Easily the best of the trilogy imo. TDK was great too but it wasn't as good and I never got the hype for TDKR
"I never thanked you..."
"...And you'll never have to."
Can't believe it's been 10 years...I think I was a sophomore in college at the time.
"I never thanked you..."
"...And you'll never have to."
I was in 5th grade when this came out time flies brehIt came out the summer before my sophomore year in college
Dat Nolan hate seeping throughI love the movie but people overrate the fukk out of it for being exactly the movie that anyone with half a brain knew a new Batman movie needed to be. Like it's a joke how long it took WB to realize that the problem with Joel Schumacher's Batman wasn't Batman but Joel Schumacher.
Anyway, as always don't play the drinking game where you take a shot whenever someone uses the word 'fear' because you'll be dead of alcohol poisoning within the first 30 minutes.
Dat Nolan hate seeping through
Dat Nolan hate seeping through
Saw this movie between classes i believe. I was the only person in the theater. I walked out likeCrazy to realize it's been 10 years since this dropped. I still remember seeing this on opening day in the afternoon that summer and being blown away. Blown away to the point that when I went to new york that summer to get ready for school, I copped the damn bootleg from chinatown and watched it over and over and over.
I know we talk a lot about movies changing the game but I think this is definitely one movie that changed the game, not just for comic book flicks, but movies in general. So many movies have come out since this movie that reference it in terms of how they want to "reboot" their stories or reinvigorate their franchises, Casino Royale being one of them. It didn't invent the reboot but it perfected it and started the trend we still have today.
Everything about this flick just sings and it's so on point and I remember being this 19 year old who felt like spider-man 2 was the pinnacle of comic book filmmaking but then this thing came along and made me go and made me rethink that statement.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/scottme...-and-saved-the-comic-book-movie-10-years-ago/