The Dark Knight is, for me, a very rare film because I am giving it four out of five stars. That's something I hardly do. In fact, out of all the movies that I've seen, I've only rated seventeen of them four stars and only given four movies five stars. The reason
The Dark Knight rated so highly with me is largely due to
Heath Ledger's final performance as The Joker. The nervous twitches, the little smacks of the tongue, the maniacal cackle, and the sometimes unsteady movements almost give the impression that Ledger is the tortured and psychotic Joker. An unstable person might just become so consumed with perfecting the performance that they too would become dark and tortured enough to be swallowed up by depression and prescription drugs. When I think a movie is worth more than a three star rating when, it's because something about it was memorable. And I will remember this Joker for a long while, and I will remember it particularly because it was one Heath's best performance. It is such a tragedy that he will not live to grow even more as an actor and to give us the enjoyment of another performance like this one.
Not having seen a Batman movie in a long time, I can't say whether
Christian Bale's performance is typical or not. All I will say is that it was very well done. He isn't some superhero who can save the world without getting dirty and making some hard decisions. He has had to make some hard choices and some sacrifices, but the world still isn't a very nice place. And at times, he fails to do what he wants to do and be who he feels he should be, but he is leaving things a little bit better than they were before.
Aaron Eckhart played Harvey Dent to a tee, the Gotham District Attorney who carries the weight of being believed to be the savior of Gotham. But when he loses the love of his life, anger eats at him and drives him to madness and revenge.
I enjoyed the visuals, the shots of Hong Kong in particular. There is violence, of course, but it feels necessary and not silly like in a lot of action movies.