Archives For Christopher Nolan

Will Nolan Break the Bat?

Chris —  January 21, 2011

My first introduction to Batman was reruns of the 1960s Adam West cheeztravangza.  Then in fourth grade I wandered into a All C’s Comics to find this:A dinosaur, a jacked-up lucha libre, and the Batman in a very vulnerable position.  It was unthinkable.  I was hooked, and I’ve been reading Batman ever since.

But when I when news hit Wednesday that Ann Hathaway would be playing Selina Kyle and Tom Hardy would be playing Bane, I was more than a little scared.  The only thing worse than the last time Bane appeared in a movie was when Halle Berry put on the leather.  I really don’t understand the whole Ann Hathaway thing, and I am worried about how the over the top villain created by Kelley Jone’s demonic cover work would translate to film.

But if anyone can do it, it’s Christopher Nolan.  He finally breathed life into the Ra’s al Ghul, made the Scarecrow truly frightening, and made us all forget any Joker besides Heath Ledger.  So how can Nolan do it again, without repeating the travesty of the last superhero trilogy to end?

1.  Deal with addiction. The story of Bane is a story of obsession and the addictive power of the super steroid, venom.  Selina Kyle herself is addicted to thrill of crime.  Nolan hasn’t shied away from dark issues, and a picture of the destructive power of addiction would fit right in.

2.  Break the Bat. Knightfall told the story of the breaking of the Bat.  Bane created absolute chaos in Batman’s life, and then left him alive, but broken.  If Nolan brings in this element, he’ll show something no superhero movie has done: a mortal, vulnerable hero.

3.  Leave him broken. Nolan has promised us that this will be the end of his Batman story.  What a better way to end this definitive view of Batman than by leaving Bruce Wayne in his wheelchair.  That doesn’t mean that Bane has to win.  But it forces the audience to ask “is it worth it?”  Imagine if the story of the world’s greatest vigilante ended with a denunciation of the myth of redemptive violence.

Related Posts:

What Kind of (Bat)Man Will You Be?
Why Batman is Better than Superman

Inception Isn’t That Difficult

Chris —  August 2, 2010

Christopher Nolan’s latest mindbender focuses on the way that our subconscious ideas shape our waking life.  The basic idea behind Inception is that if you can get inside someone’s dreams, you can steal what’s important to them, and maybe even force them to think something that goes against their beliefs.

The fact of the matter is, Inception isn’t nearly the three-level-dream-near-impossibility that the movie makes it out to be.  Everyday, ideas are planted in our heads that are not our own.

Constant sexual billboards reshape our own personal self images or ideas of what’s attractive.  Advertising makes us think that the newest gadget or service will give us satisfaction.

More insidious are the messages we pick up from those around us.  Constantly being bullied as a child, or growing up in an unhealthy home teaches us lies that can shape what we decide to do with our lives.  Repeated failures can convince us that it’s not worth taking risks.

Beyond what we see, there are spiritual forces at work, whose main weapon is lies.  Trying to distract us from what matters.

Perhaps the role of the Church is to call out the lies of society, and to form a community that demonstrates what it means to live in Truth.  And perhaps the role of the individual Christ follower is to dig out the deeply planted lies within, and discover who they truly can be.