Batman 3 The Dark Knight Rises Direct

The film opens with a startling image: Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale), eight years after taking the fall for Harvey Dent’s crimes, is a recluse. He walks with a cane, his body a lattice of scar tissue and untreated fractures. The Batcave is dusty. Alfred (Michael Caine) has become a worried caretaker delivering trays of cold food. Nolan does something few blockbusters dare: he makes his hero pitiable. Bruce isn't just retired; he's defeated. He believed the "Harvey Dent Act" would usher in an era of peace, but it was a lie. And lies, as we learned from the Joker, have a cost.

It is a messy, sprawling, occasionally clumsy epic. But it is also a film that dares to be sad, to be slow, and to end not with a fist raised in triumph, but with a simple cup of coffee and a shared glance. The Dark Knight doesn’t win. He rises. And then, at last, he rests. batman 3 the dark knight rises

To ignore the film’s problems is to be dishonest. The timeline is a mess (how does Bruce heal a broken spine and return to Gotham in what feels like weeks?). The third act’s “clean slate” device is convenient. And Marion Cotillard’s Talia al Ghul is rushed, her death scene unintentionally hilarious—a rare misfire for a Nolan actress. The film opens with a startling image: Bruce