Dark Knight Rises
Christian Bale Actor , Anne Hathaway Actor , Tom Hardy Actor , Marion Cotillard Actor , Joseph Gordon-Levitt Actor , Michael Caine Actor , Gary Oldman Actor , Morgan Freeman Actor
MPAA Rating:
PG13
Contains:Violence,Profanity,Sexual Situations
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Dark Knight Rises
Theatrical Release Date: 2012 07 20 (USA - IMAX) / 2012 07 20 (USA)
UPC: 883929212569
Studio: Warner Home Video
MPAA Rating: PG13 Contains:[Violence, Profanity, Sexual Situations]
Summary: Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy concludes with this Warner Brothers release that finds The Dark Knight pitted against Bane, an unstoppable foe possessed of tremendous physical and intellectual strength. Nearly a decade after taking the fall for Harvey Dent's death and disappearing into the darkness, a fugitive Batman (Christian Bale) watches from the shadows as the Dent Act keeps the streets of Gotham City free of crime. Meanwhile, an elusive cat burglar seizes the chance to strike, and a masked anarchist plots a devastating series of attacks designed to lure Bruce Wayne out of the shadows. Determined not to abandon the people who he once risked his life to protect, The Dark Knight emerges from his self-imposed exile ready to fight. But Bane (Tom Hardy) is ready, too, and once Batman is within his grasp, he will do everything in his power to break Gotham City's shadowy savior. Oscar-winner Michael Caine and Gary Oldman return in a sequel also starring Anne Hathaway, Marion Cotillard, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Crime
Awards: Best Supporting Actress (Runner-up) – Los Angeles Film Critics Association Top Ten Film of the Year – American Film Institute Best Art Direction in a Fantasy Film – Art Directors Guild Best Art Direction in a Fantasy Film – Art Directors Guild Best Special Visual Effects – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Special Visual Effects – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Special Visual Effects – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Special Visual Effects – British Academy of Film and Television Arts
Features:
The Journey of Bruce Wayne:
Filmmakers reveal the bold creative choices that led to the stunning conclusion of Bruce Wayne's story
Dark Knight Rises
Format: DVD
Release Date: 12/04/2012
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1
Runtime: 165 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English,French,Spanish
Subtitles: English,French,Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- The Dark Knight Rises
1. Scene 1 [9:02]
2. Scene 2 [10:05]
3. Scene 3 [11:07]
4. Scene 4 [10:51]
5. Scene 5 [10:00]
6. Scene 6 [9:19]
7. Scene 7 [9:30]
8. Scene 8 [10:12]
9. Scene 9 [10:45]
10. Scene 10 [8:24]
11. Scene 11 [9:32]
12. Scene 12 [11:22]
13. Scene 13 [10:25]
14. Scene 14 [8:24]
15. Scene 15 [11:01]
16. Scene 16 [6:35]
17. Scene 17 [7:40]
Jeremy Wheeler
Christopher Nolan concludes his Bat trilogy with a nearly three-hour opus that focuses just as much on Gotham as it does the Caped Crusader. Indeed, the hero spends a good deal of time sidelined in his own picture. Nolan's vision is another grand crime tale, yet he shoots for bloat while going for broke in the final installment -- all without a charismatic villain the likes of the Joker (who carried the previous film) or the one-two punch of Liam Neeson and the Scarecrow, whose mad gas gave Batman Begins a terrifying touch. Here audiences are given Bane, a ridiculously voiced brawler whose menace rings more hollow than not. Thankfully, Anne Hathaway brings some life to the proceedings as Catwoman, while Joseph Gordon-Levitt adds much to Rises when Batman is not around. Fans of the series might be satisfied with what they find in the film, but that doesn't mean that there aren't valid criticisms to be found in this lofty, yet meandering third outing. The action picks up eight years after the events of The Dark Knight, with the death of Harvey Dent allowing the government to pass the Dent Act, which has helped to clean up organized crime within the city. Batman remains an outlaw; still blamed for the district attorney's death, while the man behind the mask, Bruce Wayne, has turned into a crippled recluse. Only after a burglar (Hathaway) steals his fingerprints does the Bat come out of the cave again, just in time to confront an underground group of terrorists fronted by Bane (played by Tom Hardy), a masked muscleman who takes down Wall Street while also taking all of Bruce Wayne's fortune away from him. Meanwhile, a beat cop (Gordon-Levitt) does much of the detective work on the anarchists while Commissioner Gordon (Gary Oldman) lays in the hospital recovering from his own run-in with Bane. Soon Gotham finds itself cut off from the rest of the world, with both the cops and Batman out of commission to help them, while the maniac Bane stages an event that will level the city if he's not stopped. So we have a madman who is committed to taking the riches away from the wealthy -- except that doesn't figure much into his final goal. While The Dark Knight was the answer to a post-9/11 world, the third film takes cues from its own modern political landscape, but it ends up being a grab-bag rather than a statement. All of this wouldn't be such an issue if the movie wasn't intended to draw parallels. And just where does Batman figure into all of this? Good question! The structure of the film puts the main character in a loop of not being a hero, then being a hero, then not being a hero, and then back to being a hero again. It seems that Nolan is much more interested in what happens to a city in the hands of a madman rather than having much to do with the main character. Even without its Batman problems, there are still inconsistencies that are big (jumps in logic connecting two main characters) and small (characters audiences didn't know suddenly being referenced as if they are important), making it seem that the director's original vision was even longer. Emotionally it remains cold, even when characters are blubbering with awkward tears. On the plus side, Wally Pfister's cinematography is stunning, with all other technical aspects being top form -- especially Hans Zimmer's exceptional score, which pulses through each scene. To his detriment, Nolan is either unconcerned with delivering bravura popcorn moments -- or he's just bad at it. In the same year where The Avengers wowed audiences with one crowd-pleasing moment after the next, The Dark Knight Rises is intent on being subdued and without humor. The film's sprawling size is equally fascinating and frustrating. Rises is not the masterstroke that many consider The Dark Knight to be. That said -- time constraints aside -- it is absolutely the film that Nolan set out to make. And that remains as important as any criticisms leveled against it. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Charles Roven
Producer
Michael E. Uslan
Executive Producer
Hans Zimmer
Composer (Music Score)
Benjamin Melniker
Executive Producer
Christopher Nolan
Director
Christopher Nolan
Producer
Christopher Nolan
Screenwriter
Emma Thomas
Producer
Kevin de la Noy
Executive Producer
Jonathan Nolan
Screenwriter
Thomas Tull
Executive Producer
Christian Bale
Actor
Anne Hathaway
Actor
Tom Hardy
Actor
Marion Cotillard
Actor
Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Actor
Michael Caine
Actor
Gary Oldman
Actor
Morgan Freeman
Actor
Liam Neeson
Actor
Juno Temple
Actor
Nestor Carbonell
Actor
Burn Gorman
Actor
Josh Pence
Actor
Matthew Modine
Actor
Tom Conti
Actor
Joey King
Actor
Chris Ellis
Actor
Brett Cullen
Actor
Josh Stewart
Actor
Daniel Sunjata
Actor
Country: USA

