Skip Navigation,Sitemap

Royal Borough Observer

Film review: The Dark Knight Rises (12A)

Alexandra Gregg • Published 27 Jul 2012 12:30 Print Comments 4 Comments

Jump to first paragraph.

Share this Facebook Twitter Google Buzz Delicious DIGG Reddit Stumbleupon Email RSS

click to enlarge
EMOTIONAL ENDING: Tom Hardy as Bane and Christian Bale as Batman in The Dark Knight Rises. PHOTO: 2012 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. and Legendary Pictures Funding, LLC

THE Batman must come back. These are the words uttered by Commissioner Gordon (Gary Oldman) as he lies in a hospital bed in The Dark Knight Rises (TDKR) - the final instalment in a so-far flawless trilogy.

Bruce Wayne's response? "What if he doesn't exist any more?" Well, director, screen writer, and cinematic genius, Christopher Nolan, has proven that he surely does.

Set eight years after The Dark Knight, The Dark Knight Rises hones in on the gloomy and brooding Gotham City, which is just as sinful, broken and misguided as it has ever been.

After taking the fall for the crimes of Two Face, a.k.a. "hero" Harvey Dent, philanthropic billionaire Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) has hung up his cape, trading his crusader days for those of a reclusive cripple. Isolated in the east wing of Wayne Manor, Bruce is devastated after the death of his one true love, Rachel, and at being abandoned by a city he risked his life for.

But heroes cannot stay hidden for long and when the future of Bruce's beloved Wayne Enterprises is threatened, he is forced to make his return to society. Enter Bane (Tom Hardy), a mercenary villain whose only agenda is to ensure the downfall of Gotham. As his uprising gains momentum and the city's police force is disabled, Bruce braves his Batman suit once again, pitting himself against an adversary who pushes his physical boundaries to breaking point - and then some.

While the city's fate hangs in the balance, he finds himself in the middle of a two-pronged attack, the first from the "pure evil" that is Bane, and the second from his inner demons.

TDKR is a pure behemoth, as dark and grandiose as anticipated and five times as intense. I thought Nolan's tour de force was Inception until I clapped eyes on this satisfying conclusion to the DC Comics trilogy. It fires at a relentlessly rapid pace, introducing fantastic new characters along the way - in particular the sexy and ruthless Selina Kyle/Catwoman (Anne Hathaway), hothead rookie cop Blake (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) and Bruce's romantic interest, Miranda Tate (Marion Cotillard).

As Nolan so loves to do, every character is put through the emotional wringer. Gordon is engulfed by the guilt of his lie about Dent, while the faithful Alfred (Michael Caine) feels the sting of seeing Bruce throw his life away. Bruce is isolated, yearning for death but instead forced to re-build himself, rising from the ashes like a Phoenix, with Gotham mirroring his highs and lows. The audience is forced to feel every tiny bit of this pain and but a climactic, yet giddily uplifting ending gives closure on the trilogy, while leaving the door open for the next chapter.

An epic finale that marks a fitting end to Nolan's Batman tenure, TDKR is unsurprisingly action-packed, offering pulse-racing car chases and breathtakingly orchestrated CGI sequences, while delivering heartfelt dialogues and a masterful script.

This article appeared in Royal Borough Observer 26 Jul 12

Have your say. Post a comment on this article.

Post a comment

Registered users log in here

You must be logged in to post. If you have not registered with us, please do so now.

Registration only takes a few minutes. Registered users do not have to complete word verification once logged in and can also take part in competitions and other registered user only features of the site.


Enter the text as shown.

Return to the main index, get more from this section or browse our archives.

Berkshire Deals
loading...

Local Businesses
click here
Search Local Businesses Click Here

Hot Jobs

Most Read

  1. Reporters battle it out in doughnut eating competition
  2. VIDEO: Boxing star Barry McGuigan opens new multi-million pound college facility
  3. Berkshire workers third most productive in the country for boosting the economy
  4. VIDEO: Touring exhibition aims to bring the Bible 'alive'
  5. Free entry to Legoland on Sunday for visitors dressed in swimwear
  6. Martin garage to go but old Eton College sanatorium set to survive

» View More Stories

You may have missed

Taste

View our Taste Guide

Your social, local Business Directory - It's in WindsorIt's in The DirectoryDirectory Network

Copyright ©2013 Berkshire Media Group, 50/56 Portman Road Reading Berkshire RG30 1BA • Tel: 01753 627222 • Fax: 01753 586520

Login     RSS Feeds FacebooK Twitter

close XCookies

We use cookies to enhance the use of our site - please see here for our Privacy and Cookie policy.