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Cinema Rat - Sifting through the Garbage to bring you the GOOD STUFF

Cinema Rat - July 2008

The Dark Knight (2008)

Starring: Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Gary Oldman, Aaron Eckhart, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman
Director: Christopher Nolan
Screenplay: Christopher Nolan, Jonathan Nolan

Running Time: 152 minutes


Batman is back and once again Christopher Nolan delivers superbly, ably supported by great performances from his leads and supporting cast.
We pick up where Batman Begins signed off, with Gotham, while not as crime-ridden as it once was, is nonetheless still full of organised crime figures and corrupt cops.
Somebody starts ripping off the mob’s money by pulling bank heists, something that starts getting the gangster’s all het up. Turns out it is the psychopathic Joker grabbing the loot, all in an attempt to get them to hire him to get rid of Batman and once again turn Gotham City into a criminal haven - for no other reason than it seems like a good thing to do.
Of course, Bruce Wayne, in the guise of Batman and Gotham’s squeaky clean Lieutenant Jim Gordon, aided by the newly elected DA Harvey Dent, plan to not only stop the chaos, but put all the bad guys behind bars. A minor subplot involving a love triangle of Batman, Dent and Wayne’s former love Rachel Dawes, soon evolves into one of the main story arcs. Nothing is simple in this story with several plot twists and turns leaving the viewer wondering where the rollercoaster is heading next.
It would be easy to pass Ledger’s performance of the Joker off as brilliant simply because it would be the right thing to do due to his passing away before he’d made a huge dent in the cinemascape. But that would be doing a disservice not only to Ledger, but to the role itself. To say it is splendid is an understatement. He plays so convincingly a man caught in such an acute psychosis that it rises above the comic book caricature that is its source material. I never thought Jack Nicholson’s incarnation would never be bettered, but I was glad to be proven wrong. Add to that Bale, Oldman, Gyllenhaal and especially Eckhart’s earnest performances, with a sprinkle of class by Freeman and Caine, it’s easy to see why this turned out to be such a box office smash.

4.5 stars out of 5


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3:10 To Yuma (2007)


Starring: Russell Crowe, Christian Bale, Peter Fonda, Gretchen Mol, Ben Foster
Director: James Mangold
Screenplay: Halsted Welles, Michael Brandt, Derek Haas

Running Time: 122 minutes


A remake of a 1957 B-grade western, this movie promised a lot but, in the end, delivered little. There are some stand out moments for sure, and some of the acting and gun play is certainly admirable, but the director would have done well to follow the original to a T.
Set in the 1880s, 3:10 tells the story of cattle farmer Dan Evans (Bale) who agrees to help the Pinkerton Detective agency escort recently captured outlaw Ben Wade (Crowe) to the local town to catch the train to Yuma state prison.
Evans is desperate to clear a debt he owes a neighbouring cattle baron, so the money he will earn is well worth the risk, as he knows Wade’s gang is keen to free him. So a game of cat and mouse begins, and while in most westerns of this type the good guys and the bad guys are clearly defined, it is not the case with this pic.
Where the viewer is let down is the ending and the characterisation of Wade. One minute he has total psychopathic tendencies, yet the next he shows an empathetic nature, which does not appear to gel with the rest of his character. The director and/or writer were being to smart for their own good and the ending of the movie leaves you with a slightly bitter taste in your mouth.

2.5 stars out of 5
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Into the Wild (2007)


Starring: Emile Hirsch, William Hurt, Marcia Gay Harden, Catherine Keener, Vince Vaughn, Hal Holbrook
Director: Sean Penn
Screenplay: Sean Penn

Running Time: 148 minutes


Based on the biography by Joe Krakouer, Into the Wild is the story of a young man trying to find the meaning of life in the barren landscape of America's remote hinterland.
Chris McCandless was a Harvard-bound law student who decided to send his college fund money to Oxfam and set about finding himself by travelling through America on little or no money. After saving enough money for some meagre supplies, he headed off to the wilds of Alaska with the intent of living off game and wild vegetation for a few months.
Told in flashback, we discover that the reason for McCandless living the life he did may have been to deep psychological scars suffered as a child with his parents constant bickering and fighting giving him a skewed view of the world and his place in it.
Penn has done an outstanding job with both script and direction and French cinematographer Eric Gautier makes the most of the Alaskan location, easily giving the viewer the feel of isolation that is McCandless’s world.
Harden and Hurt make the most of their limited screen time, but this is Hirsch's show, and he does a great job of conveying the real McCandless's state of mind.
Without giving away too much of how it pans out, there are those who think that the real-life McCandless was some sort of anti-hero living his life on his terms, others thought he was a fool to even attempt the feat.
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Atonement (2007)


Starring Keira Knightly, James McAvoy, Saoirse Ronan, Brenda Blethyn, Benedict Cumberbatch, Juno Temple, Vanessa Redgrave
Director: Joe Wright

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