Personally, I remember some criticism about the violence in TDK, especially the pencil scene, but let us not selectively drag up the past. I think the saturation of the Joker has already had some backlash - I went to a costume party that banned the joker dress-up.
LOL, that's one of the stupidest things I've ever heard of

t: But it just re-affirms my point of the extreme influence Heath's Joker has had on the public.
And what of the controversy of that mock-up of Barack Obama as the Joker?
That was hilarious.
Anyway, back to the film at hand. I still think that while TDK is a good film, when people in a few years will probably lower their exaltation of the film when they re-watch it with a fresher perspective.
You mean like people did with the Burton movies, when Batman Begins came out? Not that Batman Returns (my 2nd favorite Batman movie after TDK) was ever held in very high esteem. Being panned as being too Burton, or too unsuitable for kids etc. It still receives a lot of criticism today.
No, I think TDK, like Spider-Man 2, X-Men 2, and the other highly praised comic book flicks, will stand the test of time. In fact,
Empire magazine did a public vote recently.
http://www.empireonline.com/500/93.asp
The Dark Knight was ranked the 15th greatest film in history on Empire's list of the "500 Greatest Movies of All Time", based upon the weighted votes of
10,000 readers, 150 film directors, and 50 key film critics. Heath Ledger's interpretation of the Joker was also ranked number three on Empire's 2008 list of the "100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time".
Here's where some notable comic book flicks came in:
The Dark Knight #15
Batman Begins #81
Superman #174
Sin City #274
The Incredibles #400
Batman Returns #401
Iron Man #406
Spider-Man 2 # 411
V for Vendetta #418
X-Men 2 #432
Spider-Man #437
Batman '89 #458
The Crow #468
Superman Returns #496
Now you're not going to try and tell me that TDK came in at #15 because of thousands of pity votes for Heath, are you?
Don't get me wrong, the over-hype didn't just come from Ledger's death, although I still remain surprised at some alleged fans' willingness to accept the Ledger's Joker as authenticity Batman, the viral campaign clearly had a hand in it.
The viral campaign, the trailer.....it all had a hand in the hype for the movie. It's only natural. That's what marketing is supposed to do. People were genuinely excited for it. I was there for it all. It was
crazy. Then 7 months later the movie was released, and the response to it was equally as positive.
Two years later, and several comic book movies later, it's still going strong. So strong that it's where these silly excuses of Heath's death being the lynchpin for his popularity arise, because some fans, and no offense to them, simply can't accept the extreme praise the movie gets.
It would be just as easy, although rather unfair, to accuse the Burton fans of being merely nostalgic about the comic book movies they grew up with. Or because they were the first ever Batman movies. I say unfair, because I grew up with Burton's movies. I love them not because they made me a fan of Batman, which they did, but because I genuinely love them.
Equally I love TDK because it is a genuinely great movie to me. I believe that is the reason for the other legions of fans who love it, too. It's why when I see cries of "It's only because Ledger died that people love it" etc that I call BS. Talk about clutching at straws.
It is far easier to write an eulogy of an actor who died and crown it with his last role being his 'swan song', and you know, Ledger's Joker probably was his swan song, and he definitely did well with the material he was given. My criticism isn't directed at Ledger per se, it's directed at Ledger and Nolan's version of the Joker. It seems blindingly obvious to me that Ledger's death has diverted attention away from whether Nolan's Joker was really all that fantastic.I can see why it happened though, it is obviously not popular to criticize a role a recently-deceased actor had just played. But one should be able to objectively say, look I don't like this Joker in the context of the Batman world and I think more people would say this if Ledger was alive and well today.
People are saying that. I don't know what you're basing that theory on, but people are not afraid to criticize. Far from it. Especially two years later.
That is the mis-conception I was talking about above. People accuse the praise as people tip toeing around the fact he's dead. If only people were that nice.
Let us just agree to disagree because we could argue this until the end of time and ultimately, it is time that will be the best judge of which Joker will stand the test of time better.
Fair enough.