Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - What are the three Nolan Batman trilogies?

What are the three Nolan Batman trilogies?

1 Batman: Rogue One (2005) Batman Begins

2 Batman: The Dark Knight (2008) The Dark Knight

3 Batman: The Dark Knight Rises (2012) The Dark Knight Rises

The Batman Dark Knight Trilogy is a film series directed by Christopher Nolan and starring Christian Bale, consisting of three entries: Batman: Hour of War (released on June 15, 2005, grossing $352 million worldwide), Batman: The Dark Knight (released on July 18, 2008, grossing $1.002 billion worldwide), Batman: The Dark Knight Rises ( released on July 20, 2012 and grossed $1.082 billion worldwide). The Dark Knight Trilogy, a reboot of the Batman franchise, is a completely separate series that ditches the overly comic book-heavy parts while retaining a darker tone to portray a realistic Batman. Not only was it a huge success at the box office, but it won critical acclaim.

Background:

Seven years after Joe Schumacher's Batman & Robin was voted "the fifth worst sequel of all time," British wunderkind Christopher Nolan was determined to revitalize the Batman franchise. This time, Nolan stayed true to the coarse, bold, darkly realistic style of Frank Miller's 1986 Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, while using IMAX, the state-of-the-art film shooting mode, to conjure up the operatic grandeur he desired. DC Comics even changed its logo to emphasize the Batman franchise's determination to clean up its act, and Nolan and Warner executives boldly recruited British actor Christian Bale, who was immersed in indie films at the time to hone his acting skills, knowing that Batman was a purely American comic book. As fans marveled at Bale's new Batman, with his authentic American accent and charisma, he became one of Hollywood's most popular actors.

In addition to the more de-comicized and realistic scenes, the massive action sequences and the more powerful Batmobile have also contributed to this outstanding superhero film franchise. From the grand finale of Batman Begins against Master Ninja in Batman Begins to the "slow-motion 180-degree flip" of the truck in The Dark Knight to the disintegration of the plane and the city's police chasing Batman in The Dark Knight Rises, the action in each movie is unique and allows the viewer not to be distracted from the plot by these elements of the action. In order to win the support of hard-core comic book fans, based on the style of realistic, high-tech attributes of Batman's equipment and props, but not sloppy, is the first part of the tough and heavy Batmobile, the second part of the Batmobile, the Batmobile, the third part of the Batmobile into the sky, let the fans in the viewing of the movie over the eyeballs.

What's most amazing is Nolan's characterization and thematic thinking. Gotham City, the city of crime, the city of the rich and the poor, the city of Sodom and Gomorrah, the city of sin, the city that the League of Shadows and the Joker are trying to destroy, and Bruce Wayne has to fight against these forces of darkness on his own, and will he be able to do whatever it takes to protect the city? Personal moral dilemmas and the possession of heroic powers repeatedly torment Wayne. The Dark Knight trilogy is extremely detailed in its portrayal of human nature and contemplation of social propositions, very elegantly balancing comic book style and documentary, while still y imprinted with Nolan's personal attributes of authorship, and it would not be an exaggeration to call it the highest caliber of superhero films.

Nolan created the Dark Knight trilogy in the overall quality and thematic depth, out of this world, will be superhero movies to unprecedented heights, the rich dark realistic style has also influenced many of the subsequent superhero movies.

AUTHOR BIO:

Judy Duncan Jesse, while working as an editor at Cinefex magazine, authored thousands of articles on feature film techniques. She's also the author of several books demystifying super-blockbusters, including "Behind the Scenes of the Making of Star Wars Prequel 1: The Phantom Menace," "Behind the Scenes of the Making of Star Wars Prequel 2: Attack of the Clones," "Behind the Scenes of the Making of Terminator 2," and "Behind the Scenes of the Making of Jurassic Park. It was the book "Behind the Scenes of the Making of Avatar" that ultimately established her as a dominant force in the industry