returntovoid
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I didn't like Begins either, but then again, I don't like Batman, and I really don't like Bale's Batman.
Fair enough, if you're not a fan of Batman.
I didn't like Begins either, but then again, I don't like Batman, and I really don't like Bale's Batman.
Never knew of them, and out of the three movies mentioned, I'd only heard of Memento.
And the movie wasn't made in the way a mainstream Batman movie would be made.
What are you talking about???
Batman Begins was a great Bat-Film and I think it's better than TDK.![]()
I'd take one-liners over plot-holes, any day.![]()
To say that TDK was only as successful as it was because of Ledger's death is ridiculous. There isn't one factor that determined it's mega success, it was a combination of things that culminated into lightning in a bottle. I can say with confidence that the marketing had just as much to do with it as Ledger' death.
Nolan? The director of Memento? And Christian bale? The Empire of the Sun? Patrick Bateman himself? No, nobody knew them. And what to say about such no-ones as Michael Kane (or it was Caine?) or Morgan Freeman. God, it was a miracle that movie wasn't released directly to dvd. And that bat-human character. Who in the world would see a movie about that? Yeah, thus it didn't make as much money.
Me too. Plot-holes like a microwave emitter that vaporizes water everywhere but from human bodies AND bad one-liners are not a good combination.
Being movies from the same director with the same cast (almost) it is clear than most of the elements from BB were completely improved in TDK.
but from human bodies
bad one-liners
The microwave emitter wasn't a plot hole, that's just you being overly picky. That would be like me saying TDK has a TON of plot holes, in how the bus aligned PERFECTLY after the bank heist, how Harvey can survive such a horrendous accident, how Batman was carrying another person, while falling from a 30+ story building and survived, how you can somehow obtain over a billion in CASH, and have it setup in a warehouse(like that money wouldn't be floating around in multiple accounts, deposits, stocks, and/or funds), or just The Jokers overall elaborate, but entirely impossible, plan.Me too. Plot-holes like a microwave emitter that vaporizes water everywhere but from human bodies AND bad one-liners are not a good combination.
I know, I was talking about just having a huge pile of cash like that. Nobody has that much cash laying around in one specific area.^ Not that I want to be picky, but the 68 million that the Joker stole at the beginning and the pile that he burned are not the same money. The pile at the ship was all the mob's money, which was hidden by Lau. Otherwise I agree with your points.
The microwave emitter wasn't a plot hole, that's just you being overly picky. That would be like me saying TDK has a TON of plot holes, in how the bus aligned PERFECTLY after the bank heist, how Harvey can survive such a horrendous accident, how Batman was carrying another person, while falling from a 30+ story building and survived, how you can somehow obtain 68 million in BILLS, and have it setup in a warehouse(like that money wouldn't be floating around in multiple accounts, deposits, stocks, and/or funds), or just The Jokers overall elaborate, but entirely impossible, plan.
Most of these should be overlooked, because it's a friggin Batman movie. If you're worried about a microwave emitter in a Batman movie, then I think you should be more worried about the guy dressed as a bat. I don't care how "realistic" Nolan's style is, if you worried about that, then you should be just as worried about all the other "plot holes" in TDK.
I know, I was talking about just having a huge pile of cash like that. Nobody has that much cash laying around in one specific area.
I know in a comic book world it wouldn't matter, just like a microwave emitter, which was my point.How do you know that? Read the comics. Carmine Falcone had a warehouse full to the brim with cash in The Long Halloween.
Imo, it wasn't just due to Batman and Robin, it was due to all the previous Batman films 89-97. Regardless of cinema gaps these are the Batman movies that would be played on tv all the time. They were all pretty average, and the general audience would have the feeling they'd already seen what a Batmn movie could offer, and weren't that interested in seeing another.
But unknown to them these movies were not representative of the best kind of Batman stories, and the ones who didn't bother going to check BB out had to wait to see either BB on tv or TDK to realise that.
Bond had at least a couple of great Bond movies before it reebooted, so audiences knew the reboot had the potential to be great. Batman had no such great movie previous to BB.
Begins was average in many senses too.
Public might have gone to see a revolutionary action movie and ended up seeing average action sequences.
And they felt Begins was more serious yet the dialogues revealed some average amount of cheese. That might explain it too.
I know in a comic book world it wouldn't matter, just like a microwave emitter, which was my point.![]()
If you like The Dark Knight more than Begins, that's fine with me but calling Begins average is just too much.
To be honest, I thought Begins had more memorable dialogues but if you didn't like them does not mean you have to bash it.
Neither was The Dark Knight a revolutionary action movie.
Begins was average in many senses too. Public might have gone to see a revolutionary action movie and ended up seeing average action sequences. And they felt Begins was more serious yet the dialogues revealed some average amount of cheese. That might explain it too.
Why are people linking quality with BO earnings ? Look at Transformers 2.
Begins didn't do giant numbers because of Batman and Robin and bad marketing.
Spiderman 4 won't do as well as 3 either.