Monday, July 21, 2008

The Dark Shrub

Like millions of other people this past weekend, I went to see “The Dark Knight” at the Uptown on Saturday morning (special note for those in DC – the early morning show at the Uptown is a tremendous bargain at only $6, no one is there, and they don’t give you any grief about bringing in a cup of Starbucks from next door). Heath Ledger’s performance is as remarkable as they say – anyone who has seen any of his prior roles will fully appreciate the way in which he utterly transformed himself for this role – and the whole look and feel of the movie is nothing short of awesome. The movie is super long, but well worth seeing.

There is, however, a strangely dichotomous subtext to the film. On one hand, the movie could well have been written by Darth Cheney and Turdblossom Rove, with President Bush and Company as “the Batman.” This subtext plays out as follows: the evils that we, the citizens of Gotham City, are facing are so extreme that we must resort to acting outside of the law in order to combat them. The laws and the judicial system are so weak (so weak that they cannot even protect their own from harm), so ineffectual, so susceptible to corruption that we must seek our heroes elsewhere. We must disregard the laws, operate in secret, and utilize patently illegal technology that unavoidably happens to spy upon the personal communications of all citizens. Only through vigilantism and unlawful measures can we hope to combat the terrorists, who are agents of chaos and who have no motive other than “to watch the world burn.”

On the other hand, an integral part of the story pits the normal citizenry of Gotham City against the orange jump suited prisoners in a moral showdown. Without spoiling too much of the movie (although I am certain that most every contributor to and reader of this blog has already seen the film at least twice), suffice it to say that the convicted criminals in their orange jumpsuits come off as the more moral of the two groups, and that the only reason that the general population does the right thing is because it is too weak in the knees to pull the trigger. I’m surprised that this thinly veiled praise for moral purity of the jihadists and critique of the U.S. doesn’t already have JJV frothing at the mouth.

With this muddled subtext, how apropos that this Batman film serves as the creation myth of the super-villain “Two Face.”

4 comments:

jjv said...

Most of us have not seen the movie I'll wager. However, Batman is obviously a Republican circa 1980. He is wealthy and believes in bringing the pain to bad guys when a corrupt system fails. His aversion to guns is the only non-conservative thing about him.

I will note however that Senator Leahy of Vermont has appeared in most of the Batman movies one way or another and dresses up like him apparently. And Leahy is as squishy a leftist as their is except paradoxically that he is pretty good on guns because he comes from Vermont. Whose motto could be Socialism and Ammunition.

Dave S. said...

CRH and I saw it Saturday night so 50% (at least) of the masthead has now seen it. Really enjoyed it and Heath Ledger was phenomenal. His Oscar win will not be for sentimental reasons. His performance also benefited from the strongest writing for his role.

I won't get into too much of a discussion here for fear of spoilers, but I did not see the civilian response as necessarily weak-kneed. It seemed a bit more ambiguous than that, but when I see it again I will take a look at that.

EMM said...

Ahhh the memories, I voted for my first Republican in 1984. I was too busy this weekend watching a chick flick double header consisting of Mama Mia and Sex and the City (for the 2nd time) to see Batman. I will be catching up with the rest of you this weekend.

Anonymous said...

I too saw batman over the weekend - it was tremendous - and I agree with the accolades, for Mr. Ledger and for the maritime moral showdown, already delivereed. Kudos to strong performances from Oldman and Eckhart as well. I heard rumors the latter might play steve rogers (too old?)or the green lantern.

I have to mention one thing about the movie that really bugged me though-- the "Batman Voice" used by christian bale constantly throughout the movie. It would have been ok if used for a stray threat here or there but the constant gravely whisper got annoying.

Otherwise - Great Movie.