
Radio Free Cybertron - All of our Transformers podcasts!
Podcast
This feed contains ALL of the Radio Free Cybertron family of Transformers shows from The RFC...

Clockwork
Philip Pullman and Paul Bailey
Book
Tick, tock, tick, tock! Some stories are like that. Once you've wend them up, nothing will stop them...

Aberystwyth Mon Amour
Book
Schoolboys are disappearing all over Aberystwyth and nobody knows why. Louie Knight, the town's...
Batman: The Jiro Kuwata Batmanga: Volume 2 : The Jiro Kuwata Batmanga
Book
* At the height the 1960's Batman television show's popularity, a shonen manga magazine in Japan...
Gotham by Midnight: Volume 1
Ben Templesmith and Ray Fawkes
Book
* Spinning out of Batman Eternal, Detective Jim Corrigan (aka: The Spectre) stars in his very own...

Christopher Hobbs recommended The Seventh Seal (Det Sjunde inseglet) (1957) in Movies (curated)

The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie (1981)
Movie
The film starts with a showing of the 1958 award winning cartoon Knighty Knight Bugs before going...

Batman: Detective Comics, Volume 1: Rise of the Batmen
Book
A part of DC Universe: Rebirth! DETECTIVE COMICS is back! Follow the adventures of Batman, the...

Daredevil Guardian Devil
Book
Guardian Devil found Kevin Smith (Clerks, Chasing Amy) confidently transitioning from writing...

BankofMarquis (1832 KP) rated The Dark Knight Rises (2012) in Movies
Jun 27, 2018
The quick answer is - you don't, so don't even try.
THE DARK KNIGHT RISES is a satisfactory conclusion to the Dark Knight trilogy that started with 2005's BATMAN BEGINS and, again stars Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne/Batman, the "Dark Knight".
What Director Nolan wisely does is continue his dark tone with this film, but does not even mention The Joker (or Ledger) in this film. Let the memories of the past films be just that - memories - and let this film stand on it's own.
And it does, for the most part.
Taking place 8 years after the events of THE DARK KNIGHT, this film has Batman coming out of self-imposed "retirement" to, yet again, save Gotham City from the clutches of a bad guy - this time, the masked Bane. In the course of this film Batman is torn down, to be risen and reborn again as the shining light of good over evil, shedding the "Dark Knight" moniker once and for all.
Nolan - and his brother, and frequent collaborator, Jonathan - wrote the screenplay and it is...serviceable. Nothing really remarkable about the story and plot. It gives each one of our returning characters - Lucious Fox (Morgan Freeman), Alfred Pennyworth (Michael Caine) and - especially - Commissioner Gordon (Gary Oldman) room to shine along with other, new characters like Selina Kyle/Catwoman (a really good Anne Hathaway), Officer Blake (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) Miranda Tate (Marion Cotillard) and, of course, Bane (Tom Hardy).
As you might be able to see, ALL of these actors are members of Nolan's "troupe" of actors - they either have been in other Nolan films (or, in the case of Hathaway, WILL be in another Nolan film) and each of them appear on the screen with gusto and a quiet confidence in their characters and a trust in a filmmaker that comes from frequent collaborations.
In the lead, Bale, of course, gives his usual, strong performance, though I did detect a hint of weariness in the performance. Now...some will say that is because the character is becoming weary, but I think it is more to the case that Bale was growing weary of playing this character.
But that is a quibble for all of the characters/actors do a terrific/professional job pushing the plot forward, which (let's admit) is just an excuse to go from one gigantic battle/chase scene to another and...Nolan certainly knows how to do these.
From the opening to close, every one of these gigantic "set pieces" held my attention and I found myself - even though I have seen this film before - sitting on the edge of my seat as the good guys - led by Batman - raced time to thwart the machinations of the bad guys in the end.
I'm glad these action sequences held my attention, for there are, inexplicably, looooong sections of this film where there is no action, but "character development" and "growth from strong internal retrospection." This sort of thing might have looked good on the page, but it is rather dull and boring when put on the screen. This film is almost 3 hours long, and - if Mr. Nolan would like to contact me - I can suggest a few spots where we can trim about 20-30 minutes out of this film, starting with the long stretch where Bruce Wayne is imprisoned.
But...these stretches are tolerable when you know it will lead you to some really fine action sequences featuring character/actors that you care about and are actually rooting for them to succeed. As I stated before, this is an "agreeable" conclusion to the trilogy. One who's journey I was glad to be one, but - to be honest - one that I was glad was over as well.
Letter Grade: B+
7 1/2 (out of 10) stars and you can take that to the Bank (ofMarquis)