I really hope it does. This film is much more worthy of that record (in my opinion )Josh wrote:Even if The Dark Knight doesn't reach Titanic's record, I'm still glad that it is doing very well.
Batman Begins
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Thanks Josh. Yeah, I'm also glad it's doing well. As far-fetched as this MAY sound, I think there might possibly be a chance of a Best Picture nom later this year--really, I do. If the Sixth Sense can do it, TDK certainly can!Josh wrote:(By the way, cool article! Even if The Dark Knight doesn't reach Titanic's record, I'm still glad that it is doing very well. Earlier this summer, I assumed Knight would make close to what Batman Begins made.)
I agree Angel!Whippet Angel wrote:I really hope it does. This film is much more worthy of that record (in my opinion )
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
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Here is a positive update on Morgan Freeman: http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=47631
Looks like he is going to be fine, thank goodness.
Looks like he is going to be fine, thank goodness.
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I'm afraid I gotta come clean...
While I thought it was a much, <I>much</I> better film than Batman Begins, that wasn't saying much for me.
I just didn't like the <I>Dark Knight</I> all that much and can't see how it's making all this coinage. I found it to be a series of non-linking scenes that didn't really build to anything (within a scene) and cut to something else just as things were getting interesting.
Case in point: the party that the Joker crashes: Bats arrives, things start getting juicy and he has to leap out to save the girl, we think there's an action sequence about to begin, but no: they just land and...that's it!? Are we to believe the Joker then carried on partying upstairs with the other guests? Batman just went home? That was a real "<I>what?</I>" moment for me.
The rest of the film followed suit: again things just happen and drop into place all too conveniently. I didn't think Ledger actually had much chance to assert his Joker character - the impact he <I>did</I> make was down to him being a superlative performer, but his character was hardly in the movie. I thought the best thing was the treatment of Two-Face, which was handled pretty well.
I found the use of Chicago to be <I>much</I> better utilised in the film: no fake, jarring CG monorail shots: just a tough, hard city at work and play. There were good things: the gritty opening had nice touches, but I was hoping the vigilante Batmans would be back, possibly even killed in mistake for being the real deal.
I found the music to be the same old thing as before. Quick, we must have action, and so Zimmer's pounding strings - the same four notes - just kept plugging away in the background while the horns built some kind of tension that the picture wasn't accomplishing elsewhere.
I just thought that each scene was a snapshot of something much better: I'm sure there's a three and a half hour director's cut in here that could be mega-fantastic, but I didn't see that one last week in the theater.
I didn't think it was "bad", but just not very good. Sorry!
While I thought it was a much, <I>much</I> better film than Batman Begins, that wasn't saying much for me.
I just didn't like the <I>Dark Knight</I> all that much and can't see how it's making all this coinage. I found it to be a series of non-linking scenes that didn't really build to anything (within a scene) and cut to something else just as things were getting interesting.
Case in point: the party that the Joker crashes: Bats arrives, things start getting juicy and he has to leap out to save the girl, we think there's an action sequence about to begin, but no: they just land and...that's it!? Are we to believe the Joker then carried on partying upstairs with the other guests? Batman just went home? That was a real "<I>what?</I>" moment for me.
The rest of the film followed suit: again things just happen and drop into place all too conveniently. I didn't think Ledger actually had much chance to assert his Joker character - the impact he <I>did</I> make was down to him being a superlative performer, but his character was hardly in the movie. I thought the best thing was the treatment of Two-Face, which was handled pretty well.
I found the use of Chicago to be <I>much</I> better utilised in the film: no fake, jarring CG monorail shots: just a tough, hard city at work and play. There were good things: the gritty opening had nice touches, but I was hoping the vigilante Batmans would be back, possibly even killed in mistake for being the real deal.
I found the music to be the same old thing as before. Quick, we must have action, and so Zimmer's pounding strings - the same four notes - just kept plugging away in the background while the horns built some kind of tension that the picture wasn't accomplishing elsewhere.
I just thought that each scene was a snapshot of something much better: I'm sure there's a three and a half hour director's cut in here that could be mega-fantastic, but I didn't see that one last week in the theater.
I didn't think it was "bad", but just not very good. Sorry!
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