WOW!
The Dark Knight is currently #1 on the imdb's top 250 movies!
I don't put much stock on imdb.com. A lot of people with nothing else to do parade the boards as if it was their own playground. I've seen better films than a lot of the new ones that are on imdb's top 250. I mean has anyone ever seen "Lone Star"?. Now that is one great acting/story movie. No special effects involved, just good old fashioned acting and a good story.
But back to the topic.....
I personally thought The Dark Knight was 30 minutes too long of a movie. My father also agrees, whom I saw the movie with yesterday. (Could be the idea of also being in the theater 45 minutes before the movie started which made me want to leave and go walk around as I was getting tired of sitting)
Although everyone is going gaga over Ledger's performance as the Joker (or Mr. J!), the character I liked in the movie was Aaron Eckhart's Harvey Dent/Two Face.
*Spoiler*
Dent had everything going for him, though he did seemed a little stressed, and then bam! Everything went down the gutter, which the Joker used to his advantage in getting Dent. Personally, if the Joker and Dent/Two Face were to live to fight another day, especially in the third movie, let's just say Dent would be gone for good and Two-Face would be almost as messed up as the Joker, but without the grin.
However, the thing I wanted the most out of Two-Face was a deep voice, signaling that Harvey Dent is gone and the alter ego is now in. Like the Two-Face from the animated series.
*End Spoiler*
The biggest useless thing in the movie was the Scarecrow. The guy gets caught in the first few minutes and he's no more. But I guess you got to acknowledge that he was still running around and had to be taken out.
Personally, I think it would have been better if the Joker were to have met him halfway in the movie, then of course take care of the Scarecrow as he is old news while the Joker is the new news of the city. Maybe have Scarecrow get so ticked off that he sprays some fright toxin on the Joker, but since the Joker is so messed up anyway that the fear toxin doesn't have any effect at all. The Joker then does away with the Scarecrow.
But, I did like the fact the movie was an ensemble piece. This could have easily been a Batman vs Joker movie with the rest of the cast as supporting characters. Glad the writers did not do that.
As for performances:
Michael Caine: He was great. I thought he acted as Bruce's/Batman's conscience, trying to tell Bruce he was doing the right thing, giving Bruce insight and to keep on going no matter what.
Gary Oldman: Great as Gordon. Thought Batman was the thing the city needed most because he was cleaning up the town, even though people in the city (cops/media/Harvey Dent) questioned if he was a hero or another crook, or someone that could be a little bit of both if he ever did cross the line.
*Spoiler*
Loved the interrogation scene where Gordan leaves the Joker and says he's going to get some coffee, leaves the room, the lights come on, and Batman knocks Joker's face flat on the table.
*End Spoiler*
Morgan Freeman: Also superb. At the end of the film, he questioned just how far Bruce had to go and didn't like it, even though Alfred told Bruce he had to do just that in order to get to the Joker.
And then we finally get to the Joker. Though Ledger did a great job (had to remind myself the guy is now dead), his Joker and Jack Nicholson's Joker are two different animals. Ledger's Joker was less on the "ha ha" and more on the insane/crazy side while Nicholson's Joker had more funny lines and was more on the "ha ha" aspect. Call me an oldie, I just liked Nicholson's Joker more. Not saying Ledger's isn't good.
Overall 3 out of 4 stars. Good, but too dark. And the whole time while I was watching the movie, I kept on thinking back to the movie's tag line "why so serious"? Indeed, the movie didn't have to be that serious.
I still like Burton's 1989 Batman more. Like I said, just call me an oldie.
On the side note, one thing Batman Begins and The Dark Knight don't have is an Danny Elfman like score, which is what those two movies really, really need. I like Hans Zimmer and James Newton Howard, but their take on the score of the new Batman films is too dark and depressing. Chris Nolan should have called in Danny Elfman and let the man do his magic.