metalhead_dave
Why am I back on here?
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2007
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I don't count the truck sequence because the Joker planned to be caught, and had his men waiting to take Harvey and Rachel prisoner straight afterwards. It was all planned.
And as for the party, I say Batman was just lucky Harvey was in his penthouse when Joker decided to strike. Had he been elsewhere, I wonder would Batman have failed like he did with Loeb, and the Judge? Most likely, IMO.
Well, since he failed at everything else in the movie, he really had no other choice but to salvage what little was left.
Now I'm not knocking the movie's ending, but that was the reality of the situation. "The Joker took the best of us. He won". Why? Because Batman failed to stop all the evil Joker did all thru the movie.
The only way to stop Joker from winning was to cover up Harvey's crimes.
I'm just wondering, have you ever read The Man Who Laughs?
It pretty much has the same formula as the Dark Knight when it comes to the Batman Joker relationship... where Batman is running around like a chicken with his head cut off trying to stop the Joker from killing innocent people, after he announces who is going to kill. Even Year One Batman had a very hard time stopping the Joker the first time around.
Now I'm not saying that a movie should be based SOLEY on one or a few stories of the source material, instead they should encompass the major theme's and spirits of said material. People have been criticising B89 for Gordon's role and the fact that Batman killed even though it was based on the early stories. It's still a major movie based on Batman and his world. So even if it is Batman's first time with the Joker, it shouldn't be exactly like the Man Who Laughs, or any other ONE Batman story.
But I really don't think one movie can nail the arch enemy relationship between Batman and the Joker that only comes with the history that they have with each other. Trying to show them off as equals, while making Joker a dangerous threat, while trying to show they are alike and yet so different, ALL in Batman's first encounter with the Joker and all in ONE story under three hours. I think it takes a few stories to really establish that because even the Man Who Laughs didn't really establish their connection. So with that being said... I like what Nolan attempted at least, he made the Joker a major threat that Batman had to step up to take on and left the Joker's fate open ended.
Call me by my first name again and i will have you fired from Wayne Ind. in no time mister!
It's okay... I got a new job.
Yours 

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