After training with his mentor, Batman begins his war on crime to free the crime-ridden Gotham City from corruption that the Scarecrow and the League of Shadows have cast upon it.
Director: Christopher Nolan
Writers: Bob Kane (characters), David S. Goyer (story), 2 more credits »
Stars: Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Ken Watanabe | See full cast and crew »
Storyline
When his parents were killed, billionaire playboy Bruce Wayne relocates
to Asia when he is mentored by Henri Ducard and Ra's Al Ghul in how to
fight evil. When learning about the plan to wipe out evil in Gotham City
by Ducard, Bruce prevents this plan from getting any further and heads
back to his home. Back in his original
surroundings, Bruce adopts the
image of a bat to strike fear into the criminals and the corrupt as the
icon known as 'Batman'. But it doesn't stay quiet for long.
"Batman Begins (2005)" Movie Reviews
I
got a chance to see 'Batman Begins' just this past Friday evening. I
must say that before seeing the film, I felt in my heart this is the
'Batman' film we've been waiting for. Within ten minutes into the movie,
I turned to my date and said to her, "This is it! This is the movie!" I
just can't believe that after all these years, Warner Bros. finally got
it right. For me the most intriguing part of the film, apart from the
great script, and great acting, was Christopher Nolan's decision to base
the film in reality. Deciding that Batman could really exist in our
universe and our world was a stroke of genius. Another aspect of the
film that's so refreshing is that instead of the focus being on the
villain, Batman is the film's star. And rightly so. It's amazing what
can happen when a studio leaves a respected director, and the creative
team alone, and allow them to make the best movie possible. The only two
negatives that I can think of is Katie Holmes and the fight sequences.
Holmes does indeed look like a teenager playing grown-up. Her
performance isn't bad per SE, it's just that you really don't buy her as
an Assistant D.A. As for the fight sequences, I felt the cameras angles
were too tight on the action, edited too quickly, and lit too dark so
that you really couldn't tell what was going on and determine who was
hitting who. Maybe we can attribute this to the fact that Nolan is not
an action director. Hopefully the next film will open up the fight
sequences so we can actually see Batman use the martial arts skills he
developed during his exile. But apart from those relatively minor
quibbles, the film is excellent, and I'm definitely going back on
opening day June 15th, and seeing it a second time. A third and fourth
viewing is definitely not out of the question.
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