The Dark Knight is a
superhero crime
thriller film directed and co-written by
Christopher Nolan. Based on the
DC Comics character
Batman,
the film is part of
Nolan's Batman film
series and a
sequel to 2005's
Batman Begins.
Christian Bale reprises the lead role. The
film follows Bruce Wayne/Batman (Bale), District Attorney
Harvey Dent/Two-Face (
Aaron Eckhart), Assistant D.A.
Rachel Dawes (
Maggie Gyllenhaal), and Police
Commissioner
James Gordon
(
Gary Oldman) and their struggles and
journey in combating the new rising threat of a criminal who goes
by the name of the "
Joker" (
Heath Ledger).
Nolan's inspiration for the film was the Joker's comic book debut
in 1940, and the 1996 series
The Long Halloween, which
retold Two-Face's origin.
The Dark Knight was filmed primarily
in Chicago
, as well as
in several other locations in the United States, the United
Kingdom, and Hong
Kong
. Nolan used an
IMAX
camera to film some sequences, including the Joker's first
appearance in the film. On January 22, 2008, after he had completed
filming
The Dark Knight, Heath Ledger died from a
toxic combination of prescription
drugs, leading to intense attention from the press and
moviegoing public.
Warner Bros. had
initially created a
viral marketing
campaign for
The Dark Knight, developing promotional
websites and trailers highlighting screen shots of Ledger as the
Joker, but after Ledger's death, the studio refocused its
promotional campaign.
The film was released on July 16, 2008 in Australia, on July 18,
2008 in North America, and on July 24, 2008 in the United Kingdom.
Before its
box office debut in North
America, record numbers of advance tickets were sold for
The
Dark Knight. It was greeted with positive reviews upon
release, and became only the second film to earn more than
$500 million at the North American box office, setting
numerous other records in the process. It is also the fourth
highest grossing film worldwide, and only the fourth film to earn
more than $1 billion, worldwide. The film received numerous awards
nominations and two
Academy Awards for
Best Sound
Editing and
Best Supporting
Actor for Ledger's performance.
Plot
In
Gotham City, the
Joker robs a mob bank with his accomplices,
whom he tricks into killing one another, ultimately killing the
last one himself. While investigating the robbery, Batman and
Lieutenant James Gordon
contemplate including new district attorney
Harvey Dent in their plan to eradicate the mob.
However, Batman wonders if Dent can be trusted. Wayne runs into
Rachel Dawes and Dent, who are dating,
and after talking to Dent, he realizes Dent's sincerity and decides
to host a fundraiser for him. Mob bosses
Sal
Maroni, Gambol, and the Chechen meet with other underworld
gangsters to discuss both Batman and Dent, who have been cracking
down on the mobster's operations.
Lau, a Chinese mafia accountant, informs them that
he has hidden their money and fled to Hong Kong
in an attempt to preempt Gordon's plan to seize the
mobsters' funds and hide from Dent's jurisdiction. The Joker
appears and offers to kill Batman for half of the mafia's money,
but they flatly refuse and Gambol places a bounty on the Joker's
head. Not long after, the Joker kills Gambol and takes control of
his men.
In Hong Kong, Batman captures Lau using a
skyhook, and delivers
him to the
Gotham City
police, where Lau agrees to testify against the mob. Dent and
Gordon arrest the mob, and in retaliation the Joker issues an
ultimatum to Gotham: people will die each day until Batman reveals
his identity. When Commissioner
Gillian
B. Loeb and the judge presiding
over the mob trials are killed, the public readily blames Batman,
prompting Wayne to decide to reveal his identity. Before Bruce can
turn himself in, Dent holds a press conference to try and persuade
the public not to sell Batman out just because of one terrorist.
However the public, though grateful for everything Batman has done
for the city, insists that things have now reached a point where
Batman must make the sacrifice, so Dent announces that he himself
is Batman and is arrested as part of a plan to draw the Joker out
of hiding. The Joker attempts to ambush the police convoy carrying
Dent, but Batman and Gordon intervene and capture him. In
recognition of his actions, Gordon is appointed the new police
commissioner.
Later that night, Dent and Dawes disappear. At the police station,
Batman interrogates the Joker, who reveals that Dent's and Dawes'
police escorts were corrupt police and have placed them in
warehouses rigged with explosives on opposite sides of the city—far
enough apart so that Batman cannot save them both. Batman leaves to
save Dawes, while Gordon and the police head after Dent. With the
aid of a smuggled bomb, the Joker escapes police custody with Lau.
Batman arrives, but finds Dent instead of Dawes. Batman
successfully saves Dent, but the ensuing explosion disfigures
Dent's face. Gordon arrives at Dawes' location too late, and she
perishes when the bomb detonates. Unable to cope with this new
level of chaos, Maroni goes to Gordon and offers him the Joker's
location. Aboard a cargo ship, the Joker burns Lau to death atop a
pile of half the mob's money, and has the Chechen killed before
taking control of his men.
Meanwhile, an accountant at Wayne Enterprises, Coleman Reese, finds
out Batman's identity and after failing to blackmail the company,
decides to go public. However, realizing that he does what he does
only because of Batman, the Joker changes his mind about revealing
Batman's identity and issues a public
ultimatum: either Reese is killed within the hour,
or he will blow up a hospital. When attempts on Reese's life are
foiled, the Joker goes to the evacuated hospital, disguised as a
nurse, and frees Dent from his restraints, convincing him to exact
revenge on the people whose corruption led to Dawes' death. Dent
begins by flipping a coin to decide if he should kill the Joker,
and spares him. The Joker destroys the hospital on his way out, and
then escapes with a hijacked bus full of hospital patients.
Out of the hospital, Dent goes on a personal vendetta, confronting
Maroni and the corrupt cops one by one and flipping his coin to
decide their fates. Now with complete control over the Gotham mob,
the Joker announces to the public that anyone left in Gotham at
nightfall will be subject to his rule. With the bridges and tunnels
out of the city closed due to a warning by the Joker, authorities
begin evacuating people by ferry. The Joker has explosives placed
on two of the ferries—one ferry with convicts, who were evacuated
in an effort to keep the Joker from freeing them, and the other
with civilians—telling the passengers the only way to save
themselves is to trigger the explosives on the other ferry;
otherwise, he will destroy both at midnight. Batman locates the
Joker and the hostages he has taken. Realizing the Joker has
disguised the hostages as his own men, Batman is forced to attack
both Gordon's
SWAT team and the Joker's
henchmen to save the real hostages.
The Joker's plan to destroy the ferries fails after the passengers
on both decide not to destroy each other. Batman finds the Joker,
and after a brief fight, is able to subdue him, preventing him from
destroying both ferries. When Batman refuses to kill the Joker, the
Joker acknowledges that Batman is truly incorruptible, but that
Dent was not, and that he has unleashed Dent upon the city. Leaving
the Joker for the SWAT team, Batman searches for Dent. At the
remains of the building where Dawes died, Batman finds Dent holding
Gordon and his family at gunpoint. Dent judges the innocence of
Batman, himself, and Gordon's son through three coin tosses. As the
result of the first two flips, he shoots Batman in the
abdomen and spares himself. Before Dent can
determine the boy's fate, Batman, who was wearing body armor,
tackles him over the side of the building. Gordon's son is saved,
but Dent and Batman fall to the ground below resulting in Dent's
death. Knowing that the citizens of Gotham will lose hope and all
morale if Dent's rampage becomes public news, Batman convinces
Gordon to hold
him responsible for the murders. Images are
shown of Gordon delivering the eulogy at Dent's funeral and
smashing the Bat-Signal. Police swarm the building, and Batman
flees as Gordon and his son watch.
Cast
Christian Bale as Bruce Wayne / Batman, a
billionaire dedicated to protecting Gotham City
from the criminal underworld by night. Bale said he was confident
in his choice to return in the role because of the positive
response to his display in
Batman
Begins. He continued training in the
Keysi Fighting Method and performed
many of his own stunts, but did not gain as much muscle as in the
previous film because the new Batsuit allowed him to move with
greater agility. Bale described Batman's dilemma as whether "[his
crusade is] something that has an end. Can he quit and have an
ordinary life? The kind of manic intensity someone has to have to
maintain the passion and the anger that they felt as a child, takes
an effort after a while, to keep doing that. At some point, you
have to exorcise your demons." He added, "Now you have not just a
young man in pain attempting to find some kind of an answer, you
have somebody who actually has power, who is burdened by that
power, and is having to recognize the difference between attaining
that power and holding on to it." Bale felt Batman's personality
had been strongly established in the first film, so it was unlikely
his character would be overshadowed by the villains, stating: "I
have no problem with competing with someone else. And that's going
to make a better movie."
Heath Ledger as The Joker. Before Ledger was
confirmed to play the Joker in July 2006,
Paul Bettany,
Lachy
Hulme,
Adrien Brody,
Steve Carell, and
Robin Williams publicly expressed interest in
the role. Yet Nolan had wanted to work with Ledger on a number of
projects in the past (though he had been unable to do so), and was
agreeable to Ledger's
anarchic
interpretation of the character. When Ledger saw
Batman
Begins, he had realized a way to make the character work
consistent with the film's tone: he described his Joker as a
"
psychopath,
mass
murdering,
schizophrenic clown
with zero
empathy".
To prepare for the role, Ledger lived alone in a hotel room for a
month, formulating the character's posture, voice, and personality,
and kept a diary, in which he recorded the Joker's thoughts and
feelings. While he initially found it difficult, Ledger eventually
generated a voice unlike
Jack
Nicholson's character in
Tim Burton's
1989 Batman film. He was
also given
Batman: The
Killing Joke and
Arkham Asylum: A
Serious House on Serious Earth, which he "really tried to
read and put it down". Ledger also cited
A Clockwork Orange and
Sid Vicious as "a very early starting
point for Christian [Bale] and I. But we kind of flew far away from
that pretty quickly and into another world altogether." "There's a
bit of everything in him. There's nothing that consistent," Ledger
said, and added, "There are a few more surprises to him." Ledger
was allowed to shoot and mostly direct the videos the Joker sends
out as warnings. Each take Ledger made was different from the last.
Nolan was impressed enough with the first video shoot that he chose
to not be present when Ledger shot the video with a kidnapped
reporter (
Anthony Michael
Hall).
On January 22, 2008, after he had completed filming
The Dark
Knight, Ledger died of an accidental
prescription drug overdose, leading to intense press attention
and memorial tributes. "It was tremendously emotional, right when
he passed, having to go back in and look at him every day [during
editing]," Nolan recalled. "But the truth is, I feel very lucky to
have something productive to do, to have a performance that he was
very, very proud of, and that he had entrusted to me to finish."
All of Ledger's scenes appear as he completed them in the filming;
in editing the film, Nolan added no "digital effects" to alter
Ledger's actual performance posthumously. Nolan has dedicated the
film in part to Ledger's memory.
Aaron Eckhart as Harvey Dent / Two-Face, the district
attorney who is hailed as Gotham's "White Knight". Dent's battle
with the Joker transforms Dent into a murderous, disfigured
vigilante called "Two-Face". Bruce sees
Dent as his heir, demonstrating his realization that Batman will be
a lifelong mission, and furthering the tragedy of Dent's downfall.
Nolan and
David S. Goyer had originally considered using Dent in
Batman Begins, but they replaced him with the new
character Rachel Dawes when they realized they "couldn't do him
justice". Before Eckhart was cast in February 2007,
Liev Schreiber,
Josh
Lucas, and
Ryan Phillippe had
expressed interest in the role, while
Mark
Ruffalo auditioned.
Hugh Jackman
was also considered for the part of Dent. Nolan chose Eckhart, whom
he had considered for the lead role in
Memento, citing his "extraordinary"
ability as an actor, his embodiment of "that kind of chiselled,
American hero quality" projected by
Robert Redford, and his subtextual
"edge".
Eckhart was "interested in good guys gone wrong", and had played
corrupt men in films such as
The Black Dahlia,
Thank You for Smoking, and
In the Company of
Men. Whereas Two-Face is an evil villain in the comics,
Nolan chose to portray him as a twisted vigilante to emphasize his
role as Batman's counterpart. Eckhart explained, "[He] is still
true to himself. He's a crime fighter, he's not killing good
people. He's not a bad guy, not purely." For Dent, Eckhart "kept on
thinking about the Kennedys", particularly
Robert F. Kennedy, who was "idealistic, held a
grudge and took on the Mob". He had his hair lightened and styled
to make him appear more dashing. Nolan told Eckhart to not make
Two-Face "jokey with slurping sounds or ticks".
Gary Oldman as James Gordon, a lieutenant in
the
Gotham City Police
Department and one of the few police officers who is not
corrupt. He forms a tenuous, unofficial alliance with Batman and
Dent. When the Joker assassinates Police Commissioner Loeb, Mayor
Garcia gives Gordon the position. Oldman described his character as
"incorruptible, virtuous, strong, heroic, but understated". Nolan
explained that "
The Long
Halloween has a great, triangular relationship between
Harvey Dent and Gordon and Batman, and that's something we very
much drew from." Oldman added that "Gordon has a great deal of
admiration for him at the end, but [Batman] is more than ever now
the dark knight, the outsider. I'm intrigued now to see: If there
is a third one, what he's going to do?" On the possibility of
another sequel, he said that "returning to [the role] is not
dependent on whether the role was bigger than the one
before".
Maggie Gyllenhaal as
Rachel Dawes, the Gotham
assistant district attorney and childhood friend of Bruce Wayne.
Before the events of the film, she told Bruce that if he ever
decided to stop being Batman, they would be together. She is one of
the few people to know the identity of Batman. Gyllenhaal took over
the role from
Katie Holmes, who played
it in
Batman Begins. In August 2005, Holmes was reportedly
planning to reprise the role, but she eventually turned it down to
do
Mad Money with
Diane Keaton and
Queen
Latifah. By March 2007, Gyllenhaal was in "final talks" for the
part. Gyllenhaal has acknowledged her character is a
damsel in distress to an extent, but says
Nolan sought ways to empower her character, so "Rachel's really
clear about what's important to her and unwilling to compromise her
morals, which made a nice change" from the many conflicted
characters whom she has previously portrayed.
Michael Caine as Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's
trusted butler and adviser. His supply of useful advice to Bruce
and his likeness to a fatherly figure to him has led to him being
labeled as "Batman's
batman".
Morgan Freeman as Lucius Fox, the recently-promoted
chief executive officer of
Wayne Enterprises who, now fully
aware of his employer's double life as Batman, serves more directly
as Bruce's
armorer in addition to his
corporate managerial duties.
Ng Chin Han as Lau, the
accountant who handles the money for the
mobs.
Eric Roberts as Sal Maroni, a gangster who has taken
over
Carmine Falcone's mob.
Bob Hoskins and
James Gandolfini auditioned for the
role.
Colin McFarlane as Gillian B. Loeb, the Police Commissioner of
Gotham until his murder at the hands of the Joker.
The film's Gotham officials and authorities include
Nestor Carbonell
as
Mayor Anthony Garcia,
Keith Szarabajka as
Detective Gerard Stephens,
Monique
Curnen as
Anna Ramirez, and
Ron
Dean as
Detective Michael Wuertz. While
Stephens is an honest and good cop, the latter two are two corrupt
officers who betray Harvey Dent and Rachel Dawes to the Joker. The
film also cast
Anthony
Michael Hall as Gotham Cable News reporter
Mike Engel,
Nydia Rodriguez
Terracina as
Judge Janet Surrillo,
Joshua Harto as
Coleman Reese,
Melinda McGraw and
Nathan Gamble as Gordon's wife and
son, and
Tom "Tiny" Lister,
Jr. as a prison inmate on one of the bomb-rigged
ferries. The film's criminals include
Michael Jai White as gang leader
Gambol,
Ritchie
Coster as
the Chechen, and
William Fichtner
as the Gotham National Bank manager.
David
Banner originally auditioned for the role of Gambol.
Cillian Murphy
returns in a cameo as
Jonathan Crane / Scarecrow, who
is captured early on in the film by Batman.
Musician
Dwight Yoakam was approached
for the roles of either the manager or a corrupt cop, but he chose
to focus on his album
Dwight Sings
Buck. Another cameo was made by
United States Senator Patrick Leahy, a Batman fan who was previously
an extra in the 1997
Batman & Robin and also
was a guest voice actor on
Batman: The Animated
Series. Leahy cameos as a guest who defies the Joker at a
fundraiser thrown by Bruce Wayne.
Production
Development
Before the release of
Batman
Begins, screenwriter
David
S. Goyer wrote a
treatment for two sequels which introduced
the Joker and Harvey Dent. His original intent was for the Joker to
scar Dent during the Joker's trial in the third film, turning Dent
into Two-Face. Goyer, who penned the first draft of the film, cited
the
DC Comics 13-issue
comic book limited
series Batman: The
Long Halloween as the major influence on his storyline.
While initially uncertain of whether or not he would return to
direct the sequel, Nolan did want to reinterpret the Joker on
screen. On July 31, 2006, Warner Bros. officially announced
initiation of production for the sequel to
Batman Begins
titled
The Dark Knight; it is the first live-action
Batman film without the word "Batman" in its title, which
Bale noted as signaling that "this take on Batman of mine and
Chris' is very different from any of the others."
After much research, Nolan's brother and co-writer,
Jonathan, suggested the Joker's first two
appearances, published in the first issue of
Batman (1940), as the crucial
influences.
Jerry Robinson, one of
the Joker's co-creators, was consulted on the character's
portrayal. Nolan decided to avoid divulging an in-depth
origin story for the Joker, and instead portray
his rise to power so as to not diminish the threat he poses,
explaining to
MTV News, "the Joker we meet
in
The Dark Knight is fully formed...To me, the Joker is
an absolute. There are no shades of gray to him—maybe shades of
purple. He's unbelievably dark. He bursts in just as he did in the
comics." Nolan reiterated to
IGN, "We never
wanted to do an origin story for the Joker in this film", because
"the arc of the story is much more Harvey Dent's; the Joker is
presented as an absolute. It's a very thrilling element in the
film, and a very important element, but we wanted to deal with the
rise of the Joker, not the origin of the Joker." Nolan suggested
Batman: The Killing
Joke influenced a section of the Joker's dialogue in the
film, in which he says that anyone can become like him given the
right circumstances.
Nolan also cited
Heat as
"sort of an inspiration" for his aim "to tell a very large, city
story or the story of a city": "If you want to take on Gotham, you
want to give Gotham a kind of weight and breadth and depth in
there. So you wind up dealing with the political figures, the media
figures. That's part of the whole fabric of how a city is bound
together."
According to Nolan, an important theme of the sequel is
"escalation", extending the
ending
of
Batman Begins, noting "things having to get worse
before they get better". While indicating
The Dark Knight
would continue the themes of
Batman Begins, including
justice vs. revenge and Bruce Wayne's issues with his
father, Nolan emphasized the sequel would also
portray Wayne more as a
detective, an
aspect of his character not fully developed in
Batman
Begins. Nolan described the friendly rivalry between Bruce
Wayne and Harvey Dent as the "backbone" of the film. He also chose
to compress the overall storyline, allowing Dent to become Two-Face
in
The Dark Knight, thus giving the film an emotional arc
the unsympathetic Joker could not offer. Nolan acknowledged the
title was not only a reference to Batman, but also the fallen
"white knight" Harvey Dent.
Filming
While
scouting for shooting locations in October 2006, location manager
Robin Higgs visited Liverpool
, concentrating mainly along the city's
waterfront. Other candidates included Yorkshire, Glasgow,
and parts of London. In August 2006, one of the film's producers,
Charles Roven, stated that its principal photography would begin in
March 2007, but filming was pushed back to April.
For its release in
IMAX theaters, Nolan shot four major sequences
in that format, including the Joker's introduction, and said that
he wished that it were possible to shoot the entire film in IMAX:
"if you could take an IMAX camera to Mount Everest
or outer space, you could use it in a feature
movie." For fifteen years Nolan had wanted to shoot in the
IMAX format, and he also used it for "quiet scenes which
pictorially we thought would be interesting."
Warner Bros. chose to film in Chicago for thirteen weeks, because
Nolan had a "truly remarkable experience" filming part of
Batman Begins there.
Instead of using the Chicago Board of
Trade Building
as the location for the headquarters of Wayne Enterprises, as Batman
Begins did, The Dark Knight used the Richard
J.
Daley Center
. While filming in Chicago, the film was
given the false title
Rory's First Kiss to lower the
visibility of production, but the local media eventually uncovered
the ruse.
Richard Roeper of the
Chicago Sun-Times
commented on the absurdity of the technique, "Is there a Bat-fan in
the world that doesn't know
Rory's First Kiss is actually
The Dark Knight, which has been filming in Chicago for
weeks?" Production of
The Dark Knight in Chicago generated
$45 million in the city's economy and created thousands of jobs.
For the film's prologue involving the Joker, the crew shot in
Chicago from April 18, 2007 to April 24, 2007. They returned to
shoot from June 9, 2007 to early September.
Shooting locations
included Navy
Pier
, 330 North
Wabash
, James R.
Thompson Center
, LaSalle Street,
The
Berghoff
, Millennium Station
, Hotel 71, the old Brach's factory, the old Van
Buren Street Post Office, and Wacker Drive
. Pinewood Studios
, near London, was the primary studio space used for
the production. Marina City
was in the background throughout the
movie.
While
planning a stunt with the Batmobile in a
special effects facility near Chertsey, England
in September 2007, technician Conway Wickliffe was
killed when his car crashed. The film is dedicated to both
Ledger and Wickliffe.
The following month in London at the defunct
Battersea
Power Station
, a rigged 200-foot fireball was filmed, reportedly
for an opening sequence, prompting calls from local residents who
feared a terrorist attack on the station. A similar incident
occurred during the filming in Chicago, when an abandoned
Brach's candy factory (which was Gotham Hospital in
the film) was demolished.
Filming
took place in Hong Kong from November 6 to November 11, 2007, at
the Central-Mid-Levels escalators
, Queen's
Road
, The
Center
, and International Finance Centre
. The city's walled city of Kowloon
influenced the Narrows in Batman
Begins. The shoot hired helicopters and
C-130 aircraft. Officials expressed concern
over possible noise pollution and traffic. In response, letters
sent to the city's residents promised that the sound level would
approximate noise decibels made by buses. Environmentalists also
criticized the filmmakers' request to tenants of the waterfront
skyscrapers to keep their lights on all night to enhance the
cinematography, describing it as a waste of energy. Cinematographer
Wally Pfister found the city officials
a "nightmare", and ultimately Nolan had to create Batman's jump
from a skyscraper digitally.
Design

Heath Ledger as the Joker
Costume designer
Lindy Hemming
described the Joker's look as reflecting his personality—that "he
doesn't care about himself at all"; she avoided designing him as a
vagrant but still made him appear
to be "scruffier, grungier", so that "when you see him move, he's
slightly twitchier or edgy." Nolan noted, "We gave a
Francis Bacon spin to [his face].
This corruption, this decay in the texture of the look itself. It's
grubby. You can almost imagine what he smells like." In creating
the "anarchical" look of the Joker, Hemming drew inspiration from
such
countercultural pop culture artists as
Pete Doherty,
Iggy Pop,
and
Johnny Rotten. Ledger described his
"clown" mask, made up of three pieces of stamped
silicone, as a "new technology", taking much less
time for the
make-up artists to apply
than more-conventional
prosthetics
usually requires—the process took them only an hour—and said that
he felt he was barely wearing any make-up.
Designers improved on the design of the
Batsuit from
Batman Begins, adding wide
elastic banding to help bind the costume to Bale, and suggest more
sophisticated technology. It was constructed from 200 individual
pieces of
rubber,
fiberglass, metallic
mesh,
and
nylon. The new cowl was modeled after a
motorcycle helmet and separated
from the neck piece, allowing Bale to turn his head left and right
and nod up and down. The cowl is equipped to show white lenses over
the eyes when the character turns on his
sonar
detection, which gives Batman the white eyed look from the comics
and animation. The
gauntlets have
retractable razors which can be fired. Though the new costume is
eight pounds heavier, Bale found it more comfortable and less hot
to wear. The original suit was also worn during part of the film,
where Batman employs
hydraulic assistance
on the gauntlets to bend a gun barrel and cut through steel.
The depiction of
Gotham City is less
gritty than in
Batman Begins. "I've tried to unclutter the
Gotham we created on the last film," said Crowley. "Gotham is in
chaos. We keep blowing up stuff, so we can keep our images
clean."
Effects
The film introduces the
Batpod, which is a recreation of
the
Batcycle.
Production designer Nathan Crowley, who
designed the
Tumbler for
Batman Begins, designed six models (built by special
effects supervisor
Chris Corbould)
for use in the film's production, because of necessary crash scenes
and possible accidents. Crowley built a prototype in Nolan's
garage, before six months of safety tests were conducted. The
Batpod is steered by shoulder instead of hand, and the rider's arms
are protected by sleeve-like shields. The bike has 508-millimeter
(20-inch) front and rear tires, and is made to appear as if it is
armed with grappling hooks, cannons, and machine guns. The engines
are located in the hubs of the wheels, which are set 3 1/2 feet
(1067 mm) apart on either side of the tank. The rider lies
belly down on the tank, which can move up and down to dodge any
incoming gunfire that Batman may encounter.
Stuntman Jean-Pierre Goy doubled for
Christian Bale during the riding
sequences in
The Dark Knight.

Aaron Eckhart with make-up and motion
capture markers on set.
Below is the finished Two-Face effect.
Nolan designed
Two-Face's appearance in the
film as one of the least disturbing, explaining, "When we looked at
less extreme versions of it, they were too real and more
horrifying. When you look at a film like
Pirates of the
Caribbean – something like that, there's something about a
very fanciful, very detailed visual effect, that I think is more
powerful and less repulsive."
Framestore
created 120 computer-generated shots of Two-Face's
scarred visage. Nolan felt using make-up would look
unrealistic, as it adds to the face, unlike real burn victims.
Framestore acknowledged they rearranged the positions of bones,
muscles and joints to make the character look more dramatic. For
each shot, three 720-pixel HD cameras were set up at different
angles on set to fully capture Aaron Eckhart's performance. Eckhart
wore markers on his face and a prosthetic skullcap, which was acted
as a lighting reference. A few shots of the skullcap were kept in
the film. Framestore also integrated shots of Bale and Eckhart into
that of the exploding building where Dent is burned. It was
difficult simulating fire on Eckhart because only having half of
something being burned is inherently unrealistic.
Music
Batman Begins composers
Hans
Zimmer and
James Newton
Howard returned to score the sequel. Composition began before
shooting, and during filming Nolan received an
iPod with ten hours of recordings. Their nine-minute
suite for the Joker, "Why So Serious?", is
based around two notes.
Zimmer compared its style to that of
Kraftwerk, a band from his native Germany
, as well as bands like The Damned. When Ledger died,
Zimmer felt like scrapping and composing a new theme, but decided
that he could not be sentimental and compromise the "evil
[performance] projects". Howard composed Dent's "elegant and
beautiful" themes, which are
brass-focused.
Release
Marketing
In May 2007,
42 Entertainment began
a
viral marketing campaign utilizing
the film's "Why So Serious?"
tagline with
the launch of a website featuring the fictional political campaign
of Harvey Dent, with the caption, "I Believe in Harvey Dent." The
site aimed to interest fans by having them try to earn what they
wanted to see and, on behalf of Warner Bros., 42 Entertainment also
established a "
vandalized" version of
I Believe in Harvey Dent, called "I believe in Harvey Dent
too," where e-mails sent by fans slowly removed
pixels, revealing the first official image of the
Joker; it was ultimately replaced with many "Haha"s and a hidden
message that said "see you in December."

horizontal
During the 2007
San
Diego Comic-Con International, 42 Entertainment launched
WhySoSerious.com, sending fans on a
scavenger hunt to unlock a teaser trailer and
a new photo of the Joker. On October 31, 2007, the film's website
morphed into another scavenger hunt with hidden messages,
instructing fans to uncover clues at certain locations in major
cities throughout the United States, and to take photographs of
their discoveries. The clues combined to reveal a new photograph of
the Joker and an audio clip of him from the film saying "And
tonight, you're gonna break your one rule." Completing the
scavenger hunt also led to another website called Rory's Death Kiss
(referencing the false working title of
Rory's First
Kiss), where fans could submit photographs of themselves
costumed as the Joker. Those who sent photos were mailed a copy of
a fictional newspaper called
The Gotham Times, whose
electronic version led to the discovery of numerous other
websites.
The Dark Knight's opening sequence, (showing a bank raid
by the Joker) and closing montage of other scenes from the film,
was screened with selected
IMAX screenings of
I Am Legend, which was
released on December 14, 2007. A theatrical
teaser was also released with non-IMAX
showings of
I Am Legend, and also on the official website.
The sequence was released on the
Blu-ray
Disc edition of
Batman
Begins on July 8, 2008. Also on July 8, 2008, the studio
released
Batman: Gotham
Knight, a
direct-to-DVD
animated film, set between
Batman Begins and
The Dark
Knight and featuring six original stories, directed by
Bruce Timm, co-creator and producer of
Batman: The Animated
Series, and starring veteran Batman voice actor
Kevin Conroy. Each of these segments, written
by
Josh Olson,
David S. Goyer,
Brian Azzarello,
Greg Rucka,
Jordan
Goldberg, and
Alan Burnett,
presents its own distinctive artistic style, paralleling numerous
artists collaborating in the same
DC
Universe.
After the death of
Heath Ledger, on
January 22, 2008,
Warner Bros. adjusted
its promotional focus on the Joker, revising some of its websites
dedicated to promoting the film and posting a memorial tribute to
Ledger on the film's official website and overlaying a black
memorial ribbon on the photo collage in
WhySoSerious.com.
On February 29, 2008,
I Believe in Harvey Dent was updated
to enable fans to send their e-mail addresses and phone numbers. In
March 2008, Harvey Dent's fictional campaign informed fans that
actual campaign buses nicknamed "Dentmobiles" would tour various
cities to promote Dent's candidacy for district attorney.
On May
15, 2008, Six Flags
Great America
and Six Flags Great Adventure
theme parks opened The Dark Knight
roller coaster, which cost $7.5 million to develop and which
simulates being stalked by the
Joker. Mattel produced toys and games
for
The Dark Knight, action figures,
role play costumes, board games, puzzles, and a
special-edition
UNO card game, which
began commercial distribution in June 2008.
Warner Bros. devoted six months to an
anti-piracy strategy that involved tracking the people who had a
pre-release copy of the film at any one time. Shipping and delivery
schedules were also staggered and spot checks were carried out both
domestically and overseas to ensure illegal copying of the film was
not taking place in cinemas. A pirated copy was released on the Web
approximately 38 hours after the film's release.
BitTorrent search engine
The Pirate Bay taunted the movie industry
over its ability to provide the movie free, replacing its logo with
a taunting message.
Theatrical run
Warner
Bros. held the world premiere for The Dark Knight in
New York
City
on July 14, 2008, screening in an IMAX theater with
the film's composers James Newton
Howard and Hans Zimmer playing a
part of the film score live. Leading up to
The Dark
Knight's commercial release, the film had drawn
"overwhelmingly positive early reviews and buzz on Heath Ledger's
turn as the Joker".
The Dark Knight was commercially
released on July 16, 2008 in Australia, grossing almost $2.3
million in its first day.
In the United States and Canada,
The Dark Knight was
distributed to 4,366 theaters, breaking the previous record for the
highest number of theaters held by
Pirates of the
Caribbean: At World's End in 2007. The number of theaters
also included 94 IMAX theaters, with the film estimated to be
played on 9,200 screens in the United States and Canada. Online,
ticketing services sold enormous numbers of tickets for
approximately 3,000 midnight showtimes as well as unusually early
showtimes for the film's opening day. All IMAX theaters showing
The Dark Knight were sold out for the opening
weekend.
The Dark Knight set a new midnight record on the opening
day of July 18, 2008 with $18.5 million, beating the $16.9 million
record set by
Star Wars Episode
III: Revenge of the Sith in 2005. $640,000 of the record
gross came from IMAX screenings. However, this record was broken a
year later by the film
Harry Potter and
the Half-Blood Prince, which grossed over $22
million.
The Dark Knight ultimately grossed $67,165,092 on its
opening day in the domestic office, beating the previous record of
$59.8 million held by
Spider-Man
3 in 2007. However, the record was broken by
New Moon which grossed close to
$73 million.
For its opening weekend in the United States and Canada,
The
Dark Knight accumulated a total of $158,411,483 from 9,200
screens at a record 4,366 theaters, for an average of $36,283 per
theater, or $17,219 per screen, beating out the original weekend
estimate by more than $3 million, and topping the previous record
of $151,116,516 held by
Spider-Man 3, while playing in 114
more theaters but on 800 fewer screens. The following Monday, it
grossed another $24,493,313, and the following Tuesday it grossed
$20,868,722.
The Dark Knight also set a new record for
opening weekend gross in IMAX theaters, accumulating $6.2 million
to beat
Spider-Man 3's previous record of $4.7 million.
Besides the United States and Canada,
The Dark Knight
premiered in 20 other territories on 4,520 screens, grossing $41.3
million in its first weekend. The film came in second to
Hancock, which was in its
third weekend, screening in 71 territories.
The Dark
Knight's biggest territory for the weekend was Australia,
grossing $13.7 million over the weekend, the third largest Warner
Bros. opening and the largest superhero film opening to date. The
film also grossed $7 million from 1,433 screens in Mexico, $4.45
million from 548 screens in Brazil, and $2.12 million from 37
screens in Hong Kong. Citing cultural sensitivities to some
elements in the film, and a reluctance to adhere to pre-release
conditions, Warner Bros. declined to release the film in
mainland China.
The Dark Knight sold an estimated 22.37 million tickets
with today's average admission of $7.08, meaning the film sold more
tickets than
Spider-Man 3, which sold 21.96 million with
the average price of $6.88 in 2007. It also broke the record for
the biggest opening weekend ever. As of December 23, 2008,
The
Dark Knight has grossed $530,833,780 in the North American box
office, breaking the previous record of the fastest film to hit
$500 million and $465,993,073 in other countries. As of March 5,
2009, its total worldwide gross stands at $1,001,758,644, and is
the fourth highest-grossing film of all time.
The Dark
Knight is the highest-grossing film of 2008 in North American
box office and worldwide. Unadjusted for inflation, it is the
second highest grossing film in North America of all time with a
total of $533,090,262, behind only
Titanic with $600,788,188. It was
the second film in history to pass the $500 million barrier, also
in the fastest time, in 43 days (compared to
Titanic's 98
days).
The Dark Knight s theatrical run was very different
from that of
Titanic. While
The Dark Knight broke
records in its opening weekend,
Titanic started out slowly
(making $28.6 million in its opening weekend) and then increased
ticket sales in the following weekends.
The Dark Knight
instead slowed down after the first few weekends; 50 other movies
had better tenth weekends and 91 had better eleventh weekends. In
its fifteenth weekend,
The Dark Knight was at #26 at the
box office.
Warner Bros. rereleased the film in traditional theaters and IMAX
theaters in the United States on January 23, 2009, at the height of
the voting for the
Academy Awards, to
further the chances of the film winning Oscars, as well as attempt
to
cross
$1 billion in worldwide gross, which it accomplished in
February 2009.
Home video release
The film was released on
DVD and
Blu-ray Disc in North America on December 9,
2008. Releases include a one-disc edition DVD; a two-disc Special
Edition DVD; a two-disc edition Blu-ray; and a Special Edition
Blu-ray package featuring a statuette of the Bat-pod. The Blu-ray
version presents the film in a variable aspect ratio, with the IMAX
sequences framed in 1.78:1, while scenes filmed in
35 mm are framed in 2.40:1. The DVD versions
feature the entire film framed in a uniform 2.40:1 aspect ratio.
Disc 2 of the two-disc Special Edition DVD features the IMAX
sequences in the original 1.44:1 aspect ratio. In addition to the
standard DVD releases, some stores released their own exclusive
editions of the film.
In the
United
Kingdom
, the film had combined sales of 513,000 units on
its first day of release, of which 107,730 (21%) were Blu-ray
discs, the highest number of first-day Blu-ray discs sold.
In the
United
States
, The Dark Knight set a sales record for
most DVDs sold in one day, selling 3 million units on its first day
of release - 600,000 of which were Blu-ray discs.
The DVD and Blu-ray Disc editions were released in
Australia on December 10, 2008. Releases were in
the form of a one-disc edition on DVD; a two-disc edition on DVD; a
two-disc edition including a Batmask on DVD; a two-disc Blu-ray
edition; and a four-disc
Batman Begins/
The Dark
Knight pack on DVD and Blu-ray disc. As of December 19, 2008,
the DVD release is the top selling film in the Australian DVD
Charts and is expected to break the Australian sales record set by
Finding Nemo.
Reception
Critical reception
Based on 263 reviews collected by
Rotten
Tomatoes, the film has an overall approval rating from critics
of 94%, with an
average score of
8.5/10. Among Rotten Tomatoes'
Cream of the Crop, which
consists of popular and notable critics from the top newspapers,
websites, television, and radio programs, the film holds an overall
approval rating of 90%. By comparison,
Metacritic, which assigns a
normalized rating out of 100 top
reviews from mainstream critics, calculated an average score of 82,
based on 39 reviews.
CinemaScore polls
reported that the average grade cinemagoers gave the film was "A"
on an A+ to F scale, and that audiences skewed slightly male and
older.
Near the time of The Dark Knight's release,
IMDb's Top 250 Movies of All-Time (a
list of the top movies based on user ratings on a scale of 1 to 10)
had
The Shawshank
Redemption ranked number one and
The Godfather ranked number two. On July
19, 2008,
The Dark Knight dethroned
The Shawshank Redemption from
that number one position, however it subsequently slipped back down
the rankings.
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times describes
The
Dark Knight as a "haunted film that leaps beyond its origins
and becomes an engrossing tragedy." He praises the performances,
direction, and writing, and says the film "redefine[s] the
possibilities of the comic-book movie". He named it one of his
twenty favorite films of 2008. Peter Travers of
Rolling Stone writes that the film is
deeper than its predecessor, with a "deft" script that refuses to
scrutinize the Joker with
popular
psychology, instead pulling the viewer in with an examination
of Bruce Wayne's
psyche, Travers
has praise for all the cast, saying each brings his or her "'A'
game" to the film. He says Bale is "electrifying", evoking
Al Pacino in
The Godfather Part II, and that
Eckhart's portrayal of Harvey Dent is "scarily moving". Ebert
states that the "key performance" is by Heath Ledger, and pondered
whether he would become the first posthumous
Academy Award-winning actor since
Peter Finch in 1976 (Ledger ultimately did win
the Oscar). Travers says the actor moves the Joker away from
Jack Nicholson's interpretation into
darker territory, and expresses his support for any potential
campaign to have Ledger nominated for an Academy Award, a call
echoed by filmmaker
Kevin Smith.
Travers says that the filmmakers move the film away from comic book
cinema and closer to being a genuine work of art, citing Nolan's
direction and the "gritty reality" of
Wally Pfister's cinematography as helping to
create a
universe that has
something "raw and elemental" at work within it. In particular, he
cites Nolan's action choreography in the IMAX-tailored heist
sequence as rivaling that of
Heat (1995).
Emanuel Levy wrote Ledger "throws himself
completely" into the role, and that the film represents Nolan's
"most accomplished and mature" work, and the most technically
impressive and resonant of all the
Batman films.
Levy
calls the action sequences some of the most impressive seen in an
American film for years, and talks of the Hong Kong
-set portion of the film as being particularly
visually impressive. Levy and Peter Travers conclude that
the film is "haunting and visionary", while Levy goes on to say
that
The Dark Knight is "nothing short of
brilliant".
David Denby of
The New Yorker holds that
the story is not coherent enough to properly flesh out the
disparities. He says the film's mood is one of "constant climax",
and that it feels rushed and far too long. Denby criticizes scenes
which he argues are meaningless or are cut short just as they
become interesting. Denby remarks that the central conflict is
workable, but that "only half the team can act it", saying that
Bale's "placid" Bruce Wayne and "dogged but uninteresting" Batman
is constantly upstaged by Ledger's "sinister and frightening"
performance, which he says is the film's one element of success.
Denby concludes that Ledger is "mesmerising" in every scene. While
Denby has praise for Pfister's cinematography, he does not rate the
film as a remarkable piece of craftmanship. He puts forward that
while a lot happens in the film, it is often difficult to follow
due to the close, dark photography and editing. Denby says the film
is too grim and is seemingly "jammed together". He surmises that
the "heavy-handed" score and "thunderous" violence only serve to
coarsen the property from
Tim Burton's
vision of the franchise into a "hyperviolent summer action
spectacle", and that the film embraces the themes of terror that it
purports to scrutinize.
A minority of reviewers expressed views that the film might be
vastly overrated and subjected to "incredible, ridiculous amount of
hype". Some suggest that the film was made
famous "in no small part by the very tragic passing away of Heath
Ledger". Other critics describe it as having "very little
substance", "not enough story and not enough Batman", being
"
nihilistic", "pretty wimpy", "zero as
art", "plodding and jejune", "
pretentious and overblown", and "isn't as deep
as some have claimed".
The Dark Knight was ranked the 15th greatest film in
history on
Empire's 2008
list of the "500 Greatest Movies of All Time", based upon the
weighted votes of 10,000 readers, 150 film directors, and 50 key
film critics. Heath Ledger's interpretation of the Joker was also
ranked number three on
Empire's 2008 list of the "100
Greatest Movie Characters of All Time".
Top ten lists
The film appeared on many critics' top ten lists of the best films
of 2008.
- 1st - Elizabeth Weitzman, New York Daily News
- 1st - Frank Scheck, The
Hollywood Reporter
- 1st - James Berardinelli,
ReelViews
- 1st - Joe Neumaier, New
York Daily News
- 1st - Mike Russell, The
Oregonian
- 1st - Peter Hartlaub, San Francisco Chronicle
- 1st - Premiere
- 1st - Empire
- 2nd - Kirk Honeycutt, The
Hollywood Reporter
- 2nd - Nathan Rabin, The A.V. Club
- 2nd - Richard Roeper,
The Chicago
Sun-Times
- 2nd - Owen Gleiberman,
Entertainment
Weekly
- 3rd - Lawrence Toppman, The Charlotte Observer
- 3rd - Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly
- 3rd - Marc Mohan, The
Oregonian
- 3rd - Michael Rechtshaffen, The Hollywood Reporter
- 3rd - Peter Rainer, The Christian Science
Monitor
- 3rd - Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
- 3rd - Sheri Linden, The
Hollywood Reporter
- 4th - Kyle Smith, New York Post
- 5th - Keith Phipps, The
A.V. Club
- 5th - Noel Murray, The
A.V. Club
- 5th - Rene Rodriguez, The Miami
Herald (tied with Hellboy II)
- 5th - Scott Foundas, LA
Weekly
- 5th - Wesley Morris, The Boston Globe
- 6th - Philip Martin, Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette
- 6th - Peter Vonder Haar, Film
Threat
- 7th - Manohla Dargis,
The New York Times
- 7th - Marc Doyle, Metacritic.com
- 7th - Sean Axmaker, Seattle
Post-Intelligencer
- 9th - Robert Mondello, NPR
- 9th - Scott Tobias, The
A.V. Club
- 10th - Michael
Phillips, Chicago
Tribune
Commentary
Mystery writer
Andrew Klavan, writing
in
The Wall Street
Journal, compared the extreme measures that Batman takes
to fight crime with those
U.S. President George W. Bush
used in the
War on Terror. Klavan
claims that, "at some level"
The Dark Knight is "a paean
of praise to the fortitude and moral courage that has been shown by
George W. Bush in this time of
terror and
war." Klavan supports this reading of the film by comparing Batman
– like Bush, Klavan argues – "sometimes has to push the boundaries
of
civil rights to deal
with an emergency, certain that he will re-establish those
boundaries when the emergency is past." Klavan's article has
received criticism on the Internet and in mainstream media outlets,
such as in
The New
Republic's "The Plank." Reviewing the film in
The Sunday Times, Cosmo Landesman
reached the opposite conclusion to Klavan, arguing that
The
Dark Knight "offers up a lot of moralistic waffle about how we
must hug a terrorist – okay, I exaggerate. At its heart, however,
is a long and tedious discussion about how individuals and society
must never abandon the
rule of law in
struggling against the forces of lawlessness. In fighting monsters,
we must be careful not to become monsters – that sort of thing. The
film champions the
anti-war coalition's
claim that, in having a war on terror, you create the conditions
for more terror. We are shown that innocent people died because of
Batman – and he falls for it". Benjamin Kerstein, writing in
Azure, says that both Klavan and Landesman "have a point,"
because "
The Dark Knight is a perfect mirror of the
society which is watching it: a society so divided on the issues of
terror and how to fight it that, for the first time in decades, an
American mainstream no longer exists."
Themes and analysis
According to David S. Goyer, the primary theme of
The Dark
Knight is
escalation. Gotham City is
weak and the citizens blame Batman for the city's violence and
corruption as well as the Joker's threats, and it pushes his
limits, making him feel that taking the laws into his own hands is
further downgrading the city.
Roger
Ebert noted, "Throughout the film, [the Joker] devises
ingenious situations that force Batman, Commissioner Gordon and
District Attorney Harvey Dent to make impossible
ethical decisions. By the end, the whole moral
foundation of the Batman legend is threatened."
Other critics have mentioned the theme of the triumph of evil over
good. Harvey Dent is seen as Gotham's "White Knight" in the
beginning of the film but ends up becoming seduced to evil. The
Joker, on the other hand, is seen as the representation of anarchy
and chaos. He has no motive, no orders, and no desires but to cause
havoc and "watch the world burn". The terrible logic of human error
is another theme as well. The ferry scene displays how humans can
easily be enticed by iniquity.
Awards and nominations
The Dark Knight garnered over 150 nominations from various
critics and organization awards at year's end, winning for various
aspects of the film. Most notable, however, was Heath Ledger's
almost complete sweep of over twenty awards for acting, including
the
Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Supporting Actor, the
Golden
Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture, and the
BAFTA
Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role.
The Dark
Knight also received nominations from the Writers Guild of America (for
Best
Adapted Screenplay), the Producers Guild of America, and
the Directors
Guild of America
, as well as a slew of other guild award nominations
and wins. It was nominated for
Best
Film at the
Critics Choice
Awards and was named one of the top ten films of 2008 by the
American Film
Institute.
The Dark Knight was nominated for eight
Academy Awards for the
81st Ceremony, breaking the previous
record of seven held by
Dick
Tracy for the most nominations received by a film based on
a
comic book,
comic strip, or
graphic
novel.
The Dark Knight won two awards:
Best Supporting
Actor for
Heath Ledger and
Best Sound Editing. It
was additionally nominated for six others, these being
Best Art Direction,
Best Cinematography,
Best Sound Mixing,
Best Visual Effects,
Best Makeup, and
Best Film Editing.
Christopher Nolan was notably snubbed from
a nomination in any of the categories he was up for (
Best Picture,
Best Director, and
Best Adapted Screenplay), and
controversy ensued regarding the lack of a
Best Picture nomination for
either
The Dark Knight or
WALL-E, two films noted for being both critical
and commercial successes. Heath Ledger was the first posthumous
winner of the Best Supporting Actor award, and only the second
posthumous acting winner ever (
Peter
Finch posthumously won the Best Actor award for his performance
in the 1976 film
Network).
In addition, Ledger's win marked the first win in any of the major
Oscar categories (producing, directing, acting, or writing) for a
superhero-based film. Notably,
Richard King's win in the Sound Editing category blocked a complete
awards sweep of the evening by the eventual
Best Picture winner,
Slumdog
Millionaire.
References
- http://boxofficemojo.com/alltime/world/
- Pinewood Studios - The Dark Knight (2008)
production information
- [This is an updated version of that website.]
- (Source: The Fans.)
- (Source: Warner Bros. Consumer Products.)
-
http://www.deadline.com/hollywood/phenomenal-breaking-records-new-moon-doing-dark-knight-midnight-numbers/
-
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118011716.html?categoryid=1082&cs=1
- Dark Knight' breaks box office record
Accessed on July 21, 2008
- Titanic, Weekend Box Office Results
Boxofficemojo, read 2008-10-17
- The Dark Knight, Boxofficemojo, read
2008-10-17
- Weekend Box Office Results for October 17-19
2008 boxofficemojo.com
- (Postdated)
- (Postdated)
-
http://coldleftovers.com/the-dark-knight-overlooked-or-overrated/
-
http://aytemir.com/10-reasons-why-batman-the-dark-knight-is-the-most-overrated-movie-of-2008/
-
http://www.scifiheaven.net/index.php/2009/01/04/featured-discussion-is-the-dark-knight-overrated/
- http://www.flyyoufools.com/why-so-serious
-
http://themoviebanter.com/2009/03/24/the-dark-knightan-overrated-film/
- http://www.lariat.org/AtTheMovies/new/darknite.html
- http://www.cinepassion.org/Archives/DarkKnight.html
-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/reviews/article-1037123/Holy-Moly-Batmans-big-noise--loses-plot.html
-
http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/DisplayMain.jsp?curTime=1243828513985
-
http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/DisplayMain.jsp?curTime=1243828577186
Further reading
External links