is 'reckless action' in the comics when the comics demand it. Ergo, it is not out of character. You seem to have an increasingly soft and pacifist interpretation of Batman, Guard. Ever think you are maybe too timid to withstand fictional violence and not take it so personally?
Nope. I'm pretty keen on violence as a method, but not needless violence, which is what I see utilized here. I'm not keen on a character who has always been about determining who to harm and not to harm (hint: bad guys VS innocents and lawmen) harming people when there are other options. And it's hilarious that you can't handle me having that opinion.
 

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