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Batman : The Dark Knight - Release Date:18 July 2008 (USA) Batman raises the stakes in his war on crime. With the help of Lieutenant Jim Gordon and District Attorney Harvey Dent, Batman sets out to dismantle the remaining criminal organizations that plague the city streets. The partnership proves to be effective, but they soon find themselves prey to a reign of chaos unleashed by a rising criminal mastermind known to the terrified citizens of Gotham as The Joker.(IMDb)

Archive for the ‘Harvey Dent’ Category

‘Dark Knight’ ad push is an event in itself

The campaign for summer’s “Batman” flick has some pretty special effects, too.
By Chris Lee

Los Angeles Times

HOLLYWOOD - The billboards arrived without fanfare or explanation in more than a dozen major cities last May. Bearing two simple catchphrases, “Harvey Dent for district attorney” and “I believe in Harvey Dent,” they featured a photo of a stately Dent (imagine Eliot Spitzer with a shock of blond hair) against an American flag.

But within 72 hours, each billboard had been defaced by identical graffiti: The candidate’s eyes were scrawled over with black rings, his lips crudely rouged with a smeary, clownlike grin. As well, each of the placards’ messages had been altered to read: “I believe in Harvey Dent TOO.”

Although not outwardly advertising anything other than Dent’s political aspirations (never mind the impossibility of running for D.A. in more than one city), the billboards were the opening salvo of one of the most interactive movie-marketing campaigns ever hatched by Hollywood: a multiplatform, hidden-in-plain-sight promotional blitz for the new Batman movie, The Dark Knight, which stars Christian Bale and Heath Ledger and reaches theaters July 18.

By employing a variety of untraditional awareness-building maneuvers and starting the film’s promo push more than a year before the film’s release, marketers at the firm 42 Entertainment (subcontracted by the film’s distributor, Warner Bros.) seem to have struck a chord with The Dark Knight’s core constituency. The promotions - part viral marketing initiative, part “advertainment” - fit into an absorbing, nascent, genre-bending pastime called alternate reality gaming (ARG) that has been the toast of movie and comic blogs for months.

The Dark Knight is mashing up advertising, scavenger-hunting and role-playing in a manner that variously recalls The X-Files, the play Tony n’ Tina’s Wedding, The Matrix, and the board game Clue - all to galvanize fans to bond (with the new Batman and one another) over the course of a wild goose chase.

Or, to be more precise, a wild Joker chase - one that has involved clues spelled out in skywriting, secret meeting points, cell phones embedded in cakes, Internet red herrings, DIY fan contests, and even fake political rallies.

Befitting the campaign’s covert-ops MO, neither Warner Bros. nor 42 Entertainment would comment for this article. But as Jonathan Waite, founder of the Alternate Reality Gaming Network (www.argn.com) sees it, The Dark Knight’s multifaceted promo-push transcends marketing to exist as a stand-alone cultural event.

“This is looked upon as viral marketing, but you have to look at it as an engrossing experience - you have people getting very attached to the game,” Waite said. “You’re not a passive onlooker, you’re taking an active role. And any time you take an active role, you’re emotionally connecting. That’s why people keep coming back.”

As any Bat-fanatic will tell you, the Dent propaganda is meant to conjure Batman’s Dark Knight nemesis, politician turned crime kingpin Two Face (a role memorably embodied by Tommy Lee Jones in 1995’s Batman Forever; Two Face is played by Aaron Eckhart in the new movie). Early in the Dark Knight marketing campaign, an official Web site for the film redirected viewers to www.ibelieveinharveydent.com - a URL notably lacking any references to Batman that urges “concerned Gotham citizens” to “take back Gotham City” by backing the candidate’s run for district attorney.

More specifically, it tells them how to get involved in a faux grass-roots political campaign through initiatives such as filming videos, writing “Take Back Gotham” songs, and coming out to meet the “Dentmobile” touring several dozen American cities.

On March 12, a rally for the fictional D.A. candidate was broken up by Chicago police who seemed perplexed by volunteers handing out Harvey Dent bumper stickers, buttons and T-shirts.

Taking the self-referential tactics a step further, another Web site, www.ibelieveinharveydenttoo.com provides a clue about a connection between the Joker and Two Face that presumably will be explained in the film.

Discovering it takes some work. Call up the site and you’ll see a blacked-out page with the message: “Page not found.” But pull down “select all” from your browser’s edit menu and a shout-out to the killer clown is revealed: a pages-long sequence of repeating Ha-ha-ha’s.

“I’ve never been a fan of the Batman series,” a poster writes on the marketing-analysis blog “Catch Up Lady,” “but this sort of thing makes me want to go see it.”

To date, the Dark Knight campaign’s masterstroke has to be its clown-cake giveaway.

In July, specially defaced dollar bills advertising yet another Dark Knight Web site, www.whysoserious.com, were handed out to fans at San Diego’s Comic-Con. On the Web site, the Joker (Ledger in the film) offered Bat-aficionados the chance to become his henchmen.

These players gathered at a physical location to obtain a phone number that was written in the sky by a plane. From there, they embarked on a scavenger hunt around San Diego. It all ended with a scene taken from the Dark Knight trailer - a fan being abducted by “thugs” in a Cadillac Escalade and getting symbolically “murdered” by armed men who mistook the player for the Joker.

Before you could say “Holy meta-narrative, Batman!” fan bulletin boards and chat rooms went wild with news after players posted about the staged event. “I’m staying glued to this ARG until its end,” wrote blogger Matt Keyser, “and definitely seeing The Dark Knight when it comes out.”

In December, followers noted a mysterious countdown on whysoserious.com that instructed viewers to travel to 22 real-world addresses in cities from coast to coast to pick up a “very special treat” under the name “Robin Banks” (get it?).

Turns out the addresses were bakeries in possession of cakes bearing phone numbers spelled out in icing. Many of those who called the number recoiled in confusion when the cake in front of them began to ring - cell phones encased in “Gotham City Evidence” bags had been baked inside, each containing a phone charger, Joker paraphernalia and explicit instructions to keep the phone with them at all times. In addition to enlisting the players as the Joker’s minions, the devices conveyed invitations to special screenings of newly cut Dark Knight Imax trailers.

“Wow. You really took the cake! Now put the icing on it,” the note says.

So, how are ARGs going to affect the future of movie marketing? “It’s a very powerful marketing tool for a certain kind of product - especially for a tent-pole like the Batman films,” media writer Frank Rose said.

Or, as ARGN.com’s Waite couches the debate: “A movie experience is an hour and 45 minutes, you watch it, you can talk about it, you’re done. But wouldn’t it be cool if you could explore more of it with others and expand the universe yourself? This stuff is tailor-made for movie fans.”

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Harvey Dent Campaign Ad

A campaign ad made to the main points in a phone call received from Harvey Dent regarding his run for Gotham City D.A.

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Batman to go up against Harvey Dent, The Joker and Scarecrow

There has been a rather interesting development in terms of my most anticipated movie of 2008, The Dark Knight.

Speaking to The Los Angeles Times, director Christopher Nolan has revealed that The Joker won’t in fact be the key element of the story.

“The Joker, he sort of cuts through the film - he’s got no story arc, he’s just a force of nature tearing through. Heath has given an amazing performance in the role, it’s really extraordinary”, said Nolan.

Revealing the true villain, Nolan adds “Harvey Dent is a tragic figure, and his story is the backbone of this film”.

Harvey Dent, played by Aaron Eckhart, is Gotham’s District Attorney who is said to start the movie as himself, and end the movie as Two-Face.

The Joker and Two-Face however aren’t the only two villains who’ll be terrorising Gotham in The Dark Knight as Cillian Murphy will also return to continue his role as Scarecrow. “It’s a dark and complex story,” said Nolan, “and the villains are dark and complex as well.”
I’m already a tiny bit too excited about The Dark Knight and this news certainly isn’t helping my case. Will The Joker be the cause of Harvey Dent’s transformation into Two-Face? Possibly.

Either way, our favourite Dark Knight will have no shortage of villains to go up against. I can only hope the movie doesn’t suffer the same fate as Spiderman 3, where too many villains proved to be a very bad idea.
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