All of the main action in this movie takes place over nine days and nights, by far the shortest time span of The Dark Knight trilogy (Batman Begins (2005) takes place over a few decades, and Il cavaliere oscuro - Il ritorno (2012), even when removing the flashbacks that elongate its time span to a few decades, still covers many months within the main action). The only scenes in this movie that are implied to take place outside of these nine days and nights are the brief flash-forwards in the final scene of Harvey Dent's funeral (which would probably not take place for at least one week) and Gordon breaking the Bat-Signal. The "day" with the most screen time in the movie is the final day, which covers forty-eight minutes (a full third of the total running time). Furthermore, unlike the other movies of the trilogy, which contain copious flashbacks, this movie only contains one flashback, when Harvey Dent remembers flipping his coin to Rachel while lying in his hospital bed. With that flashback, this movie not only becomes the only movie in the trilogy where Bruce Wayne does not have a flashback, but also the only movie where the content of the flashback references a previous scene within the movie's main action. The flashbacks of the other movies all either reference moments that take place outside of the movie's main action (a flashback to Wayne's childhood), or moments that, while being part of the main action, are shown for the first time in the flashback.
Scritto da il 05-03-2025 alle ore 07:55

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