I finally got around to seeing The Dark Knight. It wasn't perfect, but I do think it was the best super-hero movie I've ever seen, for a variety of reasons. The most important one, I think, is that the film makers understood that the powerful driver of super-hero stories, the thing that raises them above colourful sound and fury, is morality. They're about people making tough moral distinctions and choices. These people are bigger than us, and the choices are bigger, too, more noble or more evil, but that's so that we can see them better. They're archetypal, mythically resonant: the White Knight, the Dark Knight, but especially the Joker, who here has no real origin story and who wreaks havoc on a scale which is strictly speaking not believable. But that's to be expected, because he's not a human criminal - he's a malign trickster god, a blend of Coyote, Loki and Satan.
But to drive home the point that this is about all of us, not just heroes and their decisions, the key moral victory takes place within groups of ordinary people. The setup leading to their dilemma seemed a bit contrived, but in the context of a superhero story, that's OK too.
The film drew on the insights and highlights of older Batman stories without sticking with any particular version or becoming too cliched. I think I saw elements of The Long Halloween, The Killing Joke, Batman: Year One, The Dark Knight Returns, and there were doubtless others. People have been talking about this movie a lot, and I expect it will be continue to be talked about for a long time to come. I have a feeling we'll be seeing lots of essays and theses on this one.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
6 comments:
It wasn't perfect, but I do think it was the best super-hero movie I've ever seen, for a variety of reasons.
Off the top of my head I can think of two superhero films that were better, for the same reasons you give, and with the added bonus that they weren't so pretentious as The Dark Knight: the first X-Men movie a few years back, and the first Spiderman movie.
I suspect that some of this is taste. At a certain level, for me, it becomes unbelievable to see Batman, Alfred, and the Joker holding forth on ethics lectures. As I wrote on my weblog, these are comic-book characters after all. What I liked about the aforementioned films is that unlike Dark Knight they observed a good rule of fiction: don't tell the reader what you're thinking, describe it instead. The morality of Spiderman and the X-Men was pretty heavy-handed but for the most part transpired in the story, not as a bunch of pseudo-philosophy lectures that sometimes smacked of self-congratulation. (See? I can be deep too!) Batman's brooding was just too self-absorbed.
My (devalued) 2 cents (US), anyway.
Well, yes, I did feel they were laying it on too thick at points. There was more talking than showing in some places, for sure. That was a flaw.
I don't remember X-Men and Spiderman all that well, to be honest...
That's a good a reason as any I can think of to watch them again. :-) Maybe I can convince the wife to put them in the Netflix queue, but first I want to re-watch The Lord of the Rings.
I think Batman Begins and The Dark Knight are *the* best super hero movies. They're my top picks, anyways. I liked the first X-Men movie, but none of the Spidermen movies have done it for me.
Anyway, I'm glad you liked TDK too!
And yeah, I can see elements of Coyote and Loki in the Joker - definitely. They probably drew from those myths purposely, hey?
Even if they didn't, the comics they were basing their Joker on might have. The 'making up new origin stories for himself' thing comes from The Killing Joke, for example.
And I would add Satan because of the Joker's interest in tempting people and destroying their moral basis.
Great post, thanks
Post a Comment