I'm no average woman and I don't have an average woman's interests. In this blog I hope to share my interests with the readers, so expect posts about society, computer games, literature, movies and TV ... and a few others, probably.
So that's why I can't find the meaning of life any longer.
As for the anonymous writer who tried to correct the Hotdog picture: I didn’t caption it and it’s supposed to be bad English - that’s half the fun of those pictures.
I’ve waited for this movie for half a year or so. Finally, this Saturday, I could see it. And I’m glad to note the new Batman movie is just as great as I hoped.
With the hype the movie has been going through (in Germany, can’t say much about other countries), I was unsure whether or not I’d like it. Normally good critics are a good sign for me to avoid a movie, as I never have the same taste as those writing them. In this case, though, it was different.
What I found most surprising, was Heath Ledger. Yes, a lot has been written about his last performance after he’d died at the beginning of the year, but you can never be too sure about such articles. People tend to say a lot of good things about the recently deceased, omitting, as it were, the bad things. So how good would this Joker really be? What kind of mad villain would he be? Would he be at least as good as Jack Nicholson?
The answers to these questions are like this:
He was an extremely good Joker. I’ve never seen this character played as dark and insane as he’s done it. He did not try to mirror the Joker seen in the TV series or the Joker seen in the first Batman movie. He created a new version, one that was much, much closer to the comics.
The Joker is not your ordinary villain. A villain - even a super villain - usually is after something. Money, revenge, power, influence, whatever. The Joker - at least the way Heath Ledger played him - is not. He is only after one thing: utter and ultimate chaos and anarchy. (Because chaos is the ultimately fair state - his words, not mine.) He cannot be bought, he cannot be threatened, he cannot be intimidated. And that’s a great, new approach to the Bat’s archenemy.
Now, is he as good as Jack Nicholson? He’s different. In my eyes, he’s better. He’s a villain the likes of which are extremely rare on screen. You can despise and hate him, but you won’t forget him in a hurry. (And not just because of the violet and green clothing - the regular colours of the Joker.)
So, the Joker was good (he was great), but how about the others? They were just as good. Since “Batman Begins” I’ve known Christian Bale to be the perfect actor playing Batman. Michael Caine and Morgan Freeman are just as perfect for their roles. The same goes, of course, for Gary Oldman (and finally we have the Commissioner Gordon at the end of the movie). But the other roles were casted just as well.
The movie has a lot of good points: great actors, good story, great action scenes, great effects. Unfortunately the Tumbler (my Batmobile No. 1) is destroyed during the movie, but the new motorbike is just as great. Compared to the last movie, everything is faster, bigger, darker and more intense - finally giving the Batman the look of the comics and doing away with the laughable figure he’s become on screen for decades.
If you like action movies, Batman, comic-related movies or just one or more of the actors, I can only recommend “The Dark Knight” to you.
It’s slowly getting on my nerves. It really is. “The Dark Knight” started this Thursday in Germany and even before the actual starting date, the online editions of various weekly news magazines have been full of it.
That isn’t a problem as a such, but the way especially “Der Stern”, one of the most renown weekly news magazines in Germany is treating the movie is. Today, there was another article about how dark and devoid of any trace of humour the movie was - even though Batman is supposed to be a rather laughable hero. Someone, the one who wrote this article, definitely didn’t do their homework here. Yes, among all DC heroes Batman is the only one without supernatural powers. He’s no mutant, he’s no alien or part alien. He’s got no magical powers or anything else to help him in his quest against crime. The only things he’s got are his physical powers (due to years of hard training), a lot of clever inventions and the stuff his money can buy (legally or illegally).
Batman has always been a dark character in the comics, but not on the big or small screen - in other words: not in movies or TV shows. Let’s face it, ever since the TV show in the 70ies, Batman has never been portrayed as a really dark character on screen. Even the first two movies, darker than the two which followed, due to Tim Burton’s handiwork, weren’t as dark as the last two (“Batman Begins” and “The Dark Knight”). It’s only since Christian Bale took over the role and someone decided on a new beginning, the character of Batman has been reinvented and returned to the dark origins it has come from.
Whoever wrote the article, though, has not even taken a true look at the comics, otherwise they wouldn’t have written that idiotic stuff.
I’ll know about the new movie in a few hours, as I’m going to watch it this evening. Expect more about the bat then.
Alias: Cay Reet
Location: somewhere in southern Germany
I'm old enough to have some experience while at the same time young enough to still have dreams.
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My Inspiration
Inspiration comes from experience. My imagination is like a cauldron bubbling with all the things I've seen and places I've visited. My brain mixes them all up and regurgitates them in a way that I hope is original.
Eoin Colfer - excerpt from an interview
Humans need fantasy to be human - to be the place where the falling angel meets the rising ape.