Batmania thrills and chills viewers
NEW YORK (AP) - July 18, 2008 "Heath Ledger is going to have the same impact on our culture
as James Dean did," said Finegan, one of many fans across the
country who were both awed and saddened by Ledger's performance.
"He went out with a hell of a bang," said Finegan's son, Alex,
18, who wore a T-shirt emblazoned with Ledger's leering Joker face
in cracked white makeup and those red lips frozen in a sickening
smile. "He stole the show. It was everything I expected and
more."
Manhattan movie theaters are not usually packed at 9 a.m. on
weekdays, but there was not a free seat to be seen at the AMC
Lincoln Square multiplex on Friday morning, and lines lengthened
all day. Many fans were back after trying and failing - like the
Finegans - to get into packed midnight performances.
Media By Numbers, a tracking firm, said the Warner Bros. film,
directed by Christopher Nolan, set a box office record for a
midnight debut, bringing in $18.5 million Friday from midnight
screenings in 3,040 theaters - many of them open 24 hours. That
bested the 2005 performance of "Star Wars Episode III: The Revenge
of the Sith," which took in $16.9 million at its debut. "The Dark
Knight" figure didn't include any of its 3 a.m. or 6 a.m.
showings.
"When we were leaving at 3 a.m. people were still streaming
in," said Susan Pepsin, 31, who saw the film at the Arclight
theater in Hollywood.
Of course, as the latest installment in the Batman series, "The
Dark Knight" likely would have been an event even without the
added interest over Ledger, who died at 28 in January of an
accidental prescription drug overdose. But Ledger seemed at the top
of everyone's mind. During the show, fans applauded many of the
actor's particularly demonic moments.
"He was unbelievable," said Michael Loizon, a 23-year-old
asset manager in Manhattan. "I had no idea he'd be THAT good."
His and his colleague, Michael Holmgren, played hooky from work to
see the film. They didn't get in trouble, though - their boss came,
too.
"I was the ringleader," confessed John Pileggi, a big comic
book and action-film fan. "It was intense, overwhelming," he said
of Ledger's performance. "It's sad to say that it was the role of
his life, because his life is over. He was so young. I have a son
about his age, so I kept thinking about it."
Yet he and many other fans said they hoped the hype over the
death wouldn't somehow diminish what they saw as the brilliance of
the performance. And they said the portrayal was so absorbing that
during the film they forgot about Ledger the man.
"The whole time you know it's Heath Ledger, but at the same
time you have to remind yourself that it's him. He is so
convincing," said Katie Burns, 23, who went to a midnight
screening in Paramus, N.J.
Pepsin said her screening in Hollywood was interrupted by a fire
alarm - and even that didn't ruin it. "The character is so crazy,
I felt at times, Oh my God, I can't believe I'm watching this,"
said Pepsin, a financial planner. "These are images that will stay
in my mind for a long time."
Online, "The Dark Knight," which also stars Christian Bale as
Batman as well as Michael Caine, Aaron Eckhart, Maggie Gyllenhaal,
Gary Oldman and Morgan Freeman, was selling an average of about 12
tickets per second on the movie-ticket site Fandango.com.
The movie was Fandango's second best-selling movie in pre-sales
- "Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith" was No. 1 - and
made up 94 percent of this week's sales.
For Jared Yates, an engineer in St. Louis, Ledger's performance
was "perfect," and there was only one moment where he was
reminded - and jarringly, too - of the actor's death.
"It was where Joker tells Batman that the two of them 'could do
this forever,"' said Yates. Of course, the moviegoer was reminded
that that wouldn't be possible.