"A true suicide is a paced, disciplined certainty. People pontificate, “Suicide is selfishness.” Career churchmen like Pater go a step further and call in a cowardly assault on the living. Oafs argue this specious line for varying reason: to evade fingers of blame, to impress one’s audience with one’s mental fiber, to vent anger, or just because one lacks the necessary suffering to sympathize. Cowardice is nothing to do with it - suicide takes considerable courage. Japanese have the right idea. No, what’s selfish is to demand another to endure an intolerable existence, just to spare families, friends, and enemies a bit of soul-searching. The only selfishness lies in ruining strangers’ days by forcing ‘em to witness a grotesqueness."

David Mitchell, “Cloud Atlas”

Those eyes.

… wait. Is Page’s dress made of tissue paper?

Those eyes.

… wait. Is Page’s dress made of tissue paper?

Batman could be anybody, that was the point.

“… A man is just flesh and blood and can be ignored or destroyed. But as a symbol… as a symbol, I can be incorruptible, everlasting.” - Bruce Wayne, “Batman Begins”

(Source: go-backwards, via heylauraqq)

"Endure, Master Wayne. Take it. They’ll hate you for it, but that’s the point of Batman. He can be the outcast…"

Alfred Pennyworth, “The Dark Knight”

Christopher Nolan’s Farewell to the Batman

“Alfred. Gordon. Lucius. Bruce … Wayne. Names that have come to mean so much to me. Today, I’m three weeks from saying a final good-bye to these characters and their world. It’s my son’s ninth birthday. He was born as the Tumbler was being glued together in my garage from random parts of model kits. Much time, many changes. A shift from sets where some gunplay or a helicopter were extraordinary events to working days where crowds of extras, building demolitions, or mayhem thousands of feet in the air have become familiar.

People ask if we’d always planned a trilogy. This is like being asked whether you had planned on growing up, getting married, having kids. The answer is complicated. When David and I first started cracking open Bruce’s story, we flirted with what might come after, then backed away, not wanting to look too deep into the future. I didn’t want to know everything that Bruce couldn’t; I wanted to live it with him. I told David and Jonah to put everything they knew into each film as we made it. The entire cast and crew put all they had into the first film. Nothing held back. Nothing saved for next time. They built an entire city. Then Christian and Michael and Gary and Morgan and Liam and Cillian started living in it. Christian bit off a big chunk of Bruce Wayne’s life and made it utterly compelling. He took us into a pop icon’s mind and never let us notice for an instant the fanciful nature of Bruce’s methods.

I never thought we’d do a second—how many good sequels are there? Why roll those dice? But once I knew where it would take Bruce, and when I started to see glimpses of the antagonist, it became essential. We re-assembled the team and went back to Gotham. It had changed in three years. Bigger. More real. More modern. And a new force of chaos was coming to the fore. The ultimate scary clown, as brought to terrifying life by Heath. We’d held nothing back, but there were things we hadn’t been able to do the first time out—a Batsuit with a flexible neck, shooting on Imax. And things we’d chickened out on—destroying the Batmobile, burning up the villain’s blood money to show a complete disregard for conventional motivation. We took the supposed security of a sequel as license to throw caution to the wind and headed for the darkest corners of Gotham.

I never thought we’d do a third—are there any great second sequels? But I kept wondering about the end of Bruce’s journey, and once David and I discovered it, I had to see it for myself. We had come back to what we had barely dared whisper about in those first days in my garage. We had been making a trilogy. I called everyone back together for another tour of Gotham. Four years later, it was still there. It even seemed a little cleaner, a little more polished. Wayne Manor had been rebuilt. Familiar faces were back—a little older, a little wiser … but not all was as it seemed.

Gotham was rotting away at its foundations. A new evil bubbling up from beneath. Bruce had thought Batman was not needed anymore, but Bruce was wrong, just as I had been wrong. The Batman had to come back. I suppose he always will.

Michael, Morgan, Gary, Cillian, Liam, Heath, Christian … Bale. Names that have come to mean so much to me. My time in Gotham, looking after one of the greatest and most enduring figures in pop culture, has been the most challenging and rewarding experience a filmmaker could hope for. I will miss the Batman. I like to think that he’ll miss me, but he’s never been particularly sentimental.”

Christopher Nolan from ‘The Art and Making of The Dark Knight Trilogy’

I can’t just cheer on Batman. Like Rha’s and The Joker, Nolan did a great job of portraying this film’s villains, Bane and Selina Kyle/Catwoman.

Despite Bane being a one dimensional character, it’s not until the end you learn a lot more. As for Selina Kyle, well, I had faith in Anne Hathaway’s acting and trusted Nolan on his selection. No disappointment here.

"The shadows have betrayed you, because they belong to me."

Bane, The Dark Knight Rises

Thought

Would be cool if Christian Bale paid a visit to the children injured in the Colorado shooting. I mean it not as any sort of PR stunt, but for the fact that these kids went to see Batman, not receive a traumatic experience associated with the hero. There’s a chance to restore some peace of mind.

Of course I don’t know the whole politics behind these things, but if I were anyone connected to that production, I’d have nothing to lose in doing so.

Just saying.

As a big movie fan and an even bigger comic book junky, yesterday’s viewing of the Dark Knight Rises was a very remarkable one. I sat there on edge, with a very good friend of mine, feeling both utter anticipation and an indescribable collection of joy. I couldn’t care less as to which of my friends called me a geek for being that into it. Nothing mattered that time.
Nothing until one instance after the movie where I realized that, hours ago there were hundreds of people waiting to see this very movie. Hundreds, with their families, friends or significant others. People excited for their own reasons. People like my friend and myself; excited to see the depiction of a childhood comic icon. Regardless to what extent they love the Dark Knight, it was a moment of excitement. In a quick hit, that excitement turned to chaos.
By now a significant amount of you have heard of the  Denver theater shooting. Like everyone, I’m very sorry to hear of the incident that took place. I tried to imagine having that moment stripped from me and have it be a time of panic and emergency. I couldn’t imagine it. A lot of people got hurt yesterday (some dead) and all collateral to one man’s skewed perspective of reality. Nothing I can do or say can express to what extent I find the incident to be dreadful. Neither can it help any of those victims.
None the less, I made this to pay my respects. My heart goes out to the victims and to their friends and families. All the best to the residents of Aurora and may this terrible ordeal not skew your perception of an old art form such as film.

As a big movie fan and an even bigger comic book junky, yesterday’s viewing of the Dark Knight Rises was a very remarkable one. I sat there on edge, with a very good friend of mine, feeling both utter anticipation and an indescribable collection of joy. I couldn’t care less as to which of my friends called me a geek for being that into it. Nothing mattered that time.

Nothing until one instance after the movie where I realized that, hours ago there were hundreds of people waiting to see this very movie. Hundreds, with their families, friends or significant others. People excited for their own reasons. People like my friend and myself; excited to see the depiction of a childhood comic icon. Regardless to what extent they love the Dark Knight, it was a moment of excitement. In a quick hit, that excitement turned to chaos.

By now a significant amount of you have heard of the Denver theater shooting. Like everyone, I’m very sorry to hear of the incident that took place. I tried to imagine having that moment stripped from me and have it be a time of panic and emergency. I couldn’t imagine it. A lot of people got hurt yesterday (some dead) and all collateral to one man’s skewed perspective of reality. Nothing I can do or say can express to what extent I find the incident to be dreadful. Neither can it help any of those victims.

None the less, I made this to pay my respects. My heart goes out to the victims and to their friends and families. All the best to the residents of Aurora and may this terrible ordeal not skew your perception of an old art form such as film.