Holy plot, moviegoers! This ‘Batman’ has one
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JOHN DEPKO
“Batman Begins” is bigger, better and far more satisfying than any of
its predecessors. It has all the top-notch special effects anyone
would expect in a major superhero blockbuster. But director
Christopher Nolan adds real depth and intrigue to the well-known
story by concentrating on the personal and emotional realities of the
principal players.
Top-notch actors bring life and credibility to each character. Few
films have major stars -- such as Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, Liam
Neeson and Gary Oldman -- filling the supporting roles. They not only
give life to their own complex parts, but they each fully complement
Christian Bale’s outstanding dual performance as billionaire Bruce
Wayne and his newly created Batman. Katie Holmes is striking as the
idealistic district attorney prosecutor who is also his potential
love interest.
This screenplay offers insight into the formative years that
compelled Wayne to become his crime-fighting alter ego. Nolan covers
these intricate developments at an intelligent pace. Fully half of
the movie unfolds before the pensive Wayne ever dons a bat mask.
Especially noteworthy are Neeson as Wayne’s mysterious mentor, and
Caine as Alfred, the loyal family butler.
Of course, big-budget summer hits based on comic-book heroes are
bound to contain impossible but spectacular scenes. This “Batman”
dutifully provides several head-spinning, white-knuckle thrill rides
throughout the movie.
But alongside all the loud excitement, there’s a human element
that gives this production an extra dimension not usually found in
the genre.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
*
Holy bat guano! After seeing the last Batmess eight years ago,
starring George Clooney and the Governator, I wouldn’t have thought
Bob Kane’s comic book superhero was worth reviving on the big screen.
But “Batman Begins” is great summer entertainment and is sure to
generate at least one sequel.
As written by director Christopher Nolan (“Memento”) and David
Goyer (the “Blade” trilogy), this Batman and Gotham City are edgier,
more sophisticated and more visually stunning than in the four
previous movies. Gone is the campy humor and Hollywood stunt casting.
This is a tale of a man with serious childhood traumas who learns
to channel his fear and anger to evolve into the Dark Knight, a grim
seeker of justice in a once idyllic city, now another victim of
corporate greed and corruption. The villains wear exquisitely
tailored suits and are without superpowers, except perhaps for their
vast wealth.
Christian Bale (“American Psycho”) portrays Bruce Wayne, Batman’s
alter ego, like a modern-day Hamlet. Handsome but humorless, his
intensity threatens to undermine the film before he even gets into
Batmode. The wonderful supporting cast redeems it, however.
Michael Caine is perfect as the unflappable Alfred, the faithful
longtime manservant of the Wayne family. Liam Neeson is the elegant
“Jedi master” of crime who first meets up with Bruce in some vaguely
Mongolian-looking prison camp. Morgan Freeman, a forgotten employee
in the basement of Wayne Enterprises, is delightful as a James
Bond-like “Q” who supplies all the wonderful Batgadgets.
These three old pros really add wit, polish and lightness to their
scenes and get the best lines in the film.
Katie Holmes is a pretty, if chaste, love interest for Bruce, and
Gary Oldman is surprisingly colorless as good cop Jim Gordon --
perhaps he’s better suited for his standard movie roles as psychotic
villains.
“Batman Begins” does have a very nasty villain, memorably played
by Cillian Murphy (“28 Days Later”), in Dr. Jonathan Crane -- whose
asylum and panic-inducing drugs are more terrifying than any bombs,
bats or bullets.
* SUSANNE PEREZ lives in Costa Mesa and is an executive assistant
for a financial services company.
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