360 Perspective: The Dark Knight Rises

The Batman never rests…unless it’s after 12:30 and he gets sleepy. From 2007.

This is a spoiler-free post about The Dark Knight Rises: Christopher Nolan, Bane, gun control, and an Aurora miracle.

After being awestruck by The Dark Knight a few years ago (5 years ago, to be exact. Wow. Time really flies when you get old), I was really looking forward to the final chapter of Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight Trilogy. I’m not going to say much about the movie so you can enjoy it without my influence, but I’ll say that despite it’s flaws, it’s a remarkable feat of big-screen filmmaking, and it’s worthy of the 4.5 stars I gave it (out of 5).

Nolan continues to be a master director…despite not quite being a master director. I love his movies, but I’d like to see him work on two things for his next film:

  1. Cut Unnecessarily Over-the-Top Action Sequences: One of the major complaints about Inception was that it portrayed extremely complicated solutions for very basic problems. At the time, it didn’t really bother me, because it was awesome to watch Joseph Gordon-Levitt float around to solve a puzzle in zero-grav. However, after watching several key sequences in The Dark Knight Rises, I’ve realized the issue with those over-the-top set pieces: At the end of the scene, I’m always left feeling like the scene served the vision of the director, not the characters. And that really takes me out of the movie. I want to be immersed deeper into the movie by characters who make choices that I can understand and relate to. Watch the first scene of the movie–a beautiful, intense, gripping scene, mind you–and you’ll know what I mean. It ends up feeling empty.
  2. Stop Shooting Disorienting Hand-to-Hand Combat Sequences: I think this may be Nolan’s greatest weakness. Consistently throughout the Batman trilogy, it is impossible to tell what’s going on in the hand-to-hand action sequences. He shoots them really close up to the characters and uses a ton of quick cuts. Our brains are now accustomed to these quick cuts, and so we tend to fill in the blanks, but if you had to describe one of these scenes to someone after the movie, it would be impossible. I’m not interested in seeing more violence on the screen–rather, the issue is about me being removed from the movie by confusion rather than being immersed deeper into it.

I also have something to say about Bane, the main bad guy in the movie. He’s the guy with the bald head and the freaky mask. He’s supposed to be a very scary character, and in real life I’m sure he’d be very menacing.

BUT…in the movie he’s surrounded by people (usually bad guys, but sometimes good guys) who have guns. So I couldn’t help but wondering during the movie, “Why don’t they just shoot him? Even just in the arm. Shoot him in the arm.”

This point is not as much about Bane as it is the presence of guns in movies. I found it hard to acknowledge Bane as a truly fearsome bad guy because I knew that someone could just shoot him at any time. I wonder about this for other movies as well. With the proliferation of guns, will bad guys ever be scary again?

Speaking of guns, Jason Alexander of Seinfeld fame posted a long blog entry about gun control (specifically, automatic weapons) that pretty much says it all for me. It’s worth reading no matter what side of the gun fence you’re on.

Last, I don’t have much to say about the tragedy in Aurora other than it’s so, so sad. I literally broke down in tears when I read about it Friday morning. Today a friend posted this article on Facebook about a young woman named Petra Anderson, and I’m bewildered, amazed, and moved by the revelation in this post. It involves one of the bullets that entered Petra’s body through her nose, went through her brain, and ended up lodged in the back of her skull:

The doctor explains that Petra’s brain has had from birth a small “defect” in it. It is a tiny channel of fluid running through her skull, like a tiny vein through marble, or a small hole in an oak board, winding from front to rear.  Only a CAT scan would catch it, and Petra would have never noticed it.

But in Petra’s case, the shotgun buck shot, maybe even the size used for deer hunting, enters her brain from the exact point of this defect. Like a marble through a small tube, the defect channels the bullet from Petra’s nose through her brain.

It’s…well, it’s kind of dumbfounding, isn’t it? It’s literally a miracle. I think I’m struggling with it because it goes against the logic of my personal beliefs–that God doesn’t pick and choose who lives, who suffers, and who dies–rather, God suffers with us and rejoices with us–but there it is, right in front of me, a bonafide miracle 22 years in the making. I’m stumped. And that’s okay. I don’t think we can explain everything happens in this vast universe, and I’m not going to try to explain something that I can’t possibly understand. But I can say that it’s pretty cool, and I’m happy for Petra.

5 thoughts on “360 Perspective: The Dark Knight Rises”

  1. Thanks for linking to Jason Alexander, I had not seen that yet and he articulated conversation points I had not just considered.

    I cried on Friday too, partially for the tragedy, mostly for how disparaging the internet can make people be (particularly upset by how people chose to vilify any parent that had brought a kid to that movie – it’s another discussion for another time, can we please not attack parents who just lost or almost lost a child on the day that it happened?).

    Amazing about Petra.

    Reply
    • Emma–That’s a great point. I wasn’t aware that was happening so soon after the shooting. These things seem to invoke outrage so quickly. I certainly think there’s a place for outrage, but right after a tragedy like this, sadness seems like the most appropriate emotion.

      Reply
  2. Seems like eons from when I lasted posted.

    My new friend, Courtney, and I will disagree on Batman. But yes, better than Inception. With all due respect, several movies are better than Inception. Inc…was convoluted. I almost walked out.

    Ok, enough of that. I trust that God will do what is needed. But by sending out positive vibes like you did with the article, you are certainly helping.

    Remembering also those that helped and sacrificed their lives is also important. Two Navy men lost their lives one by saving his girlfriend.

    Speaking of rejoicing, the Broncos’ visit with the survivors is a testament to that notion. Those of us here will remember that literally every second counts.

    =)

    Reply

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