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laraemeadows Blog

  • WOW!

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    The Dark Knight  (2008)

     

    The Dark Knight, the next installment in the Batman movie series, is unsurpassed, unmatched, unadulterated, unimaginable WOW! 

    This is where I usually write my summary of the plot but to tell you anything would be to spoil it for you.

    The Dark Knight is visual splendor.  Director Christopher Nolan and cinematographer Wally Pfister create such a dark environment without sacrificing the viewability for the audience.  There are amazing visual effects but some of the best visuals were not effects at all.  Nolan didn’t take the easy way out: there are actual exploding buildings and vehicles!  There are numerous chase scenes and none of them lose their edge or become dull.  There are gadgets and gizmos aplenty, who’s-its and what’s-its galore!

    There is no way to mince words: The Dark Knight is all about The Joker (Heath Ledger).  It is impossible to take your eyes off of The Joker when he is on the screen because he so captivates the audience through fear and humor which turns the stomach.

    Heath Ledger’s performance actually made me tremble and my mouth got dry because I left it open for so long.  I fear Ledger’s performance will be undervalued because of the genre of this film, but make no mistake, his performance is worth an Academy Award.  Even if there was no makeup on Heath Ledger’s face, he would still be the most frightening character I’ve ever seen on film.  Every opportunity to chill the audience, to frighten us with body language or vocal inflection are taken by Ledger.  Ledger has one hundred percent commitment to The Joker.   Ledger’s posture, his demeanor, his humor and his insanity are all obscenely captivating.  It took me a half of an hour to realize it was Heath Ledger at all because Heath Ledger is completely lost to The Joker.  

    The makeup team, run by Sue Robb-King, increase the bone chilling effect The Joker leaves on the audience by making the scars and makeup subtle enough they look realistic but redoubtable.  The Joker makeup is especially freaky because it obvious the character would spend time to keep it up but messy enough to know he’s insane just by looking at him.

    The Joker isn’t the only character that rocked in The Dark Knight.  Batman (Christian Bale) is faced by several situations where he is presented with two choices that are both right and both wrong.  The moral dilemmas don’t seem contrived or simple, a blessing in the world of super hero movies. 

    Other than how he talks when he has the Batman costume on, Bale embodies the essence of Batman.  Christian Bale is strong, sad, and sometimes tragic in The Dark Knight.   You feel such weight on Bale’s shoulders as Batman but even heavier as Bruce Wayne.  It is hard to play two different egos in one character in one film and blend them as masterfully as Bale does.

    Writers Christopher Nolan, David S. Goyer and Jonathan Nolan have earned favorite writers status by their work in The Dark Knight.  All of the characters are dimensional and complex.  The plot is intricate and intriguing.

    When a movie wraps the story in a beautiful package and ties it with a perfect acting ribbon, Christopher Nolan’s direction is without flaw!

    The Dark Knight is exciting, emotional and evocative but the best word to describe it would be perfection.   See this in the theater, it is worth the money!


  • Spectacular visuals are a lot of fun

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
    Under discussion:

     

    Hellboy 2, the sequel to Hellboy, is the coming out story of a demon, a human fish and the hottest woman in the world.  Spectacular visuals save the story from its average plot and make Hellboy 2 a serious popcorn-chomper.

    A demon, code named Hellboy (Ron Perlman), but called Red by his friends is found by paranormal investigators when very small and has lived his entire life with them, but isolated from the rest of the world.  When he is grown up he wants nothing more than to be accepted as a normal person by society, but the government wants to keep him secret while he and his team, Liz Sherman (Selma Blair), Abe Sapien (Doug Jones), and Johann Kraus (John Alexander) protect the world from the paranormal.  One day, they are sent out to investigate what happened at an auction where all the people have disappeared.  What they find is the beginnings of a war between the creatures who live in the dark and humans.

    Writer and director Guillermo del Toro smears his style all over Hellboy 2.  Often dark and gritty, the visuals in Hellboy 2 range from average to amazing.  Maybe it is precisely because del Toro is willing to venture so far into fantasy that makes the characters plausible.  There is nothing that tells your mind, “No”.  Fanciful creatures are so beautifully created that I completely accepted their existence, without question, even though they are so outrageous as to be unbelievable.  Their lighting, their shading, the movement of their bodies makes them mesmerizing.  Hellboy 2 has the most beautiful death scene I have ever seen, in any movie, ever.

    The plot is not as shining as the visuals.  Guillermo del Toro does his best to give the plot of Hellboy 2 a tender meaning but all the attempts to blossom into something powerful and touching wither when del Toro can’t give the story the fertilizer it needs to truly touch the audience.  The scenes that are supposed to sell the relationship between characters don’t have resonance.  This is especially true in the relationship between Abe Sapien and Princess Nuala (Anna Walton). 

    The relationship Princess Nuala and Prince Nuada (Luke Goss) is not a waste though.  Their bond is special and even though it is not the first time a movie has presented such a relationship, Guillermo del Toro’s recreation is beautiful and unnerving.  Occasionally the acting of Walton and Goss can’t rise to the level of the story given to them by Guillermo del, Toro but generally speaking, they do justice to the script.

    The relationship between Hellboy and Abe Sapien is more complete, with sensitivity and humor that works.  Many of the relationships between Hellboy and the other characters rely on humor, and laughter is one of the better parts of the movie.  I laughed more often than I expected, but not enough to take away from the overall drama of the scenes.

    Even though I was not taken by the script, I left the theater satisfied with the story and lost in the beauty of the creatures in Hellboy 2.  The story will work well for both men and women so take a date and see Hellboy 2.


 

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