I haven’t seen The Dark Knight, and probably won’t for at least a couple of weeks, but – while I enjoyed Batman Begins – the NYT review gives me pause:
This is a darker Batman, less obviously human, more strangely other. When he perches over Gotham on the edge of a skyscraper roof, he looks more like a gargoyle than a savior. There’s a touch of demon in his stealthy menace. During a crucial scene, one of the film’s saner characters asserts that this isn’t a time for heroes, the implication being that the moment belongs to villains and madmen. Which is why, when Batman takes flight in this film, his wings stretching across the sky like webbed hands, it’s as if he were trying to possess the world as much as save it.
To which I say: The Dark Knight Returns, Frank Miller’s seminal “reinvention” of the Batman character, came out in 1986. The whole “dark” Batman is nothing new. If anything, comic afficionadoes widely regard the 1990s as the reductio ad absurdum of “grim ‘n’ gritty” superheros with their flexible morality and high body counts. Haven’t there been any new ideas since then? Has nothing interesting been done with Batman in the last 20+ years that isn’t just a retread of Miller? (This isn’t a rhetorical question; I haven’t really followed Batman comics since high school.)
No doubt this is part of the ongoing campaign to convince us all that comics are Very Serious Literature that grown ups should see as Important and Significant (and, naturally, should fork over loads of cash to see the movies based thereon). Fine; good; I’ve been enjoying the renaissance of superhero flicks as much as the next geek. But can’t superheroes still be fun? For my money that was a big part of the appeal of Iron Man – the hero, while facing an existential crisis of sorts, wasn’t perpetually tied up in knots of angst. He was having a good time being a superhero!
And my impression, as a comics reader of only the most casual sort (I think the last thing I read was the collected paperback of vol. 3 of Joss Whedon’s X-Men), is that many of the stars in the current comics firmament are trying to recapture some of the fun, and the fantastic nature, of comics (Grant Morrison also comes to mind), instead of sticking exclusively to a grim and plodding “realism.” Maybe in 20 years the movies will catch up with these guys.
(I realize this is all a lot of criticism for a movie I haven’t actually watched…)

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