MM, I agree with you on
it being all Two-Face from that moment with no Harvey, but unlike you, I wanted Harvey to be present too. I find that aspect of his character interesting, that his good side and bad side are warring with each other. I want No Man's Land Two-Face, putting himself on trial.
As a side note,
Two-Face was pretty fucking scary too, which I liked. Joker and Two-Face made Scarecrow and Ra's al-Ghul look like wannabe villains.
Agreed on Steph's final whitefont. Hee! Although
it might have undercut the drama a tad if Rachel goes boom and the audience bursts into applause.
Random thoughts:
The
sonar fight near the end
was the Batmobile chase of this movie. By which I mean it was 5 times as long as it needed to be. Ugh. Even if it did feature a lot of
dog-punching.
I keep thinking I really wanted more
Batfans. I would have liked a little of them actually being effective, too.
They really should have been involved in Joker's
"Kill this guy or I blow up a hospital"
thing. Ideally, on both sides. Because that was awesome.
Controversy! I don't mind
Bale's Batman voice.
But yeah, a little too much talky-meat. Seriously, Gordon, you don't need to
say the exact same thing twice in the final speech.
I felt bad for Oldman at that point.
Strega, I agree on the
sonar fight.
That was the first time during the movie I actually thought to myself, "Well, this has gone on a bit too long."
About Harvey: Joe, you said that Aims said that
we don't know he's dead -- that was my FIRST comment after the movie. I asked The Boy, "Are we meant to assume Dent is dead? No one SAID he was." I think they left it that way on purpose. And I think, therefore, that he'll be back.
Incidentally, I also dislike Bale's growly Batman voice.
House Next Door didn't like TDK so much:
[link]
I understand the critiques, but I don't agree with them.
P-C, on one of your questions, I thought
the Joker didn't say who was at which address, but it was going on 2 in the morning at that point, so I might have missed it.
I'm with Franken. Further
The issue was that Batman had to choose which one to save. That's why he sent Gordon one way and he went the other.
House Next Door didn't like TDK so much:
I understand the critiques, but I don't agree with them.
I don't agree with them, either, except for this one:
Morgan Freeman (as Wayne Enterprises liaison Lucius Fox) and Michael Caine (as stalwart manservant Alfred) spouting gloomy old man platitudes about the culture of surveillance, and everyone else monologuing ad nauseum about various and sundry long, dark teatimes of the soul.
Too. Much. Speechifying.
TDK surpassed (by a lot) the one day record. It made $66 million on Friday (estimated).
Holy shit that's a lot of $$.
I'm betting despite the running time it breaks the all-time opening weekend record. I'm also real curious how much in the way of legs it has - I suspect a lot.