The Dark Knight


Posted on Jul 29, 2008 By Julia Szabo
Warner Bros., 2008, 152 minutes

In director Christopher Nolan's sequel to Batman Begins, the underdog doesn't stand a chance in a world gone crazy with corruption. This movie paints a bleak picture of contemporary Gotham: In the gritty city, everyone has a dark streak - even an ostensibly good guy like crusading D.A. Harvey "Two-Face" Dent (Aaron Eckhardt). The Bat light still shines, a beacon of hope in the night sky - but this time around, the real Caped Crusader (Christian Bale) isn't the only vigilante answering the call for help. He's got competition in the form of pitifully underqualified Batman wannabes.
 
Batman's arch nemesis is The Joker, played to the hilt (literally: his signature weapon is a knife) by the late Heath Ledger, who absolutely deserves the posthumous Oscar cinema pundits are saying he'll win. This baddest of bad guys comes out of the Jacobean theater's cruel "horrid laughter" tradition by way of the Kabuki makeup department. The cackling clown is an abstract painting by Francis Bacon come to life, and his singular style of wreaking havoc chillingly reminds us of  things we'd rather forget, including September 11th and the videotaped killing of Daniel Pearl.
 
Most chilling, however, is the movie's use of dogs as symbols of evil. In a film with such great potential for unqualified magnificence, Rottweiler lovers will be appalled to see their favorite noble dog breed stereotyped as a dark, dangerous menace. Maybe "no animals were harmed" in the filming of the movie, but the thousands of sweet Rottweilers already languishing in animal shelters certainly won't benefit from the way the breed is portrayed here. 
 
Even the "good" dogs - the German Shepherd police K9s - are a thorn in the side of the Batman. Adding insult to injury, Bruce Wayne worries aloud whether his new Batman suit will protect him from dog bites (!) and the Joker is characterized - by others and in his own words - as a mad dog.
 
Once upon a time in the 1950s and 60s, D.C. Comics gave us a character called Ace the Bat Dog, canine crime-fighting partner of Batman and Robin. Memo to Christopher Nolan: Please consider reviving and updating Ace in your next Batman installment - and please go against type by casting a brave, gentle Rottweiler in the role.
 

Presence of dogs: reelreelreelreel
Respect for dogs: reelreelreelreel
Canine star quality: reelreelreelreel
Family friendly: reelreelreelreel


 

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