{"id":5475,"date":"2012-08-21T17:17:57","date_gmt":"2012-08-21T16:17:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/etbscreenwriting.com\/\/?p=5475"},"modified":"2012-08-21T17:17:57","modified_gmt":"2012-08-21T16:17:57","slug":"the-dark-knight-rises","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/etbscreenwriting.com\/the-dark-knight-rises\/","title":{"rendered":"#TypesTuesday – The Dark Knight Rises"},"content":{"rendered":"
Nolan’s whole Batman trilogy is remarkably consistent in its emotional and psychological characterizations. In the Emotional Toolbox method, rather than looking at genre, the essential emotional force driving the movie is analyzed. Nolan’s trilogy is a series of complex multi-layered Power of Truth stories.<\/p>\n These kinds of stories are driven by secrets, lies, conspiracies, or concealment. In the opening of\u00a0The Dark Knight Rises<\/strong> a huge lie is rotting at the heart of Gotham City.<\/p>\n Bruce Wayne\/Batman languishes in disgrace, broken and hiding in his cavernous mansion. Harvey Dent, who had become the criminally insane Two Face in the previous film, The Dark Knight, <\/strong>has been put on a pedestal and is revered as a hero. His crimes are concealed and even blamed on Batman.<\/p>\n When the terrorist villian Bane takes over Gotham he exposes the lie. Bane says: “Behind you stands a symbol of oppression; Blackgate Prison, where a thousand men have languished under the name of this man.”<\/p>\n Bane quotes Gordon’s letter, “‘The Batman didn’t murder Harvey Dent, he saved my boy then took the blame for Harvey’s appalling crimes so that I could, to my shame, build a lie around this fallen idol. I praised the mad man who tried to murder my own child but I can no longer live with my lie. It is time to trust the people of Gotham with the truth and it is time for me to resign.'”<\/p>\n Bane asks the crowd, “And do you accept this man’s resignation? Do you accept the resignation of all these liars? Of all the corrupt?”<\/p>\n Police Officer John Blake watches the speech on television says to Police Commissioner Jim Gordon, “Those men were locked up for eight years in Blackgate and denied parole under the Dent Act, based on a lie?”<\/p>\n Gordon explains, “Gotham needed a hero \u2026”<\/p>\n Blake is disgusted, “You betrayed everything you stood for.”<\/p>\n The Dark Knight Rises<\/strong> and all Power of Truth stories chronicle the most profound and personal betrayals. These stories also ask: when does betrayal look like loyalty and when does loyalty looks like betrayal? These stories’ twists, turns, treachery, and reversals, changes everything the character believes is true. All the character holds dear is destroyed.<\/p>\n One of the major betrayals at the heart of the film is Alfred Pennyworth’s omission in telling Bruce Wayne what happened just before Bruce’s great love, Rachel Dawes, died. Alfred argues against Bruce re-emerging as Batman, revealing the truth.<\/p>\n<\/a>Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises<\/strong>, is a powerful portrayal of a Power of Truth character. I liked the film a lot.<\/p>\n
<\/a>Bane holds up a picture of Harvey Dent and continues, “Harvey Dent, has been held up to you as the shining example of justice \u2026You have been supplied with a false idol to stop you from tearing down this corrupt city. Let me tell you the truth about Harvey Dent from the words of Gotham’s police commissioner, James Gordon.”<\/p>\n