Best Batman movie made yet. That’s easy. How does it stack up against the best superhero movies ever? That’s harder to say, because in some ways it’s comparing apples and oranges. _X-Men 2_ and _Spider-Man 2_ are both excellent, but, though _Spider-Man_ does quite a bit with the ol’ power ‘n’ responsibility theme, they’re both primarily action films. _Batman Begins_ has plenty of action, but it is primarily a character study.
Christopher Nolan takes a tremendous risk in playing the story straight and serious. But with smart writing and impeccable performances behind him, he pulls it off. The Batman story is all tied up with revenge — doing it or not doing it — and fear — how to conquer it, how to use it. One of the classic Batman tensions is the thin line between Bruce Wayne and the loonies he squares off against, and this comes out clearly in the film.
Loved seeing Gary Oldman’s Detective Gordon, clearly modelled on the Gordon from Frank Miller’s _Batman: Year One_. Loved seeing the old-school Batman characters like Fox make an appearance, though admittedly I never read those original Batman comics in the first place.
Only quibble: the fight sequences are almost all frenetic blurs that are too hard to follow. At a couple of points this is the right move: in those first scenes after Wayne puts on the Batman costume, we see things from the thugs’ perspective, and the visual language is that of a horror film, where you’re not supposed to clearly see just what the thing that’s attacking is. But even in the more straightforward fights earlier and later, the shots are cut so quicly that it’s hard to pick up any clear _narrative_ of the struggle.
Fear is everywhere in _Batman Begins_. In one of our first scenes we learn how young Bruce Wayne gained his fear of bats. It is fear of the corrupt and powerful that keeps good men like Gordon from acting against the system. The Scarecrow’s poison gas induces paranoid delusions that cause people to react out of fear — and Batman uses theatrics to induce a similar sort of fear in his foes. There’s that thin line between the hero and the villain — though the Scarecrow’s gas can make people fearful who mightn’t be otherwise, while Batman plays upon the inherent weakness in his enemies. There’s a message implicit here, one that comes through loud and clear by the end: fear is something you conquer, and acting out of it is a sure road to failure. It put me in mind of Tony Blair after the London bombings, and how telling Britons not to be afraid was one of the first things out of his mouth, and how similar language has been conspicuously absent from Bush’s pronouncements, post-9/11 and since.
Anyway — I don’t mean to say that this is a conscious or even prominent reference in the film — it was just something I happened to respond to when I saw it. Still, living as we are in a time when how we respond to fear is important, people could do a lot worse than go see this movie.

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July 27, 2005 at 10:12 am
Adam P
Nate,
You speak well and wisely. Batman Begins is the goods.
One thing my brother pointed out that is cool about the movie is that Batman always has his head tilted slightly down, just like in the Miller comics. It’s a small thing, but it speaks to the movie’s attention to detail.
Christian Bale’s film role just prior to Batman was that of a gaunt, troubled guy who couldn’t sleep in The Machinist. He got down to something like 120 pounds for that role. He gained 100 more pounds for Batman. In 5 months. I still cannot wrap my mind around this. Your next posting should be about dramatic weight gain and loss in motion pictures. I like telling people what their next posting should be about.
August 1, 2005 at 8:25 am
Ellen
Thank you for the reflection on the control and use of fear, esp. in contrasting Bush and Blair. I’ve felt like I’m moving and speaking through water, talking to others about how we’re being manipulated by fear tactics into supporting this insane agenda.