Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuSet between the events of Christopher Nolan's "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight", two high schoolers attempt to be the first to capture video footage of Batman, and inadvertently encounte... Alles lesenSet between the events of Christopher Nolan's "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight", two high schoolers attempt to be the first to capture video footage of Batman, and inadvertently encounter the masked vigilante who saves both their lives.Set between the events of Christopher Nolan's "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight", two high schoolers attempt to be the first to capture video footage of Batman, and inadvertently encounter the masked vigilante who saves both their lives.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Lou Zucaro
- Radio Newscaster
- (Synchronisation)
Jerry A. Vasilatos
- Lieutenant James Gordon
- (Synchronisation)
Louie Ruiz
- The Joker
- (Synchronisation)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Up until very recently, fans could never hope to produce a film about their favorite action hero where the quality standards would even approach the original. However, thanks to exceptional software (such as editing and rendering tools), cheaper and more easily available equipment and lots of spending money, I've seen a few films lately that have blown me away--surprising me with their quality and watchability. These are NOT films made by well-meaning geeks that only appeal to other obsessive fans of the series (like a few of the Star Wars fan films, for instance).
Two of the best of these films are Batman films. BATMAN: DEAD END is a great film that asks the important question "who would win if Batman took on Predator?" (I know you are all dying to know) and THE DARK KNIGHT PROJECT is a film that speculates about what might happen if film students went in search of Batman for a documentary film for their class. Both really excel with the special effects and the acting is pretty good. Sure, they are NOT indistinguishable from the original source material--but the gap is significantly tightened.
THE DARK KNIGHT PROJECT is a clever little film and I can't wait to see more from the talented team who made it.
Two of the best of these films are Batman films. BATMAN: DEAD END is a great film that asks the important question "who would win if Batman took on Predator?" (I know you are all dying to know) and THE DARK KNIGHT PROJECT is a film that speculates about what might happen if film students went in search of Batman for a documentary film for their class. Both really excel with the special effects and the acting is pretty good. Sure, they are NOT indistinguishable from the original source material--but the gap is significantly tightened.
THE DARK KNIGHT PROJECT is a clever little film and I can't wait to see more from the talented team who made it.
This is a "Fan Film" but i put it on the list of all the Batman Films and its an amazing 13 plus minutes of story, action, great cinematography of the City of Chicago. The Story takes place between "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight" and it premiered online only days before "The Dark Knight hit theater's world wide and it was very amazingly made. The Batman was incredible, the action, the characters, and that creepy joker laugh... This film really looks a lot like Christopher Nolan's view and it looks like it was a deleted scene from the movie... this was incredible and its hard to believe that its a Fan Film... It is made by fans for fans, But I loved it and recommend it to any super-hero fan.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesSeveral elements served as the inspiration for this short, from witnessing people all over Chicago setting out with video cameras to catch a glimpse of the The Dark Knight (2008) crew shooting during the summer of 2007, to 'Batman' Issue 584 by Ed Brubaker which was titled on the cover "Batman: Urban Myth Or Reality" and within: "The Dark Knight Project!" It chronicled the adventures of two teenaged boys interviewing a slew of Batman regulars, from Commissioner Jim Gordon to the Penguin and Two-Face in their quest to determine if Batman was real or an urban legend. Wanting to stay within the continuity of 'Christopher Nolan''s universe, writer director 'Jerry Vasilatos' took the idea of kids wanting to catch Batman on video and spun it into events that could have taken place between Batman Begins (2005) and The Dark Knight, with Batman emerging as a mysterious new figure that some Gotham citizens believe could be a hoax perpetrated by the police department. In a tip of the hat to another independent film that inspired Brubaker's comic book tale, Vasilatos named his characters "Heather and Mikey" after the teenaged characters in Blair Witch Project (1999). Thankfully, this Heather and Mikey survive their documentary filmmaking efforts. Christopher Nolan and writer David Goyer were inspired by similar comic book moments while penning Batman Begins, most notably a passage in Frank Miller and David Mazzuchelli's "Batman: Year One" where Batman uses a radio frequency to draw bats from all over Gotham to cover his escape from a Gotham Police Department SWAT team.
- VerbindungenReferences Batman Begins (2005)
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 13.500 $ (geschätzt)
- Laufzeit15 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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