Editorial Reviews
Review
Batman Begins:
Batman Begins discards the previous
 four films in the series and  recasts the Caped Crusader as a fearsome 
avenging angel. That's good  news, because the series, which had gotten 
off to a rousing start under  Tim Burton, had gradually dissolved into 
self-parody by 1997's Batman & Robin. As the title implies, Batman Begins
 tells the story anew, when Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) flees Western  
civilization following the murder of his parents. He is taken in by a  
mysterious instructor named Ducard (Liam Neeson in another mentor role) 
 and urged to become a ninja in the League of Shadows, but he instead  
returns to his native Gotham City resolved to end the mob rule that is  
strangling it. But are there forces even more sinister at hand? 
Cowritten by the team of David S. Goyer (a veteran comic book writer) 
and director Christopher Nolan (Memento), Batman Begins
 is a welcome return to the grim and gritty version of the Dark Knight, 
 owing a great debt to the graphic novels that preceded it. It doesn't  
have the razzle dazzle, or the mass appeal, of Spider-Man 2 
(though the Batmobile is cool), and retelling the origin means it starts
  slowly, like most "first" superhero movies. But it's certainly the 
best  Bat-film since Burton's original, and one of the best superhero 
movies  of its time. Bale cuts a good figure as Batman, intense and 
dangerous  but with some of the lightheartedness Michael Keaton brought 
to the  character. Michael Caine provides much of the film's humor as 
the family  butler, Alfred, and as the love interest, Katie Holmes (Dawson's Creek)
  is surprisingly believable in her first adult role. Also featuring 
Gary  Oldman as the young police officer Jim Gordon, Morgan Freeman as a
  Q-like gadgets expert, and Cillian Murphy as the vile Jonathan Crane. --David Horiuchi
The Dark Knight:
The Dark Knight
 arrives with tremendous hype (best superhero  movie ever? posthumous 
Oscar for Heath Ledger?), and incredibly, it  lives up to all of it. But
 calling it the best superhero movie ever  seems like faint praise, 
since part of what makes the movie great--in  addition to pitch-perfect 
casting, outstanding writing, and a compelling  vision--is that it 
bypasses the normal fantasy element of the superhero  genre and makes it
 all terrifyingly real. Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart)  is Gotham City's 
new district attorney, charged with cleaning up the  crime rings that 
have paralyzed the city. He enters an uneasy alliance  with the young 
police lieutenant, Jim Gordon (Gary Oldman), and Batman  (Christian 
Bale), the caped vigilante who seems to trust only  Gordon--and whom 
only Gordon seems to trust. They make progress until a  psychotic and 
deadly new player enters the game: the Joker (Heath  Ledger), who offers
 the crime bosses a solution--kill the Batman.  Further complicating 
matters is that Dent is now dating Rachel Dawes  (Maggie Gyllenhaal, 
after Katie Holmes turned down the chance to reprise  her role), the 
longtime love of Batman's alter ego, Bruce Wayne.
In  his last 
completed role before his tragic death, Ledger is fantastic as  the 
Joker, a volcanic, truly frightening force of evil. And he sets the  
tone of the movie: the world is a dark, dangerous place where there are 
 no easy choices. Eckhart and Oldman also shine, but as good as Bale is,
  his character turns out rather bland in comparison (not uncommon for  
heroes facing more colorful villains). Director-cowriter Christopher  
Nolan (Memento) follows his critically acclaimed Batman Begins with an even better sequel that sets itself apart from notable superhero movies like Spider-Man 2 and Iron Man
 because of its sheer emotional impact and striking sense of  
realism--there are no suspension-of-disbelief superpowers here. At 152  
minutes, it's a shade too long, and it's much too intense for kids. But 
 for most movie fans--and not just superhero fans--The Dark Knight is a film for the ages. --David Horiuchi
The Dark Knight Rises:
Of
 all the "most anticipated" movies ever claiming that title, it's hard  
to imagine one that has caused so much speculation and breathless  
expectation as Christopher Nolan's final chapter to his magnificently  
brooding Batman trilogy, The Dark Knight Rises. Though it may not rise to the level of the mythic grandeur of its predecessor, The Dark Knight Rises
 is a truly magnificent work of cinematic brilliance that commandingly  
completes the cycle and is as heavy with literary resonance as it is  
of-the-moment insight into the political and social affairs unfolding on
  the world stage. That it is also a full-blown and fully realized epic 
 crime drama packed with state-of-the-art action relying equally on  
immaculate CGI fakery and heart-stopping practical effects and stunt  
work makes its entrée into blockbuster history worthy of all the  
anticipation and more. It deserves all the accolades it will get for  
bringing an opulently baroque view of a comic book universe to life with
  sinister effectiveness.
Set eight years after the events of The Dark Knight, TDK Rises
 finds Bruce Wayne broken in spirit and body from his moral and physical
  battle with the Joker. Gotham City is at peace primarily because 
Batman  took the fall for Harvey Dent's murder, allowing the former 
district  attorney's memory to remain as a crime-fighting hero rather 
than the  lunatic destructor he became as Two-Face. But that meant 
Batman's cape  and cowl wound up in cold storage--perhaps for good--with
 only police  commissioner Jim Gordon in possession of the truth. The 
threat that  faces Gotham now is by no means new; as deployed by the 
intricate script  that weaves themes first explored in Batman Begins,
 fundamental  conflicts that predate his own origins are at the heart of
 the ultimate  struggle that will leave Batman and his city either 
triumphant or in  ashes. It is one of the movie's greatest achievements 
that we really  don't know which way it will end up until its final 
exhilarating  moments. Intricate may be an understatement in the 
construction of the  script by Nolan and his brother Jonathan. The 
multilayered story  includes a battle for control of Wayne Industries 
and the decimation of  Bruce Wayne's personal wealth; a destructive yet 
potentially  earth-saving clean energy source; a desolate prison colony 
on the other  side of the globe; terrorist attacks against people, 
property, and the  world's economic foundation; the redistribution of 
wealth to the 99  percent; and a virtuoso jewel thief who is identified 
in every way  except name as Catwoman. Played with saucy fun and sexy 
danger by Anne  Hathaway, Selina Kyle is sort of the catalyst (!) for 
all the plot  threads, especially when she whispers into Bruce's ear at a
 charity ball  some prescient words about a coming storm that will tear 
Gotham  asunder. As unpredictable as it is sometimes hard to follow, the
 winds  of this storm blow in a raft of diverse and extremely compelling
 new  characters (including Selina Kyle) who are all part of a dance 
that ends  with the ballet of a cataclysmic denouement. Among the new 
faces are  Marion Cotillard as a green-energy advocate and Wayne 
Industries board  member and Joseph Gordon-Levitt as a devoted Gotham 
cop who may lead  Nolan into a new comic book franchise. The hulking 
monster Bane, played  by Tom Hardy with powerful confidence even under a
 clawlike mask, is so  much more than a villain (and the toughest match 
yet for Batman's  prowess). Though he ends up being less important to 
the movie's moral  themes and can't really match Heath Ledger's maniacal
 turn as Joker, his  mesmerizing swagger and presence as demonic force 
personified are an  affecting counterpoint to the moral battle that 
rages within Batman  himself. Christian Bale gives his most dynamic 
performance yet as the  tortured hero, and Michael Caine (Alfred), Gary 
Oldman (Gordon), and  Morgan Freeman (Lucius Fox) all return with more 
gravitas and emotional  weight than ever before. Then there's the 
action. Punctuated by three or  four magnificent set pieces, TDKR
 deftly mixes the cinematic  process of providing information with 
punches of pow throughout (an  airplane-to-airplane kidnap/rescue, an 
institutional terrorist assault  and subsequent chase, and the 
choreographed crippling of an entire city  are the above-mentioned 
highlights). The added impact of the movie's  extensive Imax footage ups
 the wow factor, all of it kinetically  controlled by Nolan and his top 
lieutenants Wally Pfister  (cinematography), Hans Zimmer (composer), Lee
 Smith (editor), and Nathan  Crowley and Kevin Kavanaugh (production 
designers). The best  recommendation TDKR carries is that it 
does not leave one wanting  for more. At 164 minutes, there's plenty of 
nonstop dramatic  enthrallment for a single sitting. More important, 
there's a deep sense  of satisfaction that The Dark Knight Rises
 leaves as the  fulfilling conclusion to an absorbing saga that remains 
relevant,  resonant, and above all thoroughly entertaining. --Ted Fry
Product Description
Batman Begins:
Batman Begins explores the
 origins of the Batman legend and the Dark  Knight's emergence as a 
force for good in Gotham. In the wake of his  parents' murder, 
disillusioned industrial heir Bruce Wayne (Christian  Bale) travels the 
world seeking the means to fight injustice and turn  fear against those 
who prey on the fearful. He returns to Gotham and  unveils his 
alter-ego: Batman, a masked crusader who uses his strength,  intellect 
and an array of high tech deceptions to fight the sinister  forces that 
threaten the city.              
The Dark Knight:
The follow-up to 
Batman Begins, 
The Dark Knight
 reunites director Christopher Nolan and star Christian Bale, who 
reprises the role of Batman/Bruce Wayne in his continuing war on crime. 
With the help of Lt. Jim Gordon and District Attorney Harvey Dent, 
Batman  sets out to destroy organized crime in Gotham for good. The 
triumvirate  proves effective, but soon find themselves prey to a rising
 criminal  mastermind known as The Joker, who thrusts Gotham into 
anarchy and  forces Batman closer to crossing the fine line between  
hero and vigilante. Heath Ledger stars as archvillain The Joker, and  
Aaron Eckhart plays Dent. Maggie Gyllenhaal joins the cast as Rachel  
Dawes. Returning from 
Batman Begins are Gary Oldman as Gordon, Michael Caine as Alfred and Morgan Freeman as Lucius Fox.
The Dark Knight Rises:
It
 has been eight years since Batman vanished into the night, turning,  in
 that instant, from hero to fugitive. Assuming the blame for the death  
of D.A. Harvey Dent, the Dark Knight sacrificed everything for what he  
and Commissioner Gordon both hoped was the greater good. For a time the 
 lie worked, as criminal activity in Gotham City was crushed under the  
weight of the anti-crime Dent Act. But everything will change with the  
arrival of a cunning cat burglar with a mysterious agenda. Far more  
dangerous, however, is the emergence of Bane, a masked terrorist whose  
ruthless plans for Gotham drive Bruce out of his self-imposed exile. But
  even if he dons the cape and cowl again, Batman may be no match for  
Bane.