Agreed. Did you see Elysium? I find Blomkamp tends to stuff the message down our throats. Liked that movie but didn't love it for that reason.
bane without his mask
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wat?It's crazy how most people still don't know that the mask was actually cgi'd in in post only.
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I don't know if Nolan is making a message or not. He says that he is interested in "the things that worry us". What I find interesting is that a lot of the news after TDKR reminds me of certain events in the film.
Nolan had written the script before the whole Occupy Wall Street movement happened. This is what Bale said:
"There's something quite uncanny that happened during 'The Dark Knight Rises' and I think you'll see that there's a correlation in the Occupy Wall Street movement and some themes within the movie here."
"I turned to Chris [Nolan] and I said, 'How did that happen? I read the script long before Occupy Wall street and Occupy anything existed, but look at that!' It's become more and more topical, the more that we continued filming. He manages to do that - just to take a superhero but actually make it mean something to our time right now."
Then we have the Snowden situation, with all the talk of a Bane-esque mid-flight skyjacking of the plane which Snowden was on.
Obama has said: "Russia’s actions are a problem. They don’t pose the No. 1 national security threat to the United States. I continue to be much more concerned when it comes to our security with the prospect of a nuclear weapon going off in Manhattan."
He has said nuclear terrorism is "the single most important national security threat that we face."
Very recently, we have seen that ISIS are getting volunteers by emptying Iraq's prisons (remind anyone of a certain masked man and Blackgate?).
I wonder if members of Hamas watched The Dark Knight Rises...hey, if Bruce Wayne can watch television in a Middle-Eastern underground pit...
Like I said I don't know if Nolan is making a political message or not.
The very first image of The Dark Knight Rises shows us cracking - the bat symbol cracking. I think Nolan in The Dark Knight Rises is showing cracks within society - how they appear and how certain people/events can cause further cracks or repair the cracks. He just understands cities, urban settings, how they work, how they manipulate, and how they can be manipulated. In a way he is playing with Gotham City in The Dark Knight Rises, on the largest possible scale (as he cuts it off from the rest of the world), similar to how he was playing with and folding cities in Inception. He is asking "What if...?" questions. I don't know if he is providing answers to us in the film, but he certainly raises interesting questions.
Some events in the news have reminded me of certain scenes in Nolan's films. Nolan can't predict the future, but I'd still keep an eye on the advances in space exploration/physics in the coming years, as Interstellar is out this year...![]()
I do not think TDKR has any real particular political message. If it does, it is a small-C Burkian conservative message that essentially boils down to "mobs are bad," which has been the American position in reaction to such social revolutions going back to the French in the 1790s.
However, what he did very well is to pick at the types of social collapses or upheavals that overthrows the status quo, usually at the cost of blood running through the streets. And he imagines how such timeless terrors can happen in the early 21st century. Sometimes his solutions are fanciful or "comic booky" (Bane holding the US government hostage with a bomb), but much of it comes from a visceral level.
Ra's Al Ghul is a bearded extremist from a foreign mountain that wants to destroy an American city to send a political message. The Joker is the lone killer on the streets that inexplicably and horrifyingly slaughters without reason or cause (though for cinematic and comic book grandeur, it is all part of an unlikely calculation to spread maximum chaos throughout society). And Bane is the social dissident (which doesn't have to be liberal like OWS or conservative like the Tea Party), who whips social unrest up in a frenzy for his own ends through the pretense of a bad economy and social inequality--especially with a growing income gap.
Some of their tools also are scarily believable. Bane having a band of fanatics who hide underground and are organized enough to take over small communities seems absurd in the U.S. But we see it all the time around the world, including right now in Northern Iraq and parts of Syria.
Nolan just has the artistic license in a superhero movie to do something unbelievable--say they take over a major American city?--but he'll present it in a way that seems uncomfortably familiar.
It is a big reason why the villains of this trilogy are so much more memorable and disturbing than what Marvel cranks out on a yearly basis.
Ive heard a lot of people say that Stryver should have been Sionis. I find that interesting..
Does it show how he survived the nuclear blast?
Does it show how he survived the nuclear blast?
He will die a slow death of radiation poisoning while living out his days with Selina.
I thought this conversation was over. He ejected before the Bat goes through that building within Gotham when everyone is pointing and eying the Bat as it heads out into the bay. Nolan using non linear plotting/editing isn't anything new.