TJ Verboten
Member
It's explained in the article though, it's just another cheap shallow reference to A Tale of Two Cities. The entire movie felt like a fan fiction wankfest of a relatively smart dude who just read the book and felt so enamored by it that he couldn't help himself from framing his entire new Batman movie with themes and references to the story, even when they felt forced and cheap. And everyone suffered for it.
The Tale of Two Cities references amount to -
a 2 second shot of Bane tying a knot/knitting, and
the poignant eulogy that Gordon gives at the end
Cheap, shallow, fan fiction wankfest is overly harsh.
This isn't like Nolan hammering the poem in Interstellar.
Pretentious?
Again we're talking about a 2 second shot of Bane, that 99% of the audience didn't even notice.
For as much criticism as Nolan gets for being -
- exposition heavy
- having his characters spell out the themes of his movies a little too much....
The use of the Tale of Two Cities references in Rises are pretty subtle on Nolan's part.
You still have dopes complaining about the politics in Rises from both the left and right, trying to tie it to Occupy Wall Street, when the script was written before Occupy happened, and the 'politics' of the movie, if anything, are an exploration of French revolutionary politics in the modern age.
Which I'll concede saying that last sentence out loud, sounds kinda "pretentious".
Having said that, the exploration of those politics are pretty surface layer, an introduction of an idea, that the movie isn't that interested in exploring in any detail.
It's why I've wished that the second act Gotham under seige part of the movie had more time to breathe, could've gotten even more interesting, but perhaps that IMAX runtime limit forced Nolan to keep it lean.
Rises is flawed, as has been debated on this forum ad nauseam since its release, but its Tale of Two Cities "references" is something I thought the movie did well.
Zimmer's music and Gordon's eulogy are a beautiful stretch of the movie.
For all of its flaws, the last 15 minutes of Rises are immensely satisfying stuff imo.