The Dark Knight
The Dark Knight “You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.” If Batman Begins is a study in fear and the integration of the shadow, The Dark Knight (2008) is its cruel sequel: a meditation on chaos, moral erosion, and the unbearable cost of ethical choice. Christopher Nolan does not escalate the trilogy by making the action louder or the villains more flamboyant. He escalates the ideas. This is not a film about whether Batman can defeat evil; it is about whether goodness can survive contact with a world determined to corrupt it. Where Batman Begins asks how a man becomes a symbol, The Dark Knight asks what happens when that symbol is put under intolerable pressure. Bruce Wayne has succeeded — Gotham’s crime rates are falling, the mob is cornered, and legitimate institutions are beginning to function again. Yet this success contains the seed of collapse. Batman’s existence has forced criminals to evolve, and into that vacuum s...