Showing posts with label The Dark Knight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Dark Knight. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Editorial: Another Candle in the Wind, Gone at the Top of His Game.

On Sunday night, Heath Ledger won the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor for his unforgettable role as the Joker in "The Dark Knight." He received the night's first standing ovation, and the film's director Christopher Nolan, accepted the posthumous award on Ledger's behalf.

When Ledger died last January from an accidental overdose on medication, I was unusually shaken by it. Perhaps it was his youth, or more likely my anticipation in seeing the most anticipated film of the year in my eyes, "The Dark Knight." Earlier that December, I went to see "I Am Legend" in IMAX just to get a glimpse of the first 6 minutes of "The Dark Knight" which was being promoted with it. You only saw Ledger for all of 10 or 20 seconds, but the anticipation was boiling over nearly 7 months before the film was due in theaters that July.

I don't recall how I got the news; I remember being at work, scouring CNN's website for information, at first thinking it was a hoax for whatever reason. I think my brother was the first person I told about it, as I knew his anticipation for Ledger's upcoming film was as heightened as mine. I got home in a daze, and watched various news networks for several hours, the most stunning sight was seeing the medical staffers take his body out of his apartment building where people had already flocked to. I can't compare it to the assassination of John Lennon in 1980, but seeing the images over the years of fans flocked outside of his home in the Dakota Building also in New York City, came to mind.

The last time I remember being this moved or stirred by the passing of a celebrity was when I was around my 14th birthday in 1997, when I heard in the car on the radio that Chris Farley had died of a heroin overdose, also ironically in New York. I remember it somewhat vividly now, it was Christmastime, it was on z-100 (back when I still listened to that station) and Adam Sandler's "Hanukkah Song" had just played. It felt like a cold dose of reality, or queasy feeling, not so much a punch to the stomach, but a feeling of unease, that these people I idolized on the silver screen were just as fragile as you or me.

Last January, I was revisited by this feeling, having been a fan of Ledger's work in "The Patriot," "Brokeback Mountain," and remembering the first film I ever saw him in, "10 Things I Hate About You." Here was our generation's James Dean, a tremendous talent, who we would never see come to his fullest potential, a sad casualty to the perils of celebrity and a life cut short.
Then, I saw "The Dark Knight" in IMAX on opening night, actually at the 3AM show with my brother since the midnight shows were long sold out. The crowd was buzzing, and one would have thought it was an 8PM showing, giving no hint other than checking your watch for the time that you could be labeled certifiably insane for seeing a film during the middle of the week 3 hours before the sun was due to come up.

I remember the feeling of the film, that opening sequence, the crowd cheering at the first glimpse of the Joker. Ledger became this character, as I had no recollection or memory of his death for the entire 2 and a half hours of the film. The sign of a brilliant actor, a performer who comes along only a few times in each generation that really changes the way you look at films; someone who raises the bar so high that you don't know if there's anywhere for it to go but down from that moment forward. I'm sure the colossal IMAX screen added to this effect, but I believe it would have been the same feeling regardless. An exhilarating witness of a great story onscreen, portrayed by an actor at his best, helping to redefine the comic book film genre. It started with the first film, "Batman Begins," but major awards buzz already surrounded the film, guiding this ship of a genre down a completely different path.

Then, as some of the crowd lingered during the credits, as my brother and I almost always do whenever we see films together, the first return to reality came with the dedication to Ledger and the stunt man who died during filming. The ride home and next few days were filled with excitement, remorse for what could have been, more excitement, and wondering if a film could get any better than that. We went into the theater in the dead of night, and emerged after 6 AM with the sun up, a surreal experience, fitting for this epic motion picture event. The daze of fatigue and deep thought, and disorientation engulfed us.

I returned to the theater 2 more times to see "The Dark Knight," once the next day, the official opening Friday, and again a few weeks later, to see it again on IMAX. Each time, for those 2 and a half hours, I was removed from the sad reality outside the theater doors, that Heath Ledger's swan song was playing out right before our eyes in that dark theater. But that's what great actors and great films do; they take you away from the world outside for a few hours, away from worries of families, economic crisis, relationships, education, work, and whatever else sits in the back of your mind on a daily basis. Heath Ledger accomplished this in his films, most notably "The Dark Knight," but now, part of the realities of the world outside the cinema, was that he was no longer here.

I came back to these memories today, when reading a post on slashfilm.com recalling this same sentiment, that compiled a list of the greatest final performances by actors prior their deaths, some timely, some untimely. Ledger made this list along with other cinema legends including John Wayne, Greta Garbo, James Dean, and Henry Fonda, and rightfully so. This sad tribute during awards season will hopefully continue with the Oscars, which he most certainly should be at least nominated for in the coming months.

Ledger has one more film yet to be released, "The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus," directed by Terry Gilliam, whom he also worked with on "The Brothers Grimm" a few years back. Ledger's work was not finished on that film as he was still working on it at the time of his death, leaving "The Dark Knight" as his last complete film. The fantasy based story left his character the openness to be portrayed in different forms by different people. Therefore, his part has since been taken over by Johnny Depp, Jude Law, and Collin Farrell, all of whom are donating their wages to start a trust fund for the young daughter Ledger left behind.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

A Superman Trilogy??? I'll Take It!

Mark Millar is famous for his comic book work on Superman, Batman, Fantastic 4, you name it. Now, he's in talks to resurrect the "Superman" film franchise (again) with what he hopes to be an epic, "Lord of the Rings," scale trilogy telling a complete Superman saga from the superhero's origins to whatever of the many directions they choose to go in. His vision is to have 3 films, with a comprehensive running time of about 7 hours, an average of 2 hours and 20 minutes for each film. That's a whole lot of the Man of Steel. Does this mean they're going to go the "Death of Superman" storyline route? I hope so, since even though the Doomsday character was nothing more than a big goon with bones sticking out of him, it is still a story that would translate amazingly onscreen.
It is also something that hasn't really been done before in any superhero film, where the hero dies, with the exception of the Phoenix storyline they built up at the end of the second "X Men" film. Unfortunately, director Brett Ratner took the franchise tumbling down the ladder rung by rung with where he went in the third and final "X Men: The Last Stand." This single-handedly ruined one of the biggest setups from a previous film that I have ever seen; the movie was decent, but not near the second film. The transition from the end of "Batman Begins," setting up the Joker in the next film, to the fantastic "Dark Knight," is an example of what Ratner should have orchestrated I guess we can't blame him too much though, since we shouldn't expect much of a superhero film coming from the guy who helmed the "Rush Hour" trilogy.

If similar fashion is taken like "Batman Begins," and "X2," I think a great setup would be to have Doomsday enter the picture at the very end of the second film in the trilogy, with his impending arrival shown to the audience but not to the characters in the film. Then, have the first half of the third film be his entrance and havoc wreaking, with the death of Superman coming about 1/3 of the way into the film, and his resurrection being the big payoff at the end of the trilogy. But Millar gets paid to do this stuff and unfortunately I don't, so we'll just have to wait and see. Hopefully, they can get three films green lit, which is their biggest hurdle since "Superman Returns," supersucked both financially and cinematically.

Back to Millar, since the "Death of Superman" story is one of my whimsical pipe dreams at this point. Besides his endless and impressive comic resume, if you are questioning his "Superman: the Movie" devotion, here are some tidbits of information for you. He bought the cat from the first "Superman" film from 1978 off of eBay. You ask how a cat could be alive at 30 years old? The cat is dead, stuffed, and in his house. He also has one of Christopher Reeve's capes from the first film, hanging in his house, and has dined with the original film's director Richard Donner. The first film was said to be "Superman Returns" director Brian Singer's biggest inspiration, but the way it translated to me and many others was, that "Titanic" and an episode of "Melrose Place" were Singer's biggest spring boards for that garbage film we waited almost 20 years for. Maybe it's a bit harsh, but after he made the first two "X Men" movies, a lot of people just expected much more.
If you'd like to see more on Millar discussing his new comic book, "War Heroes," about people with super powers fighting the war in Iraq, as well as his vision of the new "Superman" films, G4TV interviewed him at the Golden Apple comic book shop in Los Angeles. The video and article can be seen here:
http://www.g4tv.com/thefeed/blog/post/688752/Mark_Millar_Working_On_Superman_Trilogy.html

From what he says, I think this is the most perfect person they are going to find out there who can bring the biggest comic book superhero back to life again on the movie screen. Cheers to Mark Millar!

Monday, August 25, 2008

"This Isn't Your Grandmother's Catwoman...Or Is It?"

I don't know how true this rumor is, and for the franchise's sake, but I hope that it's about as real as those Phillip Seymour Hoffman playing the Penguin rumors that circled when "The Dark Knight" was in development. An article from British newspaper, The Telegraph is claiming that Christopher Nolan's first choice to play Catwoman in the next "Batman" film is, are you ready for this: Cher. Yes, that Cher, the one who is 62 years old, sang "I Got You Babe," was married to Greg Allman for about 3 days, and who was last seen playing herself in the 2003 Farrelly Brothers Matt Damon-Greg Kinear tent pole, "Stuck On You."

I'll admit Cher has got decent acting chops, especially in the early 1980's Eric Stoltz drama, "Mask," (she received an Oscar nomination for it), and later "Moonstruck," (which she won an Oscar for while wearing her ridiculous outfit shown above) but I'm not sure about this. The other villain rumored to be in this film is the Riddler, to be played by Johnny Depp; so if that happens, then maybe I can forgive the Cher casting.

A so-called studio executive said that director Christopher Nolan wants the character to be portrayed as a "Vamp in her twilight years," which I guess would make Cher a decent choice since she's pushing senior citizen discount age now. After films like "Memento," "Batman Begins," "The Prestige," and "The Dark Knight," Nolan could make a Teletubbies movie and I'd probably pay to see it. This should make for an interesting film, though I'm not sure anything will top "The Dark Knight" anytime soon, but hopefully it will at least be a worthy sequel next to the first two.

This third installment is said to be called "The Caped Crusader," and The Telegraph's source also claims filming will start in Vancouver early next year, so there's more good news.

Here is the link to the original article from The Telegraph:

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

"The Dark Knight" in a Nutshell...


Here's my take on "The Dark Knight," (and even if you don't like movies, see this one anyway)-I don't spoil anything that happens in the movie in what I wrote>>Read on::


If you haven't yet, I suggest you see "The Dark Knight." Heath Ledger's performance will give your unborn children nightmares, and thinking about that statement, I'm not sure any other film of the past 10 or 20 years could conjure up a similar thought. If you like seeing shit blow up, this is your movie. If you like seeing suspensful, edge-of-your-seat action, suspense and anticipation projected onto a huge movie screen with great actors, this is your movie. If you like seeing the most thought-provoking, adrenaline-pumping story go by in what seems like a flash of 2 and a half hours this is your movie. If you like seeing Morgan Freeman being, Morgan Freeman, this is your movie.


I'd like to compare this to other superhero/comic book movies of the past but it really can't be done, and wouldn't serve justice to this great film. The only negative thoughts this film conjured up after walking out of it, was that you are likely to never again see another film be so completely hyped up for nearly a year and talked about, that actually lives up to all of it's hype. Amazingly, this movie lived up to the hype and possibly surpassed it. The saddest part about it is we'll never get to see what kind of films Heath Ledger would make after this one. Though the film may not have made as much of a ridiculous amount of money had he not died, his performance still speaks for itself. A recent comparison might be Javier Bardem's performance in "No Country for Old Men" on crack.


This is such a great film that's easily outdone every other film with a similar audience this summer: Iron Man, Hellboy 2, The Incredible Hulk, and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Meth.In the past 30 or so years since the first "Superman" movie, "The Dark Knight" has raised the bar for every superhero film before it, including X-Men, Spiderman, and the original Batman from 1989, and raised the bar for every film to come after it.


The director, Christopher Nolan, made another great film almost 10 years ago on his road to "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight." It was called "Memento," and it was equally thought-provoking, probably even more than his Batman films, but it's interesting to look back on how he came to this point. His ability to draw out a story with great twists and turns that the smartest of audiences couldn't predict are what keeps his films exciting. With the biggest of blockbuster films like "The Dark Knight," he's still managed to surprise an audience that would typically have the film figured out. His film between the two Batmans, "The Prestige" is also worth a look, and probably stands beside "Batman Begins" though both are just slight indications of the fullest potential he reaches on "The Dark Knight."


Even Aaron Eckhart, who I thought was a pretty one-dimensional actor before this, gave a great performance. In looking at all the performances of the film, Ledger, Eckhart, Christian Bale, Gary Oldman, Michael Caine, and Morgan Freeman, you realize they can be so great because the story they are telling is equally great, which makes their transformations into their characters seamless.If one film could transform the comic book genre into some sort of Academy Award inducing, mega-blockbuster hybrid hit machine, "The Dark Knight" is it. If this is not the film to break barriers like those, I'm convinced it can never be done. Well, unless they come out with some comic book about the industrialization of America in the 20th century that actually sells enough to garner a movie adaptation. That would happen at about the same time as hell freezing over and Morgan Freeman starring in a Willie Nelson biopic titled "On the Road Again." So, yeah, if "The Dark Knight" doesn't take home some serious Oscars outside of the usual visual effects/sound editing categories, it'll never happen; not to say that's a bad thing.


Bottom line is, if you're still reading this, get your ass up out of your chair and see this movie!!!

6/5 Stars Or
6 crazy smiley faces out of 5 Or
6 crazy card symbols out of 5 ♠♣♥♠♣♥


"Why...so...serious???"