
Shreck 2 was a hell of a picture.
Gotta love AP, just a god-awful graphic.
I don't know how dynamic the shifts in the world are, but let's look at it this way: if wire tapping, illegal surveilence, an "ends justify means" approach, and any general revoking of freedoms (and anything else political you wish to criticise in the movie) are only unacceptable to you now, because of the patriot act and the anti-patriot act rhetoric that followed it, then you are a political and moral sheep and there's no point in talking any longer. Don't mistake me for saying this is you specifically, or anyone else, necessarily, but let's be honest here: none of these things should only just be becoming unacceptable in a movie. So when it seems like they are, you'll have to forgive my skepticism.Cold Bishop wrote:I don't see how that is a problem. Dynamic shifts in the world require shifts in what's acceptable.Mr_sausage wrote: Again, I'll repeat myself: people are finding things in this movie I'm sure they would not if the film had been made pre-patriot act. Nor do they object to similar stuff in other, older movies. Oh well. It's not like anyone's proven beyond a doubt the movie is endorsing the allegories that are being extracted.
Too remote in time to be relevant to the argument. One can tolerate lots of things when one was not around at the time to have a reaction (and are aware things have changed much for the better). Also this makes no sense, because it's backwards from what you're claiming about The Dark Knight (as far as I can tell you were never an anti-semite or a racist, so there's no shift in your moral opinion). I can draw no parallel.Cold Bishop wrote:There's literature with hints of Antisemitism made before Nazi-Germany I can enjoy since I recognized for many people antisemitism was a highly present, and relatively acceptable aspect in society. I can't ignore it nor how ugly it is, but there is a context where its understandable. After the Holocaust, I really can't say the same; the ugly inevitable conclusion of antisemitism is far too obvious now for antisemitism to be overlooked or explained away so easily. I think Coal Black and De Sebbin Dwarfs is one of the great cartoons of all time despite its racism for similar reasons; if it was made today, I need not say how it would be received by the public, me included.
And I don't think for a moment the movie ever took away its complexity (quite the contrary, the moral problems are a major theme). On top of that the movie took great pains to present clear and reasoned dissenting voices. When you have Morgan Freeman in full-on stoical mode saying, in his calm yet authoritative voice, that "this is unethical," well, trump card: no point could be more hammered home. Not to mention all the great stuff about "Dent is the hero the city needs, Batman the one it deserves," (which could be a funny jab at America); and that Batman's actions leave him alone, hunted, and vilified: and he accepts this as his penance. Not to mention that crucial speech The Joker makes to Two-Face: "what is the one thing that creates chaos? Fear." If we're paying strict attention, we'll recall that Bruce Wayne chose the bat image for the very purpose of inciting fear: one more wonderful moment wherein the Joker shows unmistakeable similarities between himself and Batman (again one of the major themes is that both the Joker and Two-Face are essentially Batman's creations, and are the enemies he most deserves).Cold Bishop wrote:Mr_sausage wrote:
And perhaps the only way to "save" the West from terrorists is indeed to take away every freedom we have. It's not implausible, and may be a rather disturbing reality of terrorism: that the things we cherish may be the things that most expose us. Acknowledging that this may be a reality does not make you neo-conservative (although you just might be a pessemist). You can read it as a propoganda move if you want. I'd rather see it as one more reason evil is so disturbing.
Perhaps it is. It still doesn't take away the complexity of the issue, nor the fact that while it may be necessary, it still isn't right.
The boats scene was also a smart use of Prisoner's Dilemma, one of the better known problems in game theory. Paging David Mamet!Mr_sausage wrote:Oh, and everyone missed the humanist message behind the crucial boat(s) scene: the Joker lost, because the people showed they were not willing to give their up humanity surivive by any means. They, prisoners included, would rather resign themselves to their likely deaths than relinquish their basic humaness. Neo-con, "we must do everything necessary to win," rhetoric indeed.
Glad to see an actual review of the movie here for onceAntoine Doinel wrote:Since the film opened, I've stayed out of the thread and by the looks of things, I'm glad I had. I saw the film tonight and thought it was absolutely fantastic. Yes, it does draw quite obvious parallels to post-9/11 America, but I think it far from celebrates eight years of Bush policies. The Batman in this film is barely likeable. He hides behind a mask and lets countless people die and risk their lives so he can keep his identity. As Alfred mentions, Batman certainly reaps the havoc that he has sown. This is hardly a hero. This is someone whose chickens have come home to roost and now must breach his own ethics to set things right -- which is exactly what the Joker had intended him to do. I hardly see this as any validation of Bush policies or the Patriot Act. If anything it shows the dangers of playing right into the hands of terrorists/villains. In the film no one comes away clean. Nolan, maturely, shows that these choices are morally complex. That there are no "right" or "wrong" choices, but that each are fraught with their own complications and implications.
As for the film itself, it lived up to the expectations. The performances were solid across the board and cinematography, particular the IMAX landscape shots were stunning. The set pieces (particularly the hospital sequence and the highway chase) were fantastically conceived. This was well worth wait and is one of the best films so far this year.
The third act of The Dark Knight takes a morally ambiguous twist with Lucius Fox (Morgan Freeman) discovers a sonar-based spying node that Batman (Christian Bale) is using to locate The Joker. Fox is horrified at the invasion of privacy; Batman, uncomfortable with what he's done, gives Fox the power to shut it down. Over at the ACLU's blog, Amanda Simon is thrilled at the plot twist. Sort of.
"Unfortunately, like the telecoms before him, Mr. Freeman’s character reluctantly goes along with the plan saying he’ll resign and terminate the program after “this one time.” At least he didn’t ask for immunity."
But Tylerc217 at the Daily Paul totally rejects the twist, and sees the movie as propaganda.
"I clearly remember one scene in The Departed where Alec Baldwin was giving high praises for the Patriot Act. The one line of praise stuck out in my mind, because after watching Thank You for Smoking, it dawned on me that lobbyists try to win over the ideas of the movie at hand. Without actually coming out and saying "buy our product", they instead push an idea and subconciously get the viewer to be in agreement with it."
You know, it didn't strike me like that it all. The sonar actually screws up at points; when it malfunctions, Batman nearly dies. And the way it's presented, there's nothing the technology offers that heat imaging doesn't offer. I'd want the Nolan brothers to explain their thinking before I rule one way or the other, but I'd bet the sonar was an anti-national security state statement.
Help me out here, I got something completely different from the film (and I've only skimmed the thread since there's just SO many posts and so little time to be spent reading about this movie): I thought it was pretty clear that ceding to the Joker's demands was the WRONG thing to do. The whole point of the Joker's actions was to get Batman or the people of Gotham to do evil things to stop greater evil. So Joker threatens to kill certain people if Batman doesn't reveal his identity, and he threatens to blow up a hospital if no one kills the snitch. The "lesson" is that we sacrifice our own morality if we believe "desperate times call for desperate measures," or that "the ends justify the means." (which could play into the political readings of the film going on here; I personally think such "interpretation" is justified only in the case of the contrived wiretapping scenario; on the whole I agree with Sausage that everyone is stretching to find parallels when really this vigilante morality is inherent to the character, even if it's more pertinent to modern Americans today)Antoine Doinel wrote:The Batman in this film is barely likeable. He hides behind a mask and lets countless people die and risk their lives so he can keep his identity. As Alfred mentions, Batman certainly reaps the havoc that he has sown. This is hardly a hero.
Antoine Doinel wrote:In the film no one comes away clean. Nolan, maturely, shows that these choices are morally complex. That there are no "right" or "wrong" choices, but that each are fraught with their own complications and implications.
Whoever edits Nolan's films, he's done a fuckup job up until this one. The average shot length is much longer than in any of Nolan's previous work (and I'm pretty sure I've seen all of it against my better judgment).AWA wrote:Another big problem with the film, agreed. Half the time it was terribly hard to understand the geography and logic during the action sequences it was just so damn chaotic.Jeff wrote:Lee Smith edits Nolan's films. If you are referring to average shot length, yeah I guess I wish it were longer, especially during action scenes.Greathinker wrote:Does Christopher Nolan still edit his films like he's cutting a trailer?
Svevan wrote:Antoine Doinel wrote:In the film no one comes away clean. Nolan, maturely, shows that these choices are morally complex. That there are no "right" or "wrong" choices, but that each are fraught with their own complications and implications.
I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with this. Just because choices are morally complex doesn't mean that there are no "right" or "wrong" choices. Being forced into a bad decision doesn't mean that right and wrong suddenly cease to exist, or exposes that they never exist.....Just because a question is hard doesn't mean it's unanswerable.
Well, as the film points out, Gotham pretty much takes Batman for granted. Gordon is now comfortable summoning him whenever he needs to talk to him, and the city expects him to set things right. So, the novelty of him appearing when criminals abound has pretty much worn off. Instead of exclaiming "Hey! It's Batman", I assumed they kept their mouths shut saw he was coming and let him take the Joker by surprise.Svevan wrote:AWA's criticism brings up my least favorite part of the film: why can Batman appear in the middle of any fucking room and no one notice? The Joker is seriously surrounded by a crowd of tuxedoed muckdymucks and Batman whispers loudly (one of way too many one-liners), falls from the sky apparently, and punches him square in the jaw. Why does no one in the crowd go "wtf, how the fuck did he do that, that guy is fucking magic," instead they just sit around and yell "FUCK HIM UP!"
I can smoke the crack you're selling.Antoine Doinel wrote:Well, "right" and "wrong" really depends on where you're sitting doesn't it? Yes, there are some choices that are better than others, but as the movie goes to great lengths to point out, and as I mentioned, each choice - better or worse - will create it's own set of positive and negative reactions. Every question has an answer certainly, but it also has repercussions that have to be accepted. I think the film points out that it's very different to be sitting on the sidelines making judgment calls (like the Mayor does), than to be directly involved and have to make those same choices. That Batman is ordinary man both trying to serve justice and protect his own interests makes those choices that much more demanding.
AND US, coincidentally. That's a pretty apologetic reading, and this is my favorite thing to hate right now, so you're wrong dammit and I hate you to the ends of the earth.Antoine Doinel wrote:Well, as the film points out, Gotham pretty much takes Batman for granted. Gordon is now comfortable summoning him whenever he needs to talk to him, and the city expects him to set things right. So, the novelty of him appearing when criminals abound has pretty much worn off. Instead of exclaiming "Hey! It's Batman", I assumed they kept their mouths shut saw he was coming and let him take the Joker by surprise.Svevan wrote:AWA's criticism brings up my least favorite part of the film: why can Batman appear in the middle of any fucking room and no one notice? The Joker is seriously surrounded by a crowd of tuxedoed muckdymucks and Batman whispers loudly (one of way too many one-liners), falls from the sky apparently, and punches him square in the jaw. Why does no one in the crowd go "wtf, how the fuck did he do that, that guy is fucking magic," instead they just sit around and yell "FUCK HIM UP!"
The filmmakers, thankfully, don't feel the need to have to repeat the "wonder" of Batman appearing in public like has been done in every other film. Nolan goes to great lengths to point out that Batman is an expected and (grudgingly) embraced figure in Gotham by its citizens, police force and politicians. And of course, feared by criminals (who as the Joker points out, have taken to meeting during the day).Svevan wrote:AND US, coincidentally.Antoine Doinel wrote:Well, as the film points out, Gotham pretty much takes Batman for granted. Gordon is now comfortable summoning him whenever he needs to talk to him, and the city expects him to set things right. So, the novelty of him appearing when criminals abound has pretty much worn off. Instead of exclaiming "Hey! It's Batman", I assumed they kept their mouths shut saw he was coming and let him take the Joker by surprise.