JackWhite
Third Man
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- Jul 13, 2011
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But the idea itself of this signal flaring into the sky should be enough to scare anyone who tries to snatch a purse or what have you.
But is the Batman immortal? Are his methods supernatural?t:
The point is what the symbol represents to the people, that this masked guy laid down his life for them. It's instills hope and encourages positive emulation of their hero, hence "a hero can be anyone". It's about inspiring the good in people.
I only just discovered this video today but it had me and my brother in stitches!![]()
Apologies if I'm late to the party: http://youtu.be/IkMPZ7WeDck
This is off topic, but does anyone know where I can find high resolution photos from Batman Begins? I'm still looking for Fox, Gordon and Falcone.
But why should that work if everyone thinks he's dead? Nobody thinks there's multiple Batmen out there. The idea of reminding everyone he's out there was said when he was actually out there and everyone knew he was, hence they were being reminded of it.
If half the city watched him go up in a nuclear explosion then shining a batsignal in the sky isn't going to fool anyone.
What's the deal with holding Fox prisoner for 22 days?
Within moments of the film's opening, Nolan presents the audience with a fresh mystery - Gordon's alternate speech. He's clearly desperate to read it - its words are written in every fresh wrinkle on his face - but his conscience forces him to wait for the right moment.
When it's stolen by Bane (fittingly, in the City's sewers, where Gotham's dirt is hidden), we know that it won't be long before its secrets are revealed.
When the speech is finally read aloud by the masked terrorist, it's transformed into a weapon as powerful as any neutron bomb. And, like Wayne Enterprise's energy weapon, what was intended as a force for good - the confession of Gordon's sins, the absolution of Batman - is twisted into a tool of evil, shattering not just the Gotham residents' belief in Harvey Dent, but in the very concept of justice itself.
And yet, even though Gordon's words are spoken through a mask, by a maniac whose every utterance sounds sarcastic and mocking, as an audience, we feel the emotion of the words, and we hear them as though they were coming from Jim himself.
For us, stealing Gordon's moment of attrition is one of Bane's worst crimes.
Top 50 moments of The Dark Knight Rises (Total Film) - http://www.totalfilm.com/features/the-dark-knight-rises-50-best-moments-1
Maybe I'm misunderstanding it but they're kidding w/ #32 right? Do they not remember the cell-phone mapping device scene at end of TDK?
Modine had one delivery that I found cringe-worthy. "Jesus Blake, every cop in the city is down there! GARSH!"
Other than that, I thought he was fine.
I just watched that scene again and unless I got a weird copy mine cuts right after "tunnels".
Top 50 moments of The Dark Knight Rises (Total Film) - http://www.totalfilm.com/features/the-dark-knight-rises-50-best-moments-1
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