HomerSimpson-Man
Member
striKeVillain! said:I'll be the first:
GTFO.
Damn, beat me to it.
striKeVillain! said:I'll be the first:
GTFO.
Maggot9 said:Batman's voice was LOL.
Why do you hate freedom?Maggot9 said:Just saw it. It was ok. Joker was definitely the best part of the movie. Editing was horrible. Batman's voice was LOL.
HomerSimpson-Man said:Yeah, very very stupid release date Universal. One week away from the biggest release of the year for a comic adaptation also?! That's brilliant!!
Music sucked, as well.striKeVillain! said:I'll be the first:
GTFO.
Maggot9 said:Just saw it. It was ok. Joker was definitely the best part of the movie. Editing was horrible. Batman's voice was LOL.
DarkJediKnight said:Universal is run by a bunch of morons. This is no surprise.
Maggot9 said:Music sucked, as well.
Maggot9 said:Just saw it. It was ok. Joker was definitely the best part of the movie. Editing was horrible. Batman's voice was LOL.
TheGrayGhost said:I don't understand the the hate towards Bale voice. THAT's Batman. Again, THAT'S how the shit is supposed to go. I agree that when he talks for more than a few sentences, it's weird, but that's because Batman isn't supposed to talk for that long, period.
Maggot9 said:Music sucked, as well.
I saw it on Friday. I was actually thinking about not seeing it because ever since I saw Spider-man 1 in the theatre, every single movie I've watched has been interupted by a crying child. It didn't matter what movie I went to see. For example, I saw a late night showing of Saw 2 and a woman brought her 5 children, all less than 7-8 years of age. Its been a streak of like 10 movies that have been ruined. Once, the crying even led to fist fight. I hadn't been to the movies in over a year prior to TDK. Spider-man 3 was the last movie I saw and in addition to the movie being terrible it was once again ruined by someone's crying children. I was really looking forward to seeing TDK but I didn't want it to be ruined either. Before the movie started I was looking through the audience for small children hoping not to see any. I didn't, and all was quiet during the previews (which there were several). About 2 minutes into the movie, it happened....a toddler started crying. You could not imagine how I was feeling at that moment. And then the unthinkable happened....the father actually picked the child up and carried it out of the theatre AND NEVER RETURNED!! I was then able to watch the movie in peace. Ladies and gentlemen, Batman broke the Spider-man curse!!!! I was so happy. Finally someone was considerate!
About the movie...Ledger was terrific. At first I wasn't sure if his performance would live up to the hype but as the movie went on his Joker got better and better. I thought Eckhart did a really good job as Dent and Two-Face. I loved how Two-Face looked. I thought it was spot on. The movie ended the exact opposite way I would have expected (I had assumed Joker would die and Two-Face would live for the sequel). Man it really sucks about Ledger, I would have loved to see him come back to reprise the role. I wonder if they will even bother bringing the Joker back now, played by a different actor. It doesn't seem likely that anyone could fill Ledger's shoes in the role.
The two things I didn't like about the movie were Batman's voice (almost laughably bad) and the re-casting of Rachael. I hate it when that happens anyway but I really think re-casting was a mistake here because I felt it took away from what happens to the character later in the film. Had it been the same actress, i.e. someone more familiar, I feel it would have had an even greater impact.
Maggot9 said:Just saw it. It was ok. Joker was definitely the best part of the movie. Editing was horrible. Batman's voice was LOL.
SpeedingUptoStop said:Man, I so loved Harvey Dent in this film. Fucking amazing. I never thought he'd make it work. They convinced me. god damn
Maggot9 said:Music sucked, as well.
Just saw it. It was ok. Joker was definitely the best part of the movie. Editing was horrible. Batman's voice was LOL.
Royale with Cheese said:As an editor, I thought the editing was flawless. The pacing was brilliant, great storytelling. I do admit that Bale's raspy voice as Batman was a bit far-fetched at times, but you gotta remember that Batman is Bruce Wayne's superego and that somewhere in Batman's psyche, there's gotta be an 'id'.
That's the voice you heard, whether you liked it or not. What do you want it to sound like? Marge Simpson? Chappelle's Rick James impression?
I didn't notice any detrimental flaws in the editing at all either.msdstc said:Wait how are you an editor and didn't notice the flaws?
Raguel said:I didn't notice any detrimental flaws in the editing at all either.
Wait how are you an editor and didn't notice the flaws?
I'm not saying editing down the movie... which was done wonderfully. I'm saying cuttin/transitions/reaction shots. There were quite a few that didn't flow.
Royale with Cheese said:When you say flaws, please cite examples. I might or might not agree with them. This whole "Ah, the editing sucked...the acting sucked" aesthetic is retarded.
Examples, please.
I thought, first off, the editing was perfect. You edit to tell a story. You cut certain parts of a scene that don't work, extend things that do work. But you do it all "to tell the story".
Some bad editing examples would be:
1) most of Spiderman 3
2) Transformers (by hack, Michael Bay)
3) any B-movie in history
Royale with Cheese said:As an editor, I thought the editing was flawless. The pacing was brilliant, great storytelling. I do admit that Bale's raspy voice as Batman was a bit far-fetched at times, but you gotta remember that Batman is Bruce Wayne's superego and that somewhere in Batman's psyche, there's gotta be an 'id'.
That's the voice you heard, whether you liked it or not. What do you want it to sound like? Marge Simpson? Chappelle's Rick James impression? Mickey Mouse?
Next.
Those are examples? :lol There are 439 reaction shots in the movie, which one are you referring to?msdstc said:Look above. If you want specific examples cited, glad to do it.
Royale with Cheese said:Again, examples?
irfan said:Those are examples? :lol There are 439 reaction shots in the movie, which one are you referring to?
Royale with Cheese said:I do admit that the whole "ferries scene" could've been a little different...but this was Nolan's vision, his story. His goal was to get across the timidness of the two groups of people, something you can't very well simplify too much without losing track of the story. I do agree that some of the two-shots/reactions were a little "glib" in some ways.
I also thought the cut-aways during Harvey Dent's "always darkest before the dawn" speech were a little "glib" as well. Especially when the cop yells out, "No more killing cops!"
That could've been reworked or cut out altogether as well. But everything else was in its right place.
Hope I didn't sound too condescending in my exchange with you msdstc...I just believe one should back up their statements. But I do agree that these two particular scenes were a bit too long.
Everything else, masterpiece. And that's all that matters...that the work as a whole comes together, effectively tells the story, and moves/speaks to the audience.
Royale with Cheese said:Another thing, Bale did a great job with Batman's voice. Batman's inner evil is implied with that sinister, raspy voice. If you found it laughable, that's your opinion. But let's put things in perspective...would you rather have nipples on the batsuit or Bale's scratchy voice?
Think about that one for a second.
opening scene with the fake batmans and scarecrow... at one part the real batman jumps up and grabs onto a van, they didn't cut the shot short enough so you see batmans feet come down to the ground and almost as if he screwed up in the take. In the next shot he's held up on to the car perfectly. You can 100 % tell it's another shot, which is never supposed to happen. It's supposed to flow like it's happening in realtime, but I don't have to tell you that. like I said you'll have to watch to see.
and then
the ending scene where Harvey/Batman fall. I can't explain it exactly, but it is incredibly rough. You don't really see them falling, or see them land they just appear on the ground next to eachother. it was an extremely poor choice of angles/transitions, that did not flow properly, and the way they were laying was inconsistent
Royale with Cheese said:Ok, these are very good examples. I agree that the last one probably could've been avoided by setting up another shot of them falling. But you see them fall...you know they fall. You really don't have to see every little moment during a fall. That's a stylistic choice made by the director. If you remember, this guy directed The Prestige, which really never showed every little nuance (seeing as it was a movie about magicians and deception).
About the van scene...I found nothing wrong with that. There's plenty of films that make transitional/point-of-view switches all the time. It's an effect to sort of disorient the viewer for a moment. Whether it was intentional or not, I can't say. But it did appear to be again, a stylistic choice.
Hey no, you were actually civil about it, which is great. I agree with you about "no more killing cops" that was the closest thing in the movie that brought me to cringing... it felt very forced, but it wasn't AWFUL. I wish I had the movie though to cite specific reaction shots that just didn't work. I mean they COULD'VE worked, but things weren't synced up properly.
Royale with Cheese said:Stuff
SpeedingUptoStop said:Anybody love how the camera kept circling at times? Happened a lot at the party and maybe once or twice during the interrogation.
SpeedingUptoStop said:Anybody love how the camera kept circling at times? Happened a lot at the party and maybe once or twice during the interrogation.
Royale with Cheese said:Hey, I'm an amateur editor for my own stuff as well. I'm not a pro or anything. I just see certain things in films differently the more I edit things down myself. I think (a) Nolan didn't wanna keep action scenes too constrained and (b) partly because his director of photography Wally Pfister has a very documentary-style of shooting.
I'm sure they knew there would be editing mistakes. There's at least 15-20 in every film, whether you plan them or not.
capslock said:
capslock said:
Hopefully this won't make their front page - like Friday's feel good TDK articlecapslock said:
This movie was beyond Awesome. Perfect from start to finish.