
Then, after watching the Chris / Jonah Nolan scripted masterwork The Dark Knight, I see why: Batman Begins exists as an amalgamation between the director and his character in preparation for his true opus. He introduces us to the world of Bruce Wayne, a silver-spoon millionaire with a mentally disturbing past filled with murder, crime, and writhing revenge surrounded by the frightening images of bats. Nolan guides us us into Wayne's despair as an intrinsically-retreating adult, so much that he "walks the earth" in ole' Jules Winnfield's words. Gotham's prized millionaire digs, like a starving dog for a bone, into the heart of the criminal mind in several areas across the globe. Then, in a moment of weakness, he stumbles across Ducard (Liam Neeson, Schindler's List), an agent for a brotherhood of justice-seekers led by Ra's Al Ghul (Ken Watanabe, The Last Samurai).
As he returns to Gotham City as a weathered man with a mission clearly outlined, Wayne finds the city in just as bad of shape as he did when he left it seven years passed. Instead of criminals merely exploiting the boundaries of the system, doctor of psychology John Crane (Cilian Murphy, 28 Days Later) has found a way to leak them back onto the streets by nailing down insanity pleas in a way that they earn a trip to his personally run wing at the local loony bin, Arkham Asylum. Nolan introduces a level of corruption that has reached an all-time high, with police offers stuffing cash in their pockets without a hero in sight. To make matters worse, an even larger force looms over these payouts and criminal turnovers, one fueling the poisonous corruption within the city in a retroviral way. It's an entity not necessarily interested in power, but with a collapsible destruction of the city in mind. Wayne must find a way through the cash-grabbing police force and almost masochistic vileness to save the forgotten, powerless citizens of Gotham from this true pestilent villain.
Everything leading up to Bruce Wayne's return to Gotham City, as well as the initial development of the Batman persona, is crafted with intense precision and originality. To watch him learn these ninja techniques techniques that he brings to Batman, both in hand-to-hand combat and in assorted tool-based methods, interlocks with the character arch perfectly. It doesn't hurt that it sits against the backdrop of Oscar-nominated cinematography; with grand expanses filled with a complete spectrum of icy blues and grimy grays, it paints a glorious picture around Wayne's departure from his whiny, self-important image towards the brooding and selfless character that he becomes. We see how Bruce Wayne selects his symbolic persona, the bat, and witness how he caricaturizes his fake playboy persona in an effort to protect the entity that would become his true self. It's all brilliant character assembly, some of the best I've seen in a comic book style of storyline. Nolan doesn't give us a keyhole into the mythos of the character; he breaks the door down to let us see Batman for all "it" as an archetype is -- powerful, vigilant, and intelligent, but also disparate and painfully exhausted from the demands of his past.

However, the true acting strength in Begins comes out in Wayne's supportive characters Alfred Pennyworth, played by the effervescent Michael Caine (Sleuth, The Italian Job), and Lucius Fox, given life by Morgan Freeman (Shawshank Redemption, Se7en). They're integral parts into Wayne's infrastructure, as they're the only two men that Bruce can be "honest" with. Nolan handles their banter well, taking these opportunities to alleviate the tension in the story by giving them some rather choice one-liners. Alfred slyly attempts to bring humanization back into Wayne's life by joking around about taking out the family car but remembering to "fill the tank", while Fox dances with Wayne around his military desires rooted in the Archives part of the business with plenty of tongue-and-cheek prodding humor. Now, I certainly wish Wayne had a better romantic interest than the passably underwhelming Rachel Dawes, played by Katie Holmes (The Gift), but that, along with many other mistakes, are rectified in the second Batman film.
What matures with time, however, is the relationship and strength built between Batman and Ltd. Jim Gordon, vitalized by the eccentric Gary Oldman (Leon the Professional, the Harry Potter series). Initially, with Gordon as a lowly cop without recognition, their chemistry includes a bit of awkwardness. As Begins paces along, their relationship builds upon a level of trust that feels somewhat natural between Bale and Oldman. Being new to their roles (Bale as a man in a costume and Oldman as, well, normal) works wonders for the two actors as they mature over the film and pour over into their powerful personas in The Dark Knight. Oldman gets his feet wet as Gordon in the first film, but doesn't come out with near the same weight as he does later on with the character. Much like Bruce Wayne, Gordon gracefully molds into his true place within Gotham over time.

Like I said, this technique is also appealing in a way; the hand-to-hand combat is so fast-paced that it almost interrelates with Batman's presence as a vigilante in the shadows that flaps about such as a bat might, yet it also takes away from the visceral enjoyment to witness each battle blow for blow. Car chase scenes and other close-quartered action sequences still pack a meaty punch, such as an operatic battle on a train and a rescue from a burning building. Nolan establishes a solid action tone for Batman Begins, and then runs it completely through the roof in The Dark Knight which focuses a lot on the fluent use of sweeping steadycam-style shots that fluidly, and slowly, moves around the action for our absorption. He uses these same shadowy techniques that he assembled in Batman Begins, and then intricately refines them into more gracefully paced and, at times, more intuitive combat.
Nolan's Batman universe stays hinged on some rather deep themes, but Begins' ideas concentrate more on piecing together the anti-hero for the universe instead of significantly tackling core ideas like The Dark Knight. He focuses on telling the story of how a man can deconstruct his persona, filled with wealth and prestige, and become devout to purging a city of its criminal cancer. Furthermore, he meekly introduces the idea of a villain that cannot be swayed by monetary gain or powerful significance, one that explodes into resonance in his second Batman film. Batman Begins is still a thriving, thoughtful success that can be enjoyed for many years to come, but the roots of existence seem firmly planted into it as an amalgamation.
Yet it's not just as an exercise in familiarization for Christopher Nolan, but for his audience as people who have been ravaged by very different, less-thoughtful Batman personas. He whittles out a new dark hero for Batman Begins, one that shows weakness and humanization -- elements that might seem unfamiliar to moviegoers. Then, he takes this fallible and, at times, disliked character and throws him into a world of true chaos and detriment within The Dark Knight. Both of Nolan's films present a brooding, difficult universe that's hard for fans of radiant heroes to absorb, one filled with moral ambiguity and mental instability. In that, this environment is also a true gift that one of Hollywood's finest modern directors has given to both Batman aficionados and non-comic book lovers alike.
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