BATMAN BEGINS (2005), dir. Christopher Nolan
The Dark Knight Dawns Again
“Batman Begins” is a cross between a superhero action film and a biopic. It proposes to do for the titlular character what “Ali” and “The Aviator” did for the world’s greatest heavyweight champion and Howard Hughes, respectively. The movie wants to dig underneath the cape and cowl, the utility belt full of weapons. Sure, we get backstory on how billionaire scion Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale, adding another American psycho to his resume) acquired those wonderful toys. But more importantly, the filmmakers show us the events that shaped Batman into what he is—not just a man in a Halloween costume, but a hero.
It turns out Batman’s origin is a lot more complicated than Bruce Wayne sitting around in his study when a bat flew in. Yes, that did happen. He wanted to become a creature of the night, something that would strike fear into the hearts of criminals everywhere. But that wouldn’t explain his martial arts training, or his exceptional stealthiness. It wouldn’t explain why Bruce—whose parents were gunned down right in front of him—will fight criminals, but stops short of killing them.
“Batman Begins” fills in those gaps. What’s really interesting is that Bruce Wayne has values, but as the movie shows, he did not acquire them overnight. There was a time when the thirst for revenge, not justice, consumed him. After Joe Chill, his parents’ murderer, gets out of prison thanks to a plea deal, Bruce waits in front of the courtroom steps, loaded pistol in hand. Fate intervenes when Chill is killed by Falcone (Tom Wilkinson), the mob boss he was supposed to testify against. At first, Bruce has no problem seeing the man dead. However, when he tells this to Rachel (Katie Holmes), his childhood friend and Gotham City’s assistant district attorney, she shows him the ghettos, where poverty and drugs create a hundred new Joe Chills each day.
Rachel’s point: There are greater evils in the world that must be fought. But Bruce Wayne is not yet up to the task. Anger still possesses him, so he runs away to the Far East. After being locked away in a Chinese prison, he is rescued by Ducard (Liam Neeson), emissary for a secret society called the League of Shadows. The members of the League have been trained in ninjitsu. Their ultimate purpose is to fight back evil when it becomes too powerful. Ducard enlists Bruce in the League’s cause, and makes him travel to a monastery high atop the mountains. There, he offers to train his body, make his mind strong, and help him control his emotions.
Bruce agrees, and becomes Ducard’s greatest pupil. However, he falls short in one regard: The day of the final test, a farmer is brought in caged. According to Ducard, the man murdered his neighbor in a jealous rage. As a way of proving his dedication to the cause of justice, Bruce is told that he must execute the farmer. But the student will not. His own experiences with Joe Chill have shown him that justice cannot be served through retribution. “I will dedicate my life to fighting men like this, but I will not become like him,” he says to Ra’s Al Ghul (Ken Watanabe), the League’s leader.
Lest we confuse “Batman Begins” with the Tom Cruise pic “The Last Samurai,” Bruce Wayne returns home to Gotham, where he takes up a crusade, if not yet a costume. Having grown and evolved since he was last in the states, Wayne Enterprises now has its fingers in numerous pies. With the help of Lucius Fox (Morgan Freeman), a former executive relegated to the dead-end applied sciences division because he “asked too many questions,” Bruce begins piecing together his future bat-costume and bat-arsenal. He’ll need them, since gangster Falcone is more powerful than ever. With the help of a deranged, scarecrow mask-wearing psychiatrist (Cillian Murphy, channeling James Spader’s creepiness), and a mysterious third villain (whose appearance will surprise no one), the forces of evil are set to unleash a deadly weapon of mass distraction upon Gotham’s citizenry.
Luckily, Batman gets help in the form of street cop Jim Gordon (Gary Oldman, making for a surprisingly-effective ordinary joe) and assistant D.A. Rachel, with whom his alter-ego exchanges some meaningful glances. Michael Caine is also on hand portraying indispensible butler Alfred Pennyworth. The scenes between Bruce and his faithful man-servant contain the best dialogue in the movie. More a father-son relationship than employer-employee, Alfred has the thankless job of keeping Bruce from destroying himself in order to give birth to Batman. This makes all the more affecting his coming to the rescue when his master’s plans inevitably go to blazes.
“Batman Begins” was directed and co-written by Christopher Nolan, the man behind the cult fave “Memento” (2000) and the Al Pacino remake of “Insomnia” (2002). Both films used sudden jump-cuts to imitate the disoriented minds of their protagonists (In addition, “Memento” ran the last scene first, and the first scene last, to mimic how Leonard Shelby’s short-term memory loss made every new experience vague and unfamiliar). In his fourth movie, Nolan uses the same tricks to hint at Bruce’s repressed fears; when Ducard prompts him about what it is he’s afraid of, Nolan cuts, almost-subliminally, to the swarm of bats that traumatized Bruce as a child. The director also has fun depicting the point-of-view of victims who have been drugged by the Scarecrow’s fear gas, as bats, maggots, and flames come spewing out from the doctor’s burlap sack of a face.
Compared to the past four Batman movies, Tim Burton’s gothic “Batman” (1989) and “Batman Returns” (1992), Joel Schumacher’s neon-infested “Batman Forever” (1995), and the tepid “Batman and Robin” (1997), this latest installation actually underwhelms with its production design. Also, many of the action sequences feel slightly over-edited. This is mildly distracting when Bruce and Ducard are practicing their swordsmanship atop an icy pond. However, during the actual Batman sequences, this approach makes sense; he’s supposed to take bad guys down before they know what hit them.
Even if Christopher Nolan isn’t the action directing equivalent of Warners’ Wachowski Brothers, he still manages to accomplish what Burton and Schumacher failed to do: He makes Batman into a fleshed-out character. Working with David S. Goyer (“Dark City,” “Blade I-III”) off Frank Miller’s popular “Batman: Year One” miniseries, he brings the Dark Knight himself to life, not just his four-color universe. Simultaneously epic-scaled and intimate, “Batman Begins” should stand the test of time better than the franchise’s last three volumes. However, only ticket sales will determine whether Warners green-lights a sequel. Hopefully, audiences won’t shy away if word-of-mouth spreads that this superhero movie emphasizes story over action. If Nolan can indeed return to continue the saga his Batman begins here, we may be witnessing the birth of comic book movies’ Golden Age, led by “Batman,” “Spider-Man,” “X-Men,” and “Sin City.”
Overall rating: **** (out of ****)
“Batman Begins” is a cross between a superhero action film and a biopic. It proposes to do for the titlular character what “Ali” and “The Aviator” did for the world’s greatest heavyweight champion and Howard Hughes, respectively. The movie wants to dig underneath the cape and cowl, the utility belt full of weapons. Sure, we get backstory on how billionaire scion Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale, adding another American psycho to his resume) acquired those wonderful toys. But more importantly, the filmmakers show us the events that shaped Batman into what he is—not just a man in a Halloween costume, but a hero.
It turns out Batman’s origin is a lot more complicated than Bruce Wayne sitting around in his study when a bat flew in. Yes, that did happen. He wanted to become a creature of the night, something that would strike fear into the hearts of criminals everywhere. But that wouldn’t explain his martial arts training, or his exceptional stealthiness. It wouldn’t explain why Bruce—whose parents were gunned down right in front of him—will fight criminals, but stops short of killing them.
“Batman Begins” fills in those gaps. What’s really interesting is that Bruce Wayne has values, but as the movie shows, he did not acquire them overnight. There was a time when the thirst for revenge, not justice, consumed him. After Joe Chill, his parents’ murderer, gets out of prison thanks to a plea deal, Bruce waits in front of the courtroom steps, loaded pistol in hand. Fate intervenes when Chill is killed by Falcone (Tom Wilkinson), the mob boss he was supposed to testify against. At first, Bruce has no problem seeing the man dead. However, when he tells this to Rachel (Katie Holmes), his childhood friend and Gotham City’s assistant district attorney, she shows him the ghettos, where poverty and drugs create a hundred new Joe Chills each day.
Rachel’s point: There are greater evils in the world that must be fought. But Bruce Wayne is not yet up to the task. Anger still possesses him, so he runs away to the Far East. After being locked away in a Chinese prison, he is rescued by Ducard (Liam Neeson), emissary for a secret society called the League of Shadows. The members of the League have been trained in ninjitsu. Their ultimate purpose is to fight back evil when it becomes too powerful. Ducard enlists Bruce in the League’s cause, and makes him travel to a monastery high atop the mountains. There, he offers to train his body, make his mind strong, and help him control his emotions.
Bruce agrees, and becomes Ducard’s greatest pupil. However, he falls short in one regard: The day of the final test, a farmer is brought in caged. According to Ducard, the man murdered his neighbor in a jealous rage. As a way of proving his dedication to the cause of justice, Bruce is told that he must execute the farmer. But the student will not. His own experiences with Joe Chill have shown him that justice cannot be served through retribution. “I will dedicate my life to fighting men like this, but I will not become like him,” he says to Ra’s Al Ghul (Ken Watanabe), the League’s leader.
Lest we confuse “Batman Begins” with the Tom Cruise pic “The Last Samurai,” Bruce Wayne returns home to Gotham, where he takes up a crusade, if not yet a costume. Having grown and evolved since he was last in the states, Wayne Enterprises now has its fingers in numerous pies. With the help of Lucius Fox (Morgan Freeman), a former executive relegated to the dead-end applied sciences division because he “asked too many questions,” Bruce begins piecing together his future bat-costume and bat-arsenal. He’ll need them, since gangster Falcone is more powerful than ever. With the help of a deranged, scarecrow mask-wearing psychiatrist (Cillian Murphy, channeling James Spader’s creepiness), and a mysterious third villain (whose appearance will surprise no one), the forces of evil are set to unleash a deadly weapon of mass distraction upon Gotham’s citizenry.
Luckily, Batman gets help in the form of street cop Jim Gordon (Gary Oldman, making for a surprisingly-effective ordinary joe) and assistant D.A. Rachel, with whom his alter-ego exchanges some meaningful glances. Michael Caine is also on hand portraying indispensible butler Alfred Pennyworth. The scenes between Bruce and his faithful man-servant contain the best dialogue in the movie. More a father-son relationship than employer-employee, Alfred has the thankless job of keeping Bruce from destroying himself in order to give birth to Batman. This makes all the more affecting his coming to the rescue when his master’s plans inevitably go to blazes.
“Batman Begins” was directed and co-written by Christopher Nolan, the man behind the cult fave “Memento” (2000) and the Al Pacino remake of “Insomnia” (2002). Both films used sudden jump-cuts to imitate the disoriented minds of their protagonists (In addition, “Memento” ran the last scene first, and the first scene last, to mimic how Leonard Shelby’s short-term memory loss made every new experience vague and unfamiliar). In his fourth movie, Nolan uses the same tricks to hint at Bruce’s repressed fears; when Ducard prompts him about what it is he’s afraid of, Nolan cuts, almost-subliminally, to the swarm of bats that traumatized Bruce as a child. The director also has fun depicting the point-of-view of victims who have been drugged by the Scarecrow’s fear gas, as bats, maggots, and flames come spewing out from the doctor’s burlap sack of a face.
Compared to the past four Batman movies, Tim Burton’s gothic “Batman” (1989) and “Batman Returns” (1992), Joel Schumacher’s neon-infested “Batman Forever” (1995), and the tepid “Batman and Robin” (1997), this latest installation actually underwhelms with its production design. Also, many of the action sequences feel slightly over-edited. This is mildly distracting when Bruce and Ducard are practicing their swordsmanship atop an icy pond. However, during the actual Batman sequences, this approach makes sense; he’s supposed to take bad guys down before they know what hit them.
Even if Christopher Nolan isn’t the action directing equivalent of Warners’ Wachowski Brothers, he still manages to accomplish what Burton and Schumacher failed to do: He makes Batman into a fleshed-out character. Working with David S. Goyer (“Dark City,” “Blade I-III”) off Frank Miller’s popular “Batman: Year One” miniseries, he brings the Dark Knight himself to life, not just his four-color universe. Simultaneously epic-scaled and intimate, “Batman Begins” should stand the test of time better than the franchise’s last three volumes. However, only ticket sales will determine whether Warners green-lights a sequel. Hopefully, audiences won’t shy away if word-of-mouth spreads that this superhero movie emphasizes story over action. If Nolan can indeed return to continue the saga his Batman begins here, we may be witnessing the birth of comic book movies’ Golden Age, led by “Batman,” “Spider-Man,” “X-Men,” and “Sin City.”
Overall rating: **** (out of ****)
Labels: ****, 2005, Batman, Christian Bale, Christopher Nolan, comic books
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home