That makes sense P-C. I've seen that in the books...and the tv show, to an extent.
But that still doesn't explain how that character went from
scourge, riding off into the night
to
hanging out with good-hearted but below-average-thinking good guy
wannabe.
Mystery!
But that still doesn't explain how that character went from
Well when
he rode away he had a brain full of his own fear spray, so that may have altered his thinking a bit. I did love his line after Batman says he doesn't need any help - (paraphrasing) "That's not my diagnosis."
I thought
Scarecrow and good-hearted dumb guy were on opposite sides in the melee Batman interrupted but he bundled them together for the police to find.
Ah, I must have missed that. Makes sense.
I think I'm confusing this guy with
Cillian Murphy
.
Anyway, I didn't think that Harvey Dent was supposed to be pure of intent; I thought that he was supposed to -- at the very least -- have a history of being, well, two-faced.
Well, this is emblematic of my whole problem with the movie
-- it was at the end that I realized Dent was supposed to be a white knight. (Which is why I am whitefonting)
I think that with Nolan movies, plot comes first and theme gets layered on second, and the result in TDK was that the themes were often incoherent, internally contradictory, and expressed in dialogue/speeches/narration.
So as this relates to Dent,
we have a character with baggage from the comic books, played by someone who plays it a little smarmy (that courtroom scene was fucking RIDICULOUS), that at the end of the movie we realize was supposed to represent pureness driven to the dark side.
I agree the
courtroom scene was out of hand. The second time I watched the film I was still expecting to find out later that Dent had orchestrated the whole scene and I had to remind myself that I'd already seen it and we're supposed to take that bit seriously.
Also I'm still finding it odd that
Lao is on top of the pile of bills but never mentioned again after Joker starts the blaze. I wonder if a scene of him burning to death was cut out, and the sound of barking dogs now replaces what were oringally his screams.
Laga, that guy was well creepy. And similarly delicately boned to
Cillian Murphy
.
Hm.
Opposites is an option.
Which brings up another issue. How, if things are supposed to be so
secrety in the bat-warehouse,
is it that
good guy wannabes and potentially baddies just happen to know
what is going on with Bats
?
I'm thinking about this WAY too much and need to just go enjoy my memories without trying to figure it all out.
Laga, I thought that as
a character moment for the Joker, it was pretty effectively chilling that he's burning a man to death and not even paying attention.
But I'm not sure it was really intended that way - I suspect it might have been more
a plot oversight like Batman never actually going back to the fundraiser to deal with the Joker after catching Rachel.
re the plot oversight- I figured
by the time Bats got back upstairs Joker's crew had split.