I wish the film had the atmosphere of those posters.
Super dark with rain and rocks flying around everywhere?
Bane and Talia believed in the same ideals Ra's did, re: destroying Gotham. They just had an extra layer of personal vendetta against Batman to go along with it, as well as their own relationship.
Perhaps he was viewing it like "I am going to accomplish what Ra's failed to achieve and wasn't up to the task for to prove my superiority and that he was wrong to excommunicate me".Interesting and I'm not saying that's not the way it is as I haven't seen the film in ages. Ras's mission seemed more like a 'return to balance' type of motive. He wanted to remove the criminal element and corruption on a grand scale. The Talia/Bane plot just sounded like they wanted to blow it up. Furthermore, I don't quite understand why Bane wanted to carry out Ras's plans anyways? I can kinda see why Talia would as it was her dad etc. But Bane was excommunicated by Ras and sent into the pit. I still feel like he was 'fulfilling Ras Al Ghul's destiny" as per Talia's desire.
I wasn't too blown away by the tdkr posters. I liked the Legend ends one with Bane but was really annoyed that they couldn't more creative then using the tdk photo of batman standing on the police car for a tdkr movie. I liked the tdk posters the most.
I guess I'm still one of the few who still likes this poster:
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I wasn't a fan of all TDK Rises posters, but I really liked these:
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And like BB's posters, they all followed a colour theme.
I couldn't disagree more with this. Rises was trying not to be TDK. There's a reason why they moved away from Joker, from the crime thriller. It's not trying to recapture anything. Begins, Knight and Rises were all sophisticated in ways, with some grounded realism. But that's not all. Each film was trying to be something, whether it's a specific genre or what kind of story it's trying to tell. And Rises in my opinion succeeded at what it was trying to do. Nolan has described what Rises was meant to do, and none of that sounded like what he was trying to do with TDK. You don't have to like every detail of the film but the way you're judging Rises makes zero sense to me. It falls in line with all the other examples you listed.This is one of the oldest arguments we've discussed on here. "How can you say Rises is worse than xyz" or "how can you like xyz but not Rises?"
The answer to that is simple: I judge films by what they're trying to be, to what extent they achieve being that, and to what extent whatever they're trying to be is merited. Ideally, a truly great film manages to achieve all three of those components to near perfection. I'm referring to the likes of TDK, Terminator 2, TESB, Fight Club, Pulp Fiction, etc. You can't, for example, take a comedy film and drama film and argue one which is better than the other, but you can argue one achieved what it was trying to be better than the other one did.
That being said, The Avengers tries to be a big superhero event teamup...and it succeeds at being that. The Winter Soldier tries to be a 70's political thriller mixed in with the action and war themes of a Captain America comic...and it succeeds at being that. Guardians tries to be a fun space fantasy tale...and it succeeds at being that. The Wolverine tries to be a small personal story of a man haunted by his demons...and it succeeds at being that. I like all of those films because they knew what they were trying to be and in my opinion, they succeeded at being that.
The problem with Rises is that it tries to be TDK 2.0. It's a film that tries to recapture that same level of sophistication mixed in with grounded realism of Nolan's previous work, similar to how everytime we had a tentpole CBM there was at least one knockoff version that tried recapturing that magic (Superman '78 to Supergirl, SM1 to Story's FF films, Iron Man to Green Lantern, etc.). It sets up that high of a standard to itself, and it fails to reach that standard for some of us here. It's a "bad" film, but it's "bad" in that sense as opposed to in the Transformers sense. And in that particular sense, I would rank at least 6-7 of the 2013-15 CBM's over Rises.
Perhaps he was viewing it like "I am going to accomplish what Ra's failed to achieve and wasn't up to the task for to prove my superiority and that he was wrong to excommunicate me".
I couldn't disagree more with this. Rises was trying not to be TDK. There's a reason why they moved away from Joker, from the crime thriller. It's not trying to recapture anything. Begins, Knight and Rises were all sophisticated in ways, with some grounded realism. But that's not all. Each film was trying to be something, whether it's a specific genre or what kind of story it's trying to tell. And Rises in my opinion succeeded at what it was trying to do. Nolan has described what Rises was meant to do, and none of that sounded like what he was trying to do with TDK. You don't have to like every detail of the film but the way you're judging Rises makes zero sense to me. It falls in line with all the other examples you listed.
With an added element of wanting to punish Bruce for being handed what he wanted on a silver platter and then rejecting it. Kind of like the good and bad sons of Ra's. One rejected by the father but wanted to serve by his side, the other who rejects the father. I also like how none of this stuff is spelled out too bluntly in the movie and it's there for you to read into. Makes it more epic for me. You get the sense that Bane and Talia's story could've had its own movie that would've been entirely compelling in its own right.
It's a sequel. It's the same story continuing. So what do you mean by trying to recapture the style? It's a different movie, a different genre, different stakes. So for that, we know it's different. But style? Green Lantern tried to be Iron Man, yes. But you can slap the hand of Green Lantern, it's a separate franchise. You're basically saying that a sequel is trying to recapture the "style" of a previous film within the same story/franchise. Is it supposed to suddenly change in style? That would be awkward.
I see it like this, the story changed, the genre changed, but all three movies had the same style and tone. The only difference is possibly the final act of Batman Begins on a visual level. So stylistically, if you're blaming Rises for trying to do what TDK did, i dont know what to say other than...bravo to TDKR. It's not really about recapturing, as if it's trying to repeat the same thing or be a "knock-off". You're saying that TDK knew what it wanted to be and succeeded, while Rises didn't. But how? That was the basis of your argument. So I still don't understand where you're coming from. I can't stress enough that it's a sequel that continues the story so it's completely unfair to list Green Lantern biting Iron Man as an example.
GL tried going for the same snarky ***hole attitude Downey has, etc. .
I wish the film had the atmosphere of those posters.