Nolan stumbles, but lands the follow-through in ambitious, fascinating 'Dark Knight Rises'
The Dark Knight Rises Warner Bros. Pictures
Director: Christopher Nolan
Screenplay: Jonathan Nolan and Christopher Nolan
Starring: Christian Bale, Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Gary Oldman,
Michael Caine, Marion Cotillard, Matthew Modine, Ben Mendelsohn and Morgan Freeman
Rated PG-13 / 2 hours, 44 minutes
(out of four)
Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy has always been more at home as a crime saga than a comic-book story, and never has that been more evident than in the finale, The Dark Knight Rises. It's
hard to even call this a superhero film - and not just because the presumed superhero rarely
makes an appearance. Looking back at the whole arc of the series, it becomes clear that the axial
character was always Gotham City itself - as a crumbling society and as a reflection of a man,
and oh yeah, that man just happens to be a masked vigilante/hero (antihero?).
That's territory for urban thrillers and film noir - not superhero movies, which are typically more
single-mindedly centered on heroism, good vs. evil and the like. Nolan moved beyond that,
building his Gotham mosaic from the ground up, offering a more multi-faceted look at morality -
both of the decaying city and even of the Batman himself.
What Nolan sets out to accomplish in TDKR (and largely does accomplish, though not without
significant hiccups) is to not only follow through on the course set by his first two entries, but
also provide a direct mirror and companion piece to Batman Begins. The middle passage (2008's
The Dark Knight) is easily the strongest, but the beginning and end (of what is now a pretty
succinctly concluded narrative) have a necessary kinship that Nolan takes careful measures to
emphasize.
His willingness to expand upon the issues he confronted in the first two films is one of the main
reasons Rises feels more like a dramatic thriller than a comic-book spectacle. All along there has
been talk of a reckoning for Gotham - of the need for and/or inevitability of the once-great city's
destruction - and indeed that reckoning comes in the form of a man who is nothing short of a
domestic terrorist.
Technically speaking, most movie villains would be considered terrorists, but usually they just
feel like Bad Guys. Not this time. Bane - a scarred, hulking, masked mercenary played with
sardonic menace by Tom Hardy - has one thing primarily on his mind, and that is the downfall
of Gotham. And that includes, at the forefront, he who represents both its guiding light and its
darkest underbelly, Batman (Christian Bale). A protégé of the deceased Ra's Al Ghul (Liam
Neeson), Bane has looked upon the face of a society that's morally upside-down - its richest
getting more powerful, its poorest getting more desperate - and taken it upon himself to
dismantle it. Just as Ra's Al Ghul, in Batman Begins, insisted was necessary.
The eight years of peace enjoyed by the people of Gotham since
Dent's death (and presumed martyrdom) and Batman's disappearance were indeed the proverbial
calm before the storm (a continuation of a motif explored prominently in TDK); Bane is just the
faceless arbiter of their demise.
While his introduction into this existing narrative is handled awkwardly at times, Bane
nonetheless brings a pretty interesting dynamic. Like many cinematic villains before him, he is
rooted to a moral cause, one we may ideologically identify with. It's his methods and physical
tyranny that conflict with our sense of humanity and turn him into a monster. In a lot of ways
he's straight out of the history books - a fascist masquerading as a revolutionary, a saboteur
masquerading as a symbol of salvation.
Selina Kyle (Anne Hathaway) is on much the same side. She's a poor girl who can't escape her
criminal past, which only condemns her to repeat it. She moonlights as a cat burglar, shifting
from innocence to sensual villainy in a single breath. She's not inherently evil like Bane - only a
product of a corrupt society, which is probably one of the reasons Bruce takes a liking to her
even as she keeps stealing from him. The sexual chemistry between Bale and Hathaway
significantly trumps that between Bale and Miranda Tate (Marion Cotillard), a business associate
of Bruce's who sort of halfheartedly becomes the film's love interest. (Which is not to take
anything away from the Tate character as a whole - who is an essential piece to the film - nor
Cotillard's performance, which is excellent as usual.)
TDK famously ended with Batman taking the fall for Two-Face's crimes, protecting Harvey
Dent's symbolic goodness for the sake of the city and its inhabitants - even at the expense of his
identity, and the life of the woman he loved. Rises picks up eight years after the fact, with
Batman reduced to the status of an escaped and nearly forgotten fugitive and Bruce Wayne in
self-imposed exile inside the walls of Wayne Manor. The gangs and super-criminals who once
ran the town are nowhere to be found, Rachel is long gone, and Bruce has little to live for. He
doesn't even move very well anymore, weakened by age and hobbled after too much punishment
to his body. Nights of crime-fighting will do that to a man.
Bane's rise to prominence begins rather suddenly with a financial raid that not only throws the
city into turmoil, but nearly bankrupts Wayne Enterprises. And it indeed does lead to something
of a revolution in Gotham. The problem is, I almost wish the whole movie had taken place
during the revolution. The first hour or so is clunky in its construction, and I confess to being a
little let down for a while.
There are some really good scenes in that opening hour
(particularly one involving Selina making a handoff at a bar), but the exposition and dialogue
make for a strangely stop-and-go opening. It feels like we're getting introduction after
introduction - like pieces of information are just being piled on top of one another. I couldn't
help but think the film could have found some way to dramatize all the elements in the setup
more effectively.
My fears were eventually put to rest during the second half of the film, where everything begins
to come full circle and move propulsively toward their logical conclusions. Nolan is able to use
the film to both shed light on and punctuate everything that has come before (particularly
Batman Begins), while still managing to surprise us - and, in a couple of nicely foreshadowed
moments, move us.
I still wish more would have been done with the Gotham City of the film's second half, if only
because Nolan uses that canvas so brilliantly at times. But what initially looks like it might be a
stilted and underwhelming finale eventually manages to bring it home. With this trilogy, Nolan
was able to create one self-contained and rather spectacular narrative, while making three
distinctive films. The first was a journey of self-discovery wrapped in a neo-noir; the second was
an epic crime drama examining the relationship between good and evil; the final chapter is a
bleak pre-apocalyptic, pseudo-political thriller - the most ambitious and most flawed of the three
- that brings everything to a head. The Dark Knight Rises has its share of problems, but Nolan
knows exactly where he wants to go with this saga, and in his last hurrah he finds a thoughtful
and often thrilling way to get there.