Tag Archives: the dark knight rises

Charlize Theron’s 10 Best Movies

Charlize Theron

Charlize Theron is the queen of action right now in Hollywood, which isn’t a bad title to attain after 20 years playing mostly deeply serious character roles.  Theron, who is originally from South Africa, doesn’t have as deep a resume as some of the actresses from her generation, but it’s not lack of talent that prevents her, more a tendency to take on misguided “message” projects that fall flat.  Additionally, if you look for Monster among her 10 Best, you won’t find it as it is one of the few films in my life I’ve walked out of because I found it so deeply unpleasant.  Doesn’t mean that she wasn’t outstanding in her acting; just means that there’s only so much hooker/serial killer I can take (and from the eventual director of Wonder Woman….who knew?).  She’s on a serious career upswing in the wake of stealing Mad Max: Fury Road (where’s our Furiosa spin-off?) and re-establishing her action dominance in Atomic Blonde.  She looks 20 years younger than her actual age, and can beat you up, so it’s unlikely this actress is going to fall prey to the gender wall that eats so many careers.  I’d like to see her do more comedy though.  She has great timing, and that’s something you can’t teach.

Continue reading Charlize Theron’s 10 Best Movies

Tom Hardy’s 10 Best Movies

Tom Hardy

Tom Hardy has, for an actor only 15 or so years into his career, put together a top 10 list of projects that would be the lifetime envy of most.  Rarely the leading man, Hardy seems most comfortable in a high-class ensemble where he can build indelible characters that steal movies.  Even before he became part of the “Nolan Troupe”, joining the director for Inception, The Dark Knight Rises, and Dunkirk, Hardy was firmly established as a consummate character actor.  Even in films like Mad Max: Fury Road, in which he’s the title character, he was content to let Charlize Theron’s Furiosa steal the movie while he provided the constant and the result was the Academy actually nominated a cool movie for Best Picture.  Hardy is one of many actors that had their first high-profile role in Band of Brothers (one of the five best things ever to air on TV) along with James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, and others.  Hardy doesn’t stick just to films, having returned to TV for the massively underrated Peaky Blinders and beginning his own starring vehicle in FX’s Taboo.  He’s a chameleon (compare skinny Band of Brothers Hardy with Bane), but at the core of all of his characters is a fierce anger that sometimes burns hot or cold, but it’s always an asset to whatever project he’s undertaking.


Continue reading Tom Hardy’s 10 Best Movies

Christopher Nolan’s 5 Most Epic Endings

Christopher Nolan and Leonardo DiCaprio on the set of Inception
In gymnastics, it’s called “sticking the landing”. The gymnast finishes an elaborate routine with a firmly planted landing that doesn’t wobble or waver. A perfect ending. Directors seek to perform the same feat by ending their films in a way that leaves the audience with an unforgettable moment. It’s difficult. How many films are undone by a botched ending? One director who never fails to stick his landing is Christopher Nolan. Over his career, Nolan, who also writes or co-writes his films, has become known for powerful endings. He writes with the ending in mind, taking the advice of legendary film critic Roger Ebert: “Don’t bother with where it’s going to start until you know where it’s going to finish.” Nolan doesn’t just have one kind of ending, one trick up his sleeve; he’s got five. All of Nolan’s endings fall into one (or arguably several) of five types of screenwriting magic.

Memento (2000) “The Twist

Guy Pearce in Memento [Credit: Summit Entertainment]
Guy Pearce in Memento [Credit: Summit Entertainment]

Memento was the film that put Christopher Nolan on the map. Memento’s non-linear plot has the ending as both the first and last scene of the film. Leonard (Guy Pearce) suffers from short-term memory loss. Conversations, facts and faces fade after a very short time so Leonard’s body is covered in tattoos of facts he “knows” to be true as he hunts the man who killed his wife, along with photos and notes with him to try to keep reality together. If that wasn’t a complex enough premise, Memento takes place backward. The film begins with Leonard’s long-awaited revenge as he executes his wife’s killer, then we rewind and the next scene is a few minutes before, then next before that, and so on, until we reach a mirror of the first/last scene in the final scene of the film. It’s there we learn that so many of Leonard’s “truths” and “old memories” are part of a legend he’s created for himself to justify a never-ending quest for revenge. He actually avenged his wife years ago, but he’s become stuck in a loop of confusion and self-created myth, finding victim after victim who fit his profile in mind-bending twist of an ending. Like most of Nolan’s films, Memento requires multiple viewings to appreciate the brilliance of just how well the audience was set up.


The Prestige (2006) “The Shock”

The Prestige [Credit: Warner Bros.]
The Prestige [Credit: Warner Bros.]

The beauty of The Prestige is that Nolan tells you from the opening scene exactly what he’s going to do. The film follows the format of the magic trick outlined in that scene. Nolan even shows you the dark answer to the film’s puzzling question with a shot of dozens of identical hats during Robert Angier’s (Hugh Jackman) visit to Nikola Tesla’s laboratory. Angier, obsessed his whole career with how Christian Bale is performing a trick where he appears to be in two places at once, asks Tesla to build him a machine to perform a more spectacular version of the trick. Tesla reluctantly does so, and the result is a marvelous trick: Angier is chained and submerged in a glass tank of water, seemingly inescapable, when the crack of Tesla’s wizardry blinds the audience, and Angier appears among them, miraculously transported. Except he’s not. In the film’s final horrifying shot, Angier finds a warehouse full of glass tanks containing drowned doppelgangers. The machine wasn’t transporting him, merely copying him as it did the hats, and the audience leaves the theater in shock at the cost of Angier’s “success”.

The Dark Knight (2008) “The Prelude”

Christian Bale in The Dark Knight [Credit: Warner Bros.]
Christian Bale in The Dark Knight [Credit: Warner Bros.]

The Dark Knight Trilogy never had a problem leaving the audience wanting more. Just when Batman would seem to triumph, Nolan would pull the rug out from under fans and make them wait years for the next installment. The middle film of a trilogy is usually the most difficult to balance, but The Dark Knight never had that dilemma. The promised appearance of the Joker (Heath Ledger) is realized in the first scene, and the war between Batman and his nemesis claims many victims: the last of which is the life and legacy of Gotham District Attorney Harvey Dent. Scarred physically and mentally by the Joker after the murder of his fiancee, Dent becomes unhinged, and in the film’s final confrontation falls to his death as Batman rescues Commissioner Gordon’s family from Dent’s twisted sense of fate. Knowing that if Dent’s actions were to become public knowledge, all his convictions and good works would be overturned, Batman demands Gordon declare that the Batman has gone rogue. The film ends to a montage of Batman evading GCPD officers while we hear Gordon answer his son’s query, “Why is he running? He didn’t do anything wrong!”

Because we have to chase him. Because he’s the hero Gotham deserves, but not the one it needs right now, so we’ll hunt him. Because he can take it, because he’s not a hero. He’s a silent guardian…a watchful protector…a Dark Knight.


Inception (2010) “The Puzzle”

Leonardo Di Caprio's totem from Inception [Credit: Warner Bros.]
Leonardo Di Caprio’s totem from Inception [Credit: Warner Bros.]

Inception is Nolan’s most complex film, and its ending-appropriately-one of the most debated in recent film history. The story follows a team of thieves lead by Leonardo DiCaprio who are hired, not to steal something, but to implant something: an idea. For this, the team of thieves enter the dreams of their subject, and fight off memories, projections of the subconscious and their own baggage in a visually stunning and intellectually challenging masterpiece. Every dreamer carries an individual totem, something simple that only they ever touch. This totem is used to test whether they are awake or still in the dream world. In the case of Dom (DiCaprio) his is a small top that spins continually in a dream, but will topple over in reality. The desire to be reunited with his family is at the heart of Dom’s motivation, and in the final scene, he returns home, glimpses his children, and begins to walk out to meet them as the camera slowly begins to focus on the top he idly spins before striding outdoors. Is it spinning continually? Is Dom still dreaming? Is that a wobble? Did he find his way home? Nolan ends the film just at the point where the viewer might be able to make up their mind. Repeated viewings only provide clues to bolster either conclusion.

The Dark Knight Rises (2012) “The Finale”

Joseph Gordon-Levitt in The Dark Knight Rises [Credit: Warner Bros.]
Joseph Gordon-Levitt in The Dark Knight Rises [Credit: Warner Bros.]

The ending to The Dark Knight Rises wraps up the entire Dark Knight Trilogy with an amazing economy of storytelling, giving each character a farewell that builds to the hope of Bruce’s survival, and interwoven with John Blake’s (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) journey to pick up Wayne’s mantle. From the end of Bruce’s “funeral”, the strains of Hans Zimmer’s “Rise” begin to build. Lucius Fox discovers a final upgrade that might have let Batman survive. Commissioner Gordon is surprised by a brand-new Bat-Signal atop the GCPD, and whips around, wildly searching the sky. Alfred’s dreams for his foster son are realized when he looks up from a drink in Italy to see Bruce and Selina alive and at peace across the restaurant, and the wordless nod between father and son say that’s necessary. Then Nolan throws the fans a Robin card in a way that’s not at all cheesy or pandering by revealing it as John Blake’s legal name as he picks up a bag Bruce left him in his will. Following the GPS coordinates and using the climbing gear the bag contains, Blake swings into the Bat Cave, and as he rises to the suit and the legacy, the movie ends and Batman Begins. Full circle. Epic finale.


Christian Bale’s 10 Best Movies

Christian Bale
Batman, Christian Bale, The Dark Knight

Christian Bale’s career is already entering its fourth decade of excellence.  The actor, whose first starring role was in 1987 in Steven Spielberg’s Empire of the Sun at age 13, already has a career’s worth of outstanding roles and an Oscar for his performance in David O. Russell’s The Fighter.  For most, Bale is the definitive Batman in the definitive super hero trilogy: Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Trilogy.  Nolan and Bale put a stamp on Batman that others will be living up to as long as the character exists.  Bale also teamed with Nolan in The Prestige and with Russell again in American Hustle for wildly different roles in two outstanding films.  Bale is an intense, character-driven actor who has twice lost massive amounts of weight (Rescue Dawn & The Mechanic) for roles.  Bale gained 109 lbs for Batman Begins after losing 63 lbs for The Machinist. Bale went from 121 lbs to 230 lbs in only six months which overshot what Chris Nolan wanted for his Batman, so by the time filming began, Christian Bale had dropped to 190 lbs. For Vice, Bale did the reverse and gained over 40 lbs. to play former Vice-President Dick Cheney. The dedication paid off, and Bale continues to be one of the most dynamic actors working today.

Christian Bale’s Best 10
1. The Dark Knight Trilogy (2005-2012) Bruce Wayne/Batman
2. The Prestige (2006) Alfred Borden
3. 3:10 to Yuma (2007) Dan Evans
4. American Hustle (2013) Irving Rosenfeld
5. The Fighter (2010) Dicky Eklund
6. The Big Short (2015) Michael Burry
7. Henry V (1989) Robin
8. Rescue Dawn (2006) Dieter Dengler
9. Empire of the Sun (1987) Jim
10. Little Women (1994) Laurie
Honorable MentionEquilibrium (2002) John Preston

Continue reading Christian Bale’s 10 Best Movies

Nutrition Obsessed Bane Outtakes


We do a lot of serious looking at film…but sometimes you just want to be stupid funny about the films we love and for that you need Auralnauts.  You’ve probably seen the Kylo Ren Reacts series that the YouTube channel (to which you should subscribe) put up during the roll-up to Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, but before that (and this site), they had an equally fun time with vocally distorting themselves into Tom Hardy’s Bane from The Dark Knight Rises.  So for a Friday laugh, I present: Nutrition-Obsessed Bane.  HE WILL FEEEED YOU….PROPERLY!!! TGIF, Time Killers.
Tom Hardy, Bane, The Dark Knight Rise