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A howl of vigilante justice as Glasgow goes Gotham

Damon Smith reviews the latest new releases to watch in the cinema

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THE BATMAN (15)

Ten years after the conclusion of Christophe­r Nolan’s Oscar-winning Dark Knight trilogy, writer-director Matt Reeves and co-writer Peter Craig revive the tormented DC Comics character with aplomb.

They engineer a dark, brooding serial killer thriller that sows the seeds of a new trilogy, including a tantalisin­g first glimpse of Dublinborn actor Barry Keoghan as one of the cowled crusader’s eye-catching adversarie­s. Every generation has its big screen incarnatio­n of Bruce Wayne. In 1966, Adam West donned gloriously camp attire in a Kapow!tastic extension of a popular TV series.

In the late 1980s, Tim Burton introduced Michael Keaton as

Batman and the rictus grin of Jack Nicholson’s Joker in a marvellous­ly menacing take on comic book mythology that earned the first newlyminte­d 12 certificat­e from British censors. Director Joel Schumacher tarnished the legacy with the garish double whammy of Batman Returns and Batman & Robin before Nolan resuscitat­ed the franchise with the bombastic Batman Begins.

Reeves confidentl­y takes up the mantle, delving into the tortured psyche of a self-destructiv­e and almost uncontroll­ably violent Bruce Wayne, who exorcises personal demons with brute force on rain-lashed streets of Gotham, partly filmed in Glasgow.

Robert Pattinson strips away charm from his reclusive billionair­e, exposing deep fissures in a nihilistic soul, suffocated by a squalid metropolis that is, by his grim assessment, “eating itself”.

The three-hour running time is excessive but permits other characters to breathe rancid air, including Zoe Kravitz’s spirited embodiment of Catwoman – “Got a thing about strays,” she purrs alluringly – and

Paul Dano’s wickedly unhinged Riddler, who goads police with ciphers like the Zodiac Killer.

Bruce Wayne (Pattinson) is determined to honour the legacy of his murdered father, at the expense of his personal wellbeing and sanity. He prowls city streets as masked vigilante Batman in open defiance of the rule of law upheld by police lieutenant James Gordon (Jeffrey Wright) and fellow officers, often returning to his hi-tech lair bloodied and bruised.“If I can’t have an effect, I don’t care what happens to me,” Bruce growls at butler Alfred Pennyworth (Andy Serkis).

The prodigal son hopes to undermine the criminal empire of unctuous kingpin Carmine Falcone (John Turturro) and his associates, including nightclub owner Oswald Cobblepot (Colin Farrell).

A serial killer dubbed Riddler (Dano) targets high-profile city residents, beginning with a forceful interventi­on in the fiercely contested mayoral race between incumbent Don Mitchell Jr (Rupert Penry-Jones) and idealistic ingenue Bella Real (Jayme Lawson).

Bruce is drawn into a deadly game of brinkmansh­ip with Riddler, aided by enigmatic burglar Selena Kyle aka Catwoman (Kravitz), who slinks seductivel­y in the grey area between law and disorder.

The Batman opens with a soaring refrain of Ave Maria as a nocturnal predator stalks unsuspecti­ng prey, establishi­ng a tone of grim foreboding that pervades every frame, including murky cinematogr­aphy that blurs edges of the screen, focusing our attention of the eye of a storm.

Action sequences are slickly choreograp­hed to discordant ebbs and flows of composer Michael Giacchino’s score. Pattinson and Kravitz spark palpable sexual chemistry despite the relentless downpours, while Farrell is virtually unrecognis­able beneath cutting-edge prosthetic­s as a criminal underling with grand ambitions.

He’s perfectly poised for bigger and battier things in an intended second chapter that promises much and hopefully lops 30 minutes off the running time.

ALI & AVA (15)

8/10

Spectres of the past haunt a blossoming new relationsh­ip in writerdire­ctor Clio Barnard’s romance filmed on location in Bradford.

Former radio DJ Ali (Adeel Akhtar) is a taxi driver, who still lives with his soon-to-be-ex-wife Runa (Ellora Torchia) in a home they hoped would be filled with the laughter of children.

The couple haven’t worked out how to break the news of their relationsh­ip breakdown to family and friends and are stuck in a painful rut.

Ali rents a flat to Slovakian parents and kindly collects their six-year-old daughter Sofia (Ariana Bodorova) from school in his car. During one rain-lashed pick-up, he meets Sofia’s teacher Ava (Claire Rushbrook), a widow with an emotionall­y demanding grown-up son called Callum (Shaun Thomas).

Ali offers to drive Ava home to her notorious housing estate and escape the downpour. A connection is unexpected­ly formed between two lost souls from very different background­s.

REBEL DREAD (15)

6.5/10

First generation British-born black film-maker, DJ, musician and cultural commentato­r Don Letts has been a driving force in popular culture for more than 40 years.

Director William E Badgley’s documentar­y explores the life and career of Letts against a backdrop of political and social unrest on home turf including Enoch Powell’s 1968 “Rivers of Blood” speech. It covers Letts’ work behind the camera, directing music videos for Chain Gang, London Calling and Pass The Dutchie, and feature films including One Love starring Idris Elba.

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 ?? ?? The Batman with Robert Pattinson and Jeffrey Wright; below: Ali & Ava with Adeel Akhtar and Claire Rushbrook
The Batman with Robert Pattinson and Jeffrey Wright; below: Ali & Ava with Adeel Akhtar and Claire Rushbrook

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