Thank you that's what I thought but I wasn't sure even though I saw the movie 4 timesThey hired him after Batman brought Lau back to Gotham, long before they knew that he wouldn't actually kill Batman.
.Stephens also shows up with a bandage on his neck, pointing out Reese's appearance on Gotham Tonight to Gordon.4. Yep, Stephens lives to fight another day!

5. He told her to pretend to Barbara that the cops outside her house "can't be trusted" and to leave as soon as possible.
Yes indeed. Stephens looked like a very honest man by his face alone. Glad that he made it. I think that he reminds me of some cop in the comics Special Crimes Unit. Or i might be wrong.Yea, I know Stephens survived. I wasn't sure if Joker killed him or not until the second time, when I noticed he was with Gordon watching Reese on TV (with a bandage on his neck, nice attention to detail that some movies don't have). I was glad to see Stephens lived.
) to the Hong Kong fight scene etc... is there a deep symbolic meaning to broken glass or is it just because it's a staple of action films and it looks pretty on camera ?I think the plethora of broken glass is simply by virtue of it being an action movie.A question for my fellow psychologists on the Hype.
What is the significance of all the broken glass in the movie ?
From the magnificent first shot to the batpod breaking through glass doors, from Batman breaking the interrogation room mirror with Joker face (7 years of bad luck, just ask Rachel or Harvey) to the Hong Kong fight scene etc... is there a deep symbolic meaning to broken glass or is it just because it's a staple of action films and it looks pretty on camera ?
And while we're at it, my psychologists friends and if you feel like it, explain to me also the dog motif that runs throughout the movie. Thank you.
But I was reading an interesting blog post about the choice of using so much glass in the production design:Chaos in the film is simply Joker's attempt to remove some of the (already perhaps flimsy) partitions supporting an ordered edifice of civil morality. (Civil morality as in the ideological commitments to the sense of fairness that underly law, the courts, and the judiciary - also, the related concepts of what one should rationally desire and fear). Joker's desire not just to lay bare but to rip down these partitions - revealing the panic-inducing expanse of amorphous, unscripted moral interpolation - is seen realized in Gotham's inner and outer design. Nothing has proper walls: Dent's office, Bruce Wayne's bunker and penthouse -- all pillars and receding perspective lines, shelves and desks with only open, surface conspicuity. Even in Lau's Hong Kong architectural marvel, the walls and drawers are glass, revealing everything and waiting to be shattered.
First it was the under the Chechen, then the Joker, then finally back to the law with the GPD.

5. Two-Face tells Ramirez to call off the cops guarding Gordon's house, and then knocks her out without giving her a chance to call them off (?).

I've posted my thoughts about the dogs before, but....anyway. Dogs I suppose are a more animalistic version of human society. Dogs are usually pack animals, working together as a family unit to survive. But when the times really get hard, it becomes a "dog eat dog world." Joker basically says this without actually quoting the saying - "When the chips are down, these civilized people? They'll eat each other."
The Chechen's dogs also symbolized the fall of the underworld to the Joker, since they switch allegiances so quickly in that part of the film. But they've never operated completely with chaos, always under someone's orders. And they always attack poor Batman.First it was the under the Chechen, then the Joker, then finally back to the law with the GPD.
Okay, I've got a question. You know that scene where Bruce uses sonar technology to recreate the fingerprint on the bullet? Does that technology exist or is it being worked on somewhere? I thought I read on this board that this kind of technology was in development, but I don't know if I'm imagining that or not.
Good question!
..not really