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Old 06-24-2007, 11:17 PM
Uncle B Uncle B is offline
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Arrow The Dark Knight' - Pics and Movie Trailers from the upcoming movie

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Pics of the new ride, for ''The Dark Knight'', the 'Bat-Pod'






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another view of the 'Bat-Pod':






A new image from the upcoming The Dark Knight with Heath Ledger as The Joker and Maggie Gyllenhaal as Rachel Dawes.

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Last edited by Uncle B : 12-17-2007 at 02:22 PM.
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Old 07-03-2007, 11:55 AM
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Parts of 'Batman Begins - The Dark Knight' being shot in IMAX format.


Quote:
All directors promise that their sequels will be bigger and flashier than the predecessors'. But Christopher Nolan doesn't mess around.

The director's sequel to Batman Begins, The Dark Knight, will become the first feature film to be partly shot in the IMAX format, an expensive and cumbersome process that typically is the province of documentaries and short films.

Nolan will shoot four action sequences — including the introduction of the Joker, played by Heath Ledger — on IMAX.

The move is one of Hollywood's most pronounced steps yet in its embrace of IMAX theaters, which are increasingly showing commercial fare on their giant screens.

"There's simply nothing like seeing a movie that way," Nolan says. "It's more immersive for the audience. I wish I could shoot the entire thing this way."

Typically, the feature films that play in IMAX theaters are simply stretched out to fill the enormous screens. That can dilute the picture quality and give the movie a wide, squat look.

Shooting on IMAX, Nolan says, will have a twofold effect. The four scenes will fill the IMAX screens, some of which are eight stories high. And in traditional theaters, the scenes will appear more vivid (think high-definition television over standard).

Don't expect many movies to follow suit. Only 280 IMAX theaters are in operation worldwide, and fewer than 100 show feature films.

And shooting in the format is difficult. IMAX film, which is 10 times the size of standard film stock, is costly and must be shot using bulky cameras.

And "they're loud," Nolan says. "We had to figure a way to eliminate the sound so we could shoot dialogue."

In a rarity for Hollywood, the payoff isn't primarily financial, so far. "It doesn't have a huge effect yet on the money you bring in," says Chris Aronson, a distribution chief with 20th Century Fox, which carried Night at the Museum on IMAX. "But it does help make your movie more of an event."

For Nolan, IMAX makes the moviegoing experience unique again.

"You can't do this on any home theater," Nolan says. "Batman has some of the most extraordinary characters in pop culture. We wanted the Joker to have the grandest entrance possible.

"I figured if you could take an IMAX camera to Mount Everest or outer space, you could use it in a feature movie."
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Old 09-25-2007, 03:03 AM
Uncle B Uncle B is offline
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Quote:
A crew member on the new BATMAN movie has been killed in an onset accident.
The special effects expert was following the Batmobile on a racetrack in Surrey, England when the car he was in crashed into a tree.

It is believed the dead man was trying to figure out how to film a car chase scene.

The unnamed victim, a married father of two, died at the scene of the crash.

Police and the Health and Safety experts are investigating the incident.

None of the film's cast including Christian Bale, Michael Caine and Heath Ledger saw the accident. Batman: The Dark Knight is released next year (08).
Source: WENN
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Old 12-17-2007, 02:17 PM
Uncle B Uncle B is offline
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Default The Dark Knight (2008) Movie Trailer

This flick looks pretty damn good, imo...








Quote:
THE DARK KNIGHT
In Theaters July 18, 2008




HEATH LEDGER as The Joker

Director:
Christopher Nolan

Cast:
Christian Bale, Eric Roberts, Heath Ledger, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman


Synopsis:
As a follow up to last year’s blockbuster Batman Begins, Christopher Nolan is set to direct Warner Bros. Pictures’ The Dark Knight, written by Jonathan Nolan, based on a story by Christopher Nolan and David Goyer. The film will be produced by Emma Thomas, Charles Roven and Christopher Nolan. Additionally, Christian Bale will resume his role as Bruce Wayne and Academy Award nominee Heath Ledger has been cast as The Joker.








Last edited by Uncle B : 12-17-2007 at 02:43 PM.
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Old 01-22-2008, 06:17 PM
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Sad news for Batman, and Heath Ledger fans: Heath Ledger Found Dead in NYC


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Old 01-22-2008, 06:47 PM
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Quote:
Chris Nolan's The Dark Knight has already received a scathing criticism from one Batman alumni, as Jack Nicholson objected to not being re-cast in the role of the Joker. But what about Michael Keaton, who played the Dark Knight in Tim Burton's Batman and Batman Returns? MTV News got the opportunity to ask Keaton how he felt about the upcoming film:


I've only seen a little piece [of the sequels] here and there since I finished mine, not for any reason except that I didn't have any real interest. The reason they weren't interesting was the reason I didn't want to do them anymore. I read the script [for Batman Forever]. I wasn't into it. But how I wanted to do the third one is what they did in [Batman Begins]. I read an article about how they were going about it and I said, "That's exactly what I thought should be done." [Christopher Nolan] is so good and [Christian Bale] is so good. I really would like to see [Batman Begins]. I'm sure it's good and I'm sure [The Dark Knight] is going to be better.


When told about his Batman co-star's reaction to Nolan's film, Keaton laughed. "No! Is he serious? I've got to call him up on that, give him a hard time."

Keaton was also asked if he had ever been offered the role of a villain in any superhero film. "No, but it would be fun," Keaton said. "I don't think I'd take Jack's stance on it. I think it'd be fun because those are the roles where you get to chew it up. I'll always stand by the first [Batman]. Even for its imperfections, people will never know how hard that movie was to do. A lot of that still holds up."

The Dark Knight opens on July 18, 2008, and stars Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Morgan Freeman, Gary Oldman, Aaron Eckhart and Maggie Gylenhall.
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Old 01-22-2008, 06:57 PM
Uncle B Uncle B is offline
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Holy shit, this is fukin brilliant....



'Dark Knight Returns' - trailer spoof








Now, that is some impressive damn editing...
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Old 01-28-2008, 05:35 PM
Uncle B Uncle B is offline
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Two things:

#1 - The coolest movie poster you'll probably never see in a theater lobby:





#2 - Warner Bros. displays a bit of tact, respect and class, with the "The Dark Knight" website, which has been temporarily transformed into a memorial for Heath Ledger.


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Old 01-28-2008, 05:46 PM
lebowski_ lebowski_ is offline
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Going to be the greatest movie of all time
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Old 01-29-2008, 06:36 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lebowski_ View Post
Going to be the greatest movie of all time


Don't know about all that, but, i'm betting it'll be the best Batman flick of all time..

Should be the biggest too, imo..I'm guessing it will blow the previous ones away, as far as box office gross...Especially opening weekend..
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Old 03-02-2008, 01:05 PM
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Default The new extended trailer for The Dark Knight

Man, the hype machine has pretty much come to a total stand-still since Ledger died.....Found one new HD Trailer for it though, figured i'd add it here...



The Dark Knight - new extended trailer

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Old 03-28-2008, 09:14 PM
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Quote:
Heath Ledger's frenzied reinvention of the Joker had fans and colleagues buzzing. His dreadful clown face was seen online by millions, and stood as the goosebump-raising image upon which nearly all early marketing of "The Dark Knight" hinged.




All this, while Ledger was still alive.

Now the Batman archfiend stands as Ledger's next-to-last performance. And while it's not the first, "The Dark Knight" has already emerged as arguably the biggest movie featuring a posthumous role in Hollywood history.

Major stars including James Dean, Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, Spencer Tracy and Will Rogers had high-profile films released after they died. The deaths of others — notably Bruce Lee and his son Brandon — created an eerie allure that heightened interest in their final films.

Yet none had the magnitude of a comic-book franchise with an illustrious 70-year history, and movies in those eras did not arrive with the fanfare of today. Certainly none had the advance word of a delirious, demented turn by an actor completely reimagining of one of Hollywood's greatest villains.

"It was punk, it was `A Clockwork Orange, it was druggie. It was this kind of fantastic, anarchic look to him. This character who had absolutely no rules whatsoever," said Christian Bale, who returns as rich guy Bruce Wayne and his crime-fighting alter-ego Batman. "That's not like any Joker I've ever seen before, what I saw Heath do."

As the sequel to 2005 blockbuster "Batman Begins," "The Dark Knight" already was one of this year's most-anticipated films. Opening July 18, the film's must-see status has only risen since Ledger died of an accidental prescription drug overdose Jan. 22.

"More people will come to see it because of his death," said Bill Ramey, founder of the fan Web site Batman-on-Film.com. "No doubt some people may be apprehensive about seeing it because there may be a little ghoulish factor about it. But I'm betting that more people now kind of look at it as a tribute to him, and the biggest tribute you could give someone is to go see it and enjoy his performance."

When Dean died in a car wreck in 1955, studio executives lamented "there goes the movie," figuring audiences would be scared away from his final two films, said Wes Gehring, who teaches film at Ball State University. To the contrary: "Rebel Without a Cause" and "Giant" were huge hits.

In today's anything-goes celebrity climate, it's doubtful anyone in Hollywood ever felt Ledger's death might hurt the box-office prospects for "The Dark Knight," Gehring said.

"It's a tacky thing to say, but what would have been a negative in the past now could be a positive thing," Gehring said. "I think we've done a flip-flop on pop culture. Now it might actually be a selling point for a movie where you say, `So and so's dead. Let's go see his movie.' What might have been a hindrance in 1935 now won't be a problem."

In the days after Ledger's death, fans debated how it might affect the film.

Would distributor Warner Bros. make changes or even delay its release? Would the advertising shift away from its early focus on Ledger's demonic Joker and his mocking taunt, "Why so serious?" Would the Joker's ghastly persona disturb fans? Would viewers be able to set thoughts of his death aside as they watch his performance?

"Of course, you find more poignancy in moments, and I'm very, very aware he's not here with us," said Bale in an interview shortly after the film's opening segment — in which Ledger's Joker orchestrates a bank heist — was screened in mid-March at ShoWest, a convention for theater owners. It was the first time Bale had seen the sequence, and Ledger's death weighed on his mind.

"I can't deny that kind of threw me watching that just now," Bale said. "You can't help but have that different feeling when I'm viewing it, especially since he's somebody I was in touch with until just recently and believed would be a future friend."

Director Christopher Nolan, who revived the franchise with "Batman Begins," said he expects the performance will speak for itself, that morbid thoughts of Ledger's death will not affect the way audiences view "The Dark Knight."

"Having seen the movie myself in such heightened and tragic circumstances, no, I don't think that's going to be the case," Nolan said. "What I found in watching the movie myself is that you're not looking at the actor, you're not looking at the friend, you're not looking at the colleague. You're looking at the Joker. ... He inhabits this character, and it's an extraordinary icon, so it's easy to enjoy it on that level, just as a great piece of acting."

Ledger — known for serious films including "Brokeback Mountain," which earned him a best-actor Academy Award nomination — was a surprise choice for the Joker, most famously played previously with Jack Nicholson's giddy performance in 1989's "Batman."

Nolan, Ledger and their collaborators came up with a wildly different Joker, whose ominous clown makeup seems to have been finger-painted onto his face, an outer portrait of the black and twisted soul within.

Ledger's performance floored two-time Oscar winner Michael Caine, who reprises his role as Bruce Wayne's butler, Alfred. Caine's first glimpse of the character came when Ledger emerged onto the set from an elevator; in an interview last September, four months before Ledger's death, Caine said he was so startled that he forgot his lines.

"He came out of the bloody lift like a whirlwind," Caine recalled. "They said, `It's your line, Michael.' I said, `What is it?' Extraordinary. It will be one of the characters of next year, the Joker as played by him."

Warner Bros. executives, who declined to comment for this article, have moved ahead with "The Dark Knight" and its marketing as planned. To do anything differently would have disrespected Ledger's memory, the filmmakers said.

"The greatest testament to Heath's portrayal is to do everything that we were planning on doing with Heath's portrayal," said producer Charles Roven. "His family knew him to feel exactly the same way. They knew how excited he was, knew how much fun he had doing it. When you see the film, it's undeniable how much fun he had playing the character."

While the "Batman" brand-name virtually assures blockbuster status for "The Dark Knight," other posthumous films have had a mixed history.

Rogers scored a posthumous hit with "Steamboat Round the Bend," as did Tracy with "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner."

Bruce Lee's "Enter the Dragon" and Brandon Lee's "The Crow" found broader audiences beyond action crowds because of their deaths. Singer Aaliyah's "Queen of the Damned" overcame bad reviews to become a modest commercial success.

Received coolly by critics, John Candy's "Canadian Bacon" and "Wagons East" were box-office duds, as was Natalie Wood's "Brainstorm."

The final films of Lombard ("To Be or Not to Be") and husband Gable ("The Misfits") earned critical acclaim and have held up over the decades but initially were disregarded by audiences.

Unlike Oliver Reed, whose death during the filming of "Gladiator" prompted the filmmakers to digitally graft his head onto another man's body to complete a scene, Ledger had finished his work on "The Dark Knight."

Ledger died with his final film, Terry Gilliam's fantasy "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus," only half finished. Gilliam salvaged the production by casting Johnny Depp, Jude Law and Colin Farrell for the fantasy portions, each playing Ledger's character on trips through a magic mirror into a parallel realm.

The snippets of Ledger's "Dark Knight" performance released in trailers have captivated not only the average fan, but also his close colleagues from past films.

"You can tell Jack Nicholson was having fun doing that, but you can see Heath probably put his soul into it," said "Brokeback Mountain" director Ang Lee. "That's why it's scary. You see the trailer, just a few shots of him, you have to see the movie. ... I'm anxious to see it. I'm afraid to see it. I don't know how I'll respond to it, but you have to see it."
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Old 03-30-2008, 05:50 AM
Uncle B Uncle B is offline
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i don't think the movie can be blamed for him fuckin up, and taking too many presciption drugs....dude just pushed his luck a bit too far.
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Old 04-11-2008, 04:12 AM
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Quote:
Early audience screenings of new BATMAN movie THE DARK KNIGHT have left viewers stunned thanks to an unfortunate scene featuring late actor HEATH LEDGER's THE JOKER playing dead in a bodybag.

The unsettling scene has prompted studio bosses at Warner Brothers to consider cutting the footage from the sequel when it hits cinemas on full release in July (08).

Writing on BlogLog.Globo.com, one internet critic, who claims a source saw the film recently, writes, "My secret agent between the Armani suits saw a super private session for The Dark Knight and came out drooling.

"It will be a great success, he guarantees, the gadgets... are crazy and Heath Ledger... delivered, got himself into the role and it's unrecognisable. There will be no other Joker after him."

But the blogger claims audience members were a little taken aback by one scene, where Ledger's character plays dead "inside a body bag".

He adds, "It caused adverse reactions in the audience, for obvious reasons. It will possibly be cut."

Warner Brothers publicists were unavailable for comment as WENN went to press.
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Old 04-25-2008, 11:51 AM
Uncle B Uncle B is offline
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Default the official Dark Knight movie poster

the latest Dark Knight press promo still, and the final Dark Knight movie poster:









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Old 07-02-2008, 09:07 PM
Uncle B Uncle B is offline
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Default New 'The Dark Knight' One Sheet

Why So Serious? - 'Stupid Bats'








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Old 07-15-2008, 07:29 PM
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Quote:
CHRISTIAN BALE and MICHAEL CAINE paid tribute to their late co-star HEATH LEDGER
at THE DARK KNIGHT world premiere in New York on Monday.










Stars including Ethan Hawke, Gary Oldman, Maggie Gyllenhaal and her brother Jake - who appeared with Ledger in 2005 movie Brokeback Mountain - walked the red carpet to see the tragic actor's turn in the film.

And his co-stars were keen to honour his performance as The Joker.

Bale, who plays the caped crusader in the sequel, says, "Working with Heath was fantastic. He steals the movie and I'm quite happy to say that.

"He's a hell of a talent and created a joker that's very iconic and one that will become a classic portrayal of the ages."

And Michael Caine, who plays the hero's butler, was full of praise for the "intensity and ferocity of the performance" given by Ledger.

He adds, "When we were sitting down between takes, he was completely ordinary. He wasn't preparing himself or saying 'Please leave me alone, I've gotta do this.' Instead he was talking to me.

"We would sit and chat and have a cup of coffee, then suddenly they'd say, 'We're ready, Heath,' and he'd go straight into The Joker. His energy was astonishing, especially when it came from this kind of calm. He's certainly the best villain I've ever seen."

Ledger was found dead from an accidental overdose of prescription drugs at his New York apartment on 22 January (08). He was 28 years old.

The Dark Knight hits movie theatres in the U.S. on 18 July (08).

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Old 07-18-2008, 04:21 PM
visi0nize visi0nize is offline
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So I'm not really knowledgeable when it comes to download sites or sites you can watch movies on. Are there any places to download this yet or any site to watch it? I can't make it to the theater, but I MUST see this movie.
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Old 07-18-2008, 05:38 PM
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New record high for 1st midnight screening.
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