Hey, just a quick blog to announce the fact that me and my good friend Dan have decided that after Halloween we are both going to give up alcohol until Christmas!
Okay so that's not really a big deal but I'm kinda going on a bit of a health bender and I think this will definitely affect how much work I get done and how I generally feel throughout the week. I'm not a massive drinker by any standards but I am still a Uni student so I'm no stranger to a few cheeky cocktail pitchers in Spoons.
I suppose it's easy for me to think of having maybe a drink or two normal because I've grown up with such a culture that celebrates this. Though I don't exactly drink every single night I feel like recently I have been either going out late and getting drunk for the sake of going dancing or at least going to Spoons and ending up having a fair few quite often recently. (I'm saying nothing of the company I like to keep here!) So I figured this might be something interesting to try, who knows, maybe it'll cut down my drinking in general after the proposed period of time.
If you're interested, my friend Dan has his own blog here and we shook hands on this TWICE. So if we break the rules there will be dyer consequences. Maybe. If we feel like it.
Thursday, 25 October 2012
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
The Dark Knight Rises. Laboriously.
I've been sitting on this for quite a
while now, as you are most likely aware I am a massive fan of the
Batman franchise. I really enjoyed Christopher Nolans first
instalment of his trilogy 'Batman Begins'(2005) and agreed to be
civil towards 'The Dark Knight'(2008) despite it's glaring
incongruity with really important characters. Putting all that behind
us, I went into my local cinema to see The Dark Knight Rises (2012)
with quite high expectations, though I had a fairly good idea about
what would happen after reading some of the comics and knowing the
general plotline behing Bane.
I went to see this with boyfriend and
my parents who had no idea what was going to happen. Tell a lie, my
Dad nailed the Talia al Ghul bit, though who didn't? Please, the
child even looked like her.
I'll give a general plot outline first,
just incase your forgot it or haven't even seen it.
It's 8 years after the events of The
Dark Knight, Bruce Wayne has become a recluse (again) and spends a
lot of time being rubbish. Enter Selina Kyle/Catwoman. She steals
Wayne's mothers pearls from under his nose, tempting him to come back
into the world. We also find at this point that Wayne has basically
no knees. Okay, that was a lie but it's basically what's happening,
his cartilage has worn away and he has to use automotive braces to do
anything strenuous. Enter Bane and his long winded story. Bane
terrorises Gotham, beats up Batman and sends him away, then
terrorises Gorham some more and blows up a load of shit and Batman
teams up with Catwoman (ridiculously sexy outfit, by the way) to save
the day. Aaaand that's it really, with out giving too much away.
Where to start? First of all, it's a
classic Christopher Nolan mind fuck kinda plot containing some
familiar faces from Inception, see Marion Cotillard, Joseph
Gordon-Levitt and the great Michael Caine. As always it's very
beautifully filmed, the dialogue is good with both humorous and
serious moments that are not to overbearing, apart from the parts
where Michael Caine cries, that's never cool. The plot is kinda
alright, the last half which is 'timed' goes a little weird because
20 odd hours go in 15 minutes and then 15 minutes took nearly 40
minutes which I guess is acceptable because of filming constraints
but still. The whole Bane vs Batman and Bruce Wayne part was really
good but the Wayne 'rehab' section was really dragged out to with in
and inch of it's life. Yeah, we get it, he wants to save Gotham but
'boohoo my back is broken, I'm not good enough for Gotham, I'm still
hung up on a dead woman and refuse to move on and I'm letting the
city suffer for it, whine whine whine' I really cannot abide this
mopey uselessness. I was just waiting for Gordon-Levitts character to
slap him and tell him to get a grip.
Which moves me to the characters. John
Blake (Gordon-Levitt) was brilliantly written, though the little 'my
name is actually robin' bit really annoyed me. Bane (Tom Hardy) was
really well thought out, to say you can't see the majority of his
face he portrays emotion and thoughtfulness really well. Alfred
(Caine) is of course amazing, especially when he blind sides you by
leaving Wayne. Bruce Wayne is both mopey and arrogant at once, as
usual, not much else to say really. Miranda/Talia is perfect in her
deception and execution of her plot line. I was very happy to see
Gary Oldman reprise his role as Comissioner Gordon, a character I
hold very dear in the Batman world, his character treads the line
between loved and hated and he does it so well that you are generally
confused as to whether to root for him or not.
This leaves the ending, I'm trying not
reveal too much in this blog about the general plot or the twists so
I'm not going to reveal what happens at the end. I'll just say that I
shed at least 3 tears (that's a lot for me) and really enjoyed and
appreciated the ending. It ended kinda perfectly looking back, I felt
quite different when I first left the cinema, I felt almost robbed
because I had seen all the twists coming and not felt like I had
enjoyed it. Looking back however I think that Nolan nailed it. Yeah I
have a few quibbles about some minor stuff but overall it was a
really great film, I much preferred it to The Dark Knight and thought
it topped Batman Begins easily. Definitely a must see for Batman fans
and general film fanatics, it can stand alone quite easily too.
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