shauner111
Avenger
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- Mar 16, 2011
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That's baloney. The shootouts and fighting in Inception were good. The Selina stuff at the bar? How was that confusing. There was nothing wrong about it at all.
Everytime i see the Bane spinning punch it's perfect. It's quick and IMO there's no way you can see it not land unless you're slowing it down. We'll never agree on that.Maybe that's because you're blinding yourself to them. I don't pause the film or put it in slow motion. I noticed goons standing there with guns just waiting for Batman to clock them the first time i watched it. I noticed Bane's silly spinning jumping punch thing not being anywhere near Batman's face the first time i watched it. Again why did he do that silly spinning jumping punch? That was more stylized or "hollywood" than anything Cap did in his film.
Of course the punches don't land. But in TWS it FEELS like they do. When Cap boots some guy in the face, you understand he is knocked out. When Batman punches someone in the shoulder and they stay down it's like... really? None of his strikes seem incapacitating. Not just because of the choice of martial art, but because the stunt actors are terrible and the way they are filmed.
The fighting style used by Cap isn't stylistic. He's still just punching and kicking. But it feels brutal because of the way it's filmed and edited.
Everything in a frame matters because every frame, every shot is chosen specifically by the director to present to the audience, not just the center.Maybe im blinding myself to what's going on in the frame. But im focusing on batman and catwoman fighting, my eyes aren't wandering around in the frame to see what the mercenaries are up to. That's just me.
I love, love, love Nolan's stuff but it's no secret that he has a very, very, very hard time directing a good hand on hand combat scenes. He's had his moments but you can tell it's nowhere near his forte.
Never noticed.The shootouts were bad. The scene in Inception when they are boxed in at the car chase has laughable continuity. In one cut, the yellow cab that JGL is driving is undamaged with the windows intact, in the other, glaringly, the car is damaged with the windows shattered. And then the same pattern is shown to us quite a few times so that we see the damaged and undamged versions of the car in repetition.
And I meant not in the bar specifically, but outside of it where the cops are attacked by the League from the outside that is poorly edited and confusing.
What did O'Neil say?
I believe the third movie completed Bruce's arc in the best way possible. It felt like a perfect conclusion. Everything tied up nicely like a bow.Life, Death, and the Failure of Force
While Bruce laments Rachels death, Alfred shatters him with the revelation that Rachel had preferred Harvey Dent anyway. This severs their friendship, but Alfred reminds him that the only thing worse than being hated by and estranged from Bruce would be the thought of Bruces reckless death. Alfred offers his vision of Bruce learning how to live as a civilian with a wife and kids, his bat-days behind him. And yet a potent mixture of personal anger and the heros call to deal with Bane persuade Bruce to again live through his persona as the Caped Crusader, now a reckless vigilante with no fear of death or, as Alfred would say, with an eerie attraction towards it. Alfreds (2nd!) use of the Law to kill Bruce disabuses him of his obsession with what could have been, but it doesnt make him fully alive. For that, he needs the true death of brutality and failure, the kind that only lived experience and the failure of self-reliance preach effectively.
Enter Bane, a vicious mercenary and agent of the genocidal League of Shadows, which our hero spent most of Batman Begins destroying. As Alfred reminds Wayne, Bane is younger than him, far stronger, tougher, faster, and trained in Batmans same fighting style. While Ledgers Joker questioned all of the heros values parodying, complicating, and negating them Bane is devoted to his own ideals: a young woman, savagery, mastery by force. If the Joker was the perfect counterpoint to The Dark Knights Batman, Bane fits perfectly with a vengeful and disaffected Bruce, intent on using sheer force, as he did when he was younger, to fight crime. The end of sin is death, and the end of Waynes devotion to self-reliance and force is literally being broken, his back in two. He has tried sheer force and it didnt work. His self-destructive orientation has, as Alfred predicted, killed him he lies on the floor of a dark pit, where the worm never dies and the fire is not quenched. Sounding familiar? It becomes even more so with the Rising.
Fear and Humility
The first movie started with Bruce Wayne overcoming all of his fears especially of bats and death and Rises comes full-circle when a wise man in the Pit tells Bruce he must relearn the fear of death and use it. But first Bruce must have something real to live for. Bane ends up giving Batman exactly what he needs: death to victory by sheer individual force, and then the will to live. Only by entering a living hell of death does Bruce realize that he wants to live for something outside of the Pit and outside himself, looking at the TV and realizing his calling is to help Gotham. Thus Wayne again transcends himself for the city he loves; his humiliating death to self opens the space in his heart for renewed devotion to Gotham. And so he rises out of the prison, making the final leap without the customary safety rope. Now that his fall has renewed his desire to live, he becomes afraid of death again; this fear, in turn, propels him. Wayne has moved from reliance on his own power to humility, and hes concomitantly shed the fearlessness of nihilism for the bravery of one who feeds off of fear because there is so much to lose. The character development is astounding.
A few critics were concerned that Rises didnt have enough Batman; that is, Bruces character wasnt as prominent. Indeed, the side-characters take up a massive amount of screentime, and yet this is appropriate for an aging Batman who has, at last, met someone too powerful for him to deal with. Paradoxically, Banes very use of force to break Batman teaches Bruce that force doesnt always work. To this end, he relies on Fox, a brilliantly-acted Detective Blake, Miranda Tate, Gordon, and Catwoman.
Catwoman is a smart, resourceful and beautiful thief (played by Anne Hathaway) who only desires to clear her record and get a fresh start. Batmans knowledge of his inadequacy against Bane, as well as Catwomans inability to escape her involvement with Banes thugs, force the two into a beautiful relationship. Catwoman grudgingly gives up her independence and Bruce, in turn, must trust someone who betrayed him into his first death at Banes hands. Batmans honest reckoning with a world in which the good-evil fault line runs through every human heart finds its highest expression in Catwoman. He trusts that theres more to [her] than that, meaning deceit and self-preservation. The ending will prove his judgment correct and/or his imputation effective: if Batman does have a superpower, its anthropological insight into a crippled yet redeemable human nature.
Alfreds Vision and the Ending
Now that Bruce has experienced the same death as Bane in the Pit, hes prepared to face him again. Batman doesnt defeat Bane because hes been working out more; instead his secret weapon is humility. Knowing that he cannot defeat Bane in some idealized contest of physical prowess, he more humbly targets Banes mask, taking slashes (aka cheapshots) at its valves. With Bane finally defeated, however, Batman finds again that he cannot attain victory on his own: he is still the quintessentially human superhero, and this time his wits and judgment have failed him. Miranda shockingly stabs him, reveals her leading role in the League of Shadows, and stabs the Caped Crusader. Again, however, Batmans humility (you could even say desperation) saves him: his dependence upon Catwoman pays off, and she promptly destroys Bane with the Bat-bikes cannons.
Some may complain that Batman never quite gets the best of his enemy, and yet none of us ever do that would be more appropriate to more super-human heroes. Nolans Batman must open himself to the world to find victory and redemption, and its a victory which happens despite his prior arrogant and self-destructive attempts to take on Banes entire army by himself. The side-characters are so prominent because thats their natural role in any remotely honest story of human heroism. And so Batmans victory finally costs him his life as he fails to account for all the contingencies (i.e. Mirandas treachery and flooding the reactor), so he must give up his last resource to stop the bomb.
Or so we think. He survives through the banal, down-to-earth magic of autopilot, so again his humanity is affirmed. He doesnt survive through heroics, but rather through a painfully obvious software patch. He can now begin to live Alfreds vision for him as a normal human being; both his victory over Bane and its attendant humility allow him to do this. Evil is not, of course, naively eradicated; instead, Nolan gently reminds us that others are capable of taking up this mantle for Gotham. His death hidden in Batmans, Bruce has now been freed to be drum roll a mere human! He died to bodily self-preservation in the form of fear in Begins, he died to self-justifying moral high ground in The Dark Knight, and now in Rises he dies to being any kind of hero at all. And this is why Nolan concludes the trilogy perfectly: evil isnt vanquished permanently, Gothams era of heroes isnt over (as we see from Robins spelunking scene), but age and humility have finally freed Bruce. As befits Batman, the closing scenes are not epic rebuilding of Gotham or the punishment of evil. Instead, we see one mans delight in simple human life (after dying to the heros burden) and a womans freedom now that her record has been cleared. To paraphrase Gerhard Forde, life isnt about being a Godlike hero; its about learning how to live as a creature. And so Bruce Wayne does. Nolans final frame, however, resonates even more than Bruces and Catwomans normal lives. If theres any symbol for God in the movie, its Alfred: the one who adopts Bruce, who bears Bruces hatred to save his life when telling him about Rachels letter. And its Alfred we see in the final scene, a benevolent smile on his face, reveling in Bruces and Selinas liberty and rest.
Not trying to defend Rises here (ewww), but that leaves JGL's arc hanging. I would much rather Robin wasn't in the film at all, but since he is there, TDKR would've been incomplete leaving with the Bat."Hey, listen. It was a good movie. But the last 30 seconds--lose it! Come on, this thing in the <grumbles> cafe in Paris*? Story ends with the plane** going over the ocean." "It was a story about redemption. And that would have been redemption." "What was interesting is about that entire trilogy is they didn't end with two guys bashing each other. Even the first Iron Man movie [did that]--which I thought was a damn good movie..."
* Florence
** The Bat
It was on Kevin Smith's Fat Man on Batman recently.
He also said he envisioned Angie Harmon as Talia, someone tall and strong, and wasn't trying quarrel about Marion Cotillard, but admitted he was probably being way too much of a comic book guy trying to translate the page to the screen.