The Dark Knight Rises Reviews

IGN gave The Dark Knight Rises a 9/10 score but were keen to indicate that the film is not without its flaws. That said, it goes on to describe TDKR as €œthe grandest, most emotional and superheroic chapter in Batman saga.€ Variety reports that the film doesn€™t quite match the cinematic brilliance of its predecessor The Dark Knight, but goes on to reiterate that €œthis hugely ambitious action-drama nonetheless retains the moral urgency and serious-minded pulp instincts that have made the Warners franchise a beacon of integrity in an increasingly comic book-driven Hollywood universe€. While both of these reviews are keen to insist that The Dark Knight Rises is great but not perfect, The Playlist seems to insist that it€™s not only a near flawless movie but it€™s an important one for the zeitgeist too. It describes Nolan€™s trilogy-capper as: €œA cinematic, cultural and personal triumph, The Dark Knight Rises is emotionally inspiring, aesthetically significant and critically important for America itself €“ as a mirror of both sober reflection and resilient hope.€ TimeOut however is much less enthralled by the film, although does admit that it ticks most of the right cinematic boxes. The review asks and answers €œCan at least live up to the eye-popping standard he set with 2008€™s €˜The Dark Knight€™? The answers are yes, no, and mostly.€ However, it does go on to admit that €œ Sublimating CGI in favour of real crowd scenes and massive cityscapes, Nolan creates a grand, dirty, engrossing world, and his action sequences just hum.€ Among the reviews that insist TDKR€™ story is somewhat convoluted but that Nolan€™s direction is sound is comingsoon.net. This review prescribes that €œthe story isn't quite as solid as "The Dark Knight" and the main villains aren't quite as memorable, but having a director with such a strong vision and conviction to fulfill it makes Nolan's Batman finale pay off at least as a bookend to "Batman Begins" even if it may require quite a bit more patience than both previous films.€ Click "next" below for more reviews (we are adding more all the time)...

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Stuart believes that the pen is mightier than the sword, but still he insists on using a keyboard.