motan-aw ko ana puhon sa cine dli sa utorrent... dugay pa nah mo gawas...
haahha.. bati pana a thepiratebay oi. hahah
sa cine nlang d jud ka mag mahay lge.
si Jack Nicholson = Joker / Jack Napier
1989 Batman...
Joker NOW
BTW
2 face to si tommy lee
Last edited by ninzska21; 07-22-2008 at 10:32 AM.
all i can say is... the best batman ever... but not suitable for very young audiences.
a worthy sequel from Batman Begins, 2 thumbs up!
i love it!!!
sayang jud kaayo c heath ledger..
maau kau xa mu-da ni joker
Bits of my review of Dark Knight, coming to print this Saturday 26 July 2008 at Sunstar Weekend.
"The Dark Knight"
Starring:
Bruce Wayne: Christian Bale
The Joker: Heath Ledger
Harvey Dent: Aaron Eckhart
Alfred: Michael Caine
Rachel: Maggie Gyllenhaal
Gordon: Gary Oldman
Lucius Fox: Morgan Freeman
Directed by Christopher Nolan.
Written by Christopher and Jonathan Nolan.
The Dark Knight is a film of epic proportions and Shakespearean complexity. Director Christopher Nolan continues his reinvention of the Batman saga, taking viewers on a journey into the heart, mind and soul of Bruce Wayne and the city of Gotham. This franchise is blessed to have such a skilled hand directing it. Dark Knight is not only perhaps the greatest comic book story ever put on film, but is a movie worthy of comparison to the great crime films of the last two decades.
As a film lover, I couldn't help but be reminded of "Heat" by Michael Mann, a crime epic about two men, one a lawman the other a lawbreaker, two sides of the same coin, whose very natures defined each other. If you are a film buff, you will also be reminded of Martin Scorsese's "The Departed," and David Fincher's "Se7en." I'm not saying that Nolan is copying from Heat, Departed and Se7en. Nolan is quite capable of making his own crime masterpieces (go see "Memento"). I'm saying that Dark Knight is just as good, if not better because Nolan truly understands the characters and so the screenplay is not constructed with a plot that merely connects one great action sequence to the next one but is meant to depict the choices these characters make, and the consequences of these choices.
Batman has propped himself up as Gotham City's protector, the bringer of order in a city descending into chaos. The Joker's underlying motive is to expose Batman as being just as crazy as he is, that psychologically, Batman and the Joker are mirror images of each other, knight and jester, hero and villain, order and chaos.
"You had a bad day once, am I right? Why else would you dress up like a flying rat/ You had a bad day and everything changed." the Joker tells Batman, not in the film, but in "Batman: The Killing Joke"one of the comic books that informs "Dark Knight."
This time around, protecting Gotham becomes a team effort and not a one-man crusade. Batman forms a three-way partnership with Police Commissioner Jim Gordon and District Attorney Harvey Dent. Gordon does the investigation and arrests, Dent fights the courtroom battles, and Batman goes where neither can, and does what neither can…
Like flying to Hong Kong to kidnap a money launderer…
Or eavesdropping on every citizen of Gotham using their cellphones…
Or pushing a guy off a building to break his legs…
This Batman is worlds apart from any incarnation of him in any film, Batman Begins included. Harder, more brutal, more vicious. These are desperate times for Gotham and desperate times call for desperate measures.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++CONTINUED IN SUNSTAR 26 July 2008++++++++++++++++++++++
.. it lived up to it's hype. Ledger's The JOker is really something else, everything about the character is wicked, his demeanors, his behaviour and his gestures are awesome. Chris Nolan has got all the elements into place, except for one thing, the casting of Gyllanhaall as Rachel, i can't seem to continue my affection for the character since the actress is different. They should have sticked with Katie, Rachel's gonna die anyway. hehe. Anyway, it's 10 out of 10 for me.
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