Posted on July 24th, 2008 by tdksucks
Harvey Dent (shown here as Two-Face), cleaning up the criminal element in Gotham.
Well, the writers must have been a bit more lazy on the day they wrote the segment where Rachel and Harvey were trying to nail Lau on something. Particularly, they were trying to use Lau as a means to incriminate all the crime [...]
Filed under: Story/Plot Problems, Writing/Direction Tags: chinese, district attorney, Harvey Dent, kidnapping, Rachel Dawes, racketeering, rico, united states attorney, us attorney | 17 Comments »
Posted on July 24th, 2008 by tdksucks
I was laughing with my buddy today about the rottweiler scene near the end and how farcical it was overall. Firstly, it was funny how in a movie where the lead villain happens to only carry knives for weapons, Bruce Wayne just happened to want a newer costume and the new one Lucious gave him [...]
Filed under: Writing/Direction Tags: batman, Bruce Wayne, Chuck Liddell, Joker, Ralph's, Randy Couture, rottweiler, sonar, The Joker | 11 Comments »
Posted on July 24th, 2008 by tdksucks
She may also receive an Oscar nomination for best supporting male actor, although I hear she’ll be up against the likes of Heath Ledger. She wasn’t available for comment but her brother Jake, who starred alongside Heath in a highly acclaimed movie, may be a presenter for the award and will probably want to give it to [...]
Filed under: Subpar Acting Tags: Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal, Maggie Gyllenhaal | 9 Comments »
Posted on July 24th, 2008 by tdksucks
Believe it or not, Alfred, played by Michael Caine, had a role in “Mystic River”: in the end, he’s in drag (or was that Laura Linney?) and gives the same sort of speech to Sean Penn that he gave to Bruce Wayne, played by Christian Bale, repeatedly throughout his brief cameo walk-ins for “The Dark Knight”. His repeated [...]
Filed under: Subpar Acting, Writing/Direction Tags: alfred, Christian Bale, Laura Linney, Michael Caine, morality, Mystic River | 4 Comments »
Posted on July 24th, 2008 by tdksucks
At some point in the movie Batman throws the mob boss Salvatore Maroni, played by Eric Roberts, from a few stories up, and Maroni lands on his feet none too comfortably – it’s clearly shown and implied that he at least broke his ankles if not altogether broke major bones in his legs. Yet later [...]
Filed under: Story/Plot Problems, Subpar Acting, Writing/Direction Tags: broken bones, cane, Eric Roberts, eyeballs, Maroni, Salvatore Maroni | 11 Comments »