My dear reader(s), this week theaters that subscribe to the Flashback Cinema series were blessed — BLESSED, I tell you — with the return of one of the greatest films of all time: the Dark Knight.
The middle installment of Christopher Nolan's Bat-verse sees the Caped Crusader facing off with his iconic arch-nemesis, the Joker.
Spoiler level here will be...um...no promises. The movie's thirteen years old; I feel like, if you wanted to catch up with it, by now you would have.
There are four movies that, at any given time, I would call "my all-time favorite." The Dark Knight is one of them. I saw it 27 times in its original theatrical run. I've watched it hundreds of times since. It is at once entirely comfortable and entirely fresh. The current Flashback Cinema series represents the first time I've had the opportunity to "retro-review" something I reviewed upon its initial release. I guess that means I'm old. (Thanks to Facebook having discontinued its Notes feature, my original review is lost to time and the vast space of the ethernet.) It also represents my first opportunity to revisit TDK on a big screen since that original run. You needn't read further (though I hope you will) to be assured: the Dark Knight has aged better than the finest wine.
Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy is defined by many things, not least of which is the exceptional actors his team assembled. If Ben Affleck is my favorite Batman, I don't think a finer actor than Christian Bale has ever worn the cowl, and his Bruce Wayne is surrounded by the best of the best. Michael Caine. Morgan Freeman. Gary Oldman. Aaron Eckhart. Cillian Murphy. William Fichtner. The movie also gave me some folks I now look out for in anything: David Dastmalchian, Keith Szarabajka, Ritchie Coster. And then there's Heath Ledger, of course, whose chilling, Oscar-winning turn as the Joker has become the definitive rendering of a character with a history stretching back more than 80 years.
The Dark Knight features (yes, wait for it...) one of the best, if not *the* best, openings in film history. The picture is distinguished by stunning visuals and extraordinary stunts, which are sometimes enormous but never comically absurd in the way of the Fast saga. The smart, meticulous story boasts well-crafted (and quotable) dialogue. The movie runs two and a half hours, but doesn't seem even one second too long. And the score — Oh! That score! — by Hans Zimmer and James Newton Howard is just exquisite. If Merriam-Webster were to loan me the whole of its collection of superlatives, I still wouldn't have enough to effectively convey the brilliance of the Dark Knight.
The Dark Knight clocks in at 152 minutes and is rated PG13 for "intense sequences of violence and some menace."
More than a decade later, the Dark Knight remains the gold standard for its genre, and one of the most extraordinary movies ever made. Of a possible nine Weasleys, the Dark Knight gets all nine, plus one for each Weasley grandchild that has come along since the inception (see what I did there?) of the Weasley scale.
The Dark Knight is now playing on big screens wherever Flashback Cinema is shown, and streaming on HBO Max.
Fangirl points: My Gary (of course). Cillian Murphy. My favorite director I've ever worked with*, Christopher Nolan.
*Statement is both technically true and terribly misleading.
Until next time...