THE EXISTENTIAL BATSIGNAL HAS BEEN TAINTED
07-22-12
Movie theaters, particularly packed movie houses, are supposed to generate thrills and anticipation especially with a big, epic summertime blockbuster film. The mood in a movie theater has always been about generating excitement - it is a communal experience and the most that should ever happen is that someone speaks too loudly on their cellphone, throws popcorn at the screen and occasional belligerence. A movie theater is a place where people yell, holler, laugh, cry and exhibit a range of emotions. The last thing that anyone ever expected was for a man wearing bulletproof gear and a gas mask to shoot randomly at people watching a film, as he entered from an emergency door and threw tear gas.
Violence has occured at movie theaters before, more often than not in the outside of the theater than the inside (such was the case of the Westwood, L.A. riots outside a movie theater showing "New Jack City", though there were reports of gun violence in other cities). Few probably remember a 45-year-old security guard who shot a woman in the back as he sat behind her while watching "Schindler's List" in a theater, back in January of 1994 (Read this fascinating and eerie firsthand account from a witness
http://www.fright.com/edge/realshooting.html). Fortunately, the woman survived and no one else was hurt but panic did ensue with all patrons leaving the theater en masse. Colorado's tragic incident, however, is a sickeningly senseless act of murders that crossed the line between the patrons watching a film and the reality of the world they were eager to escape from for a couple of hours. Only that line has been blurred with regards to the film that was screened, "The Dark Knight Rises."
Though I have not seen the film, it is pretty close, judging by reviews, to the other two Christopher Nolan-directed Batman installments. I love "Batman Begins," possibly the best Batman flick ever made with equal doses of heroism and noir firmly placed in unison and it had the most full-bodied and developed Bruce Wayne interpretation by far. "The Dark Knight," as great a film as it is, is not really a Batman film - it is a nihilistic nightmare about the Joker painted as a malicious, malevolent and ugly terrorist who has no sense of humor. I liked the ambiguity of the finale and the idea that the hero has to escape from Gotham to preserve himself and the city. In other words, the Joker won and the reality of what was seemingly a comic-book film was, in fact, perilously close to the world we live in.
I am not suggesting that the killer, who has not given a motive for the shootings, has been inspired by the latest Batman flick or the previous Batman flicks (though reports are flooding in that his booby-trapped apartment was full of Batman paraphernalia). In fact, I believe the killer would have used any big-screen event premiere with a huge crowd to carry out his deadly attack (though he did tell police he was the Joker while being apprehended). This 24-year-old college dropout had methodically planned this crime, systematically killing any and everyone at random. In the end, 12 people thus far are dead and 58 or more have survived, some with critical injuries. I am suggesting, however, that an existential reality has infected some escapist, post-9/11 films, notably the revisionist Batman films. Director Christopher Nolan has no doubt used our currently troubled, economically recessive climate to dictate the morally hazy environment of Gotham City. The previews for "Rises" indicate a film that is far more sinister and darker than anything ever attempted before with the title Batman, particularly with clips showing exploding football fields, gunfire at a stock exchange and much more. But this terrible tragedy has infected the film forever and anytime anyone mentions "The Dark Knight Rises" in the future, this Aurora, Colorado tragedy will be alluded to or referenced.
Though the media hasn't quite made the connection between the film's subject matter and the killer (and let me be clear, I could care less if the killer uses the Twinkie defense, murder is murder), I myself might not have made such a connection had it been a Katy Perry concert film. I say pray for the victims of this unspeakably atrocious act and, speaking for myself, I am uncertain if I can bring myself to see "The Dark Knight Rises" anytime soon.