Batman: Gotham Knight
takes the same concept that 2003’s The Animatrix devised for
The Matrix: to prepare audiences for the highly anticipated upcoming
sequel. Six short animated episodes are combined to create an interlocking
storyline of Batman’s various crime-fighting adventures. Each
cartoon is directed by a different anime animation legend, and each
adds to the already noticeably darker tone that Dark Knight adopts.
This bloodier, more torrential collection of stories form the first
ever PG-13 rated Batman animated movie.
Have I Got a Story For You is easily the least impressive of
the six episodes – and it starts off the film. Using a disagreeable,
more abstract form of animation, the blobby characters spill in
and out of their dimensions, and move in a sketchy, jerky manner.
Four skateboarding kids tell stories about their encounters with
Batman, and each paints a completely different picture. This storytelling
method is stolen from Rashomon, although here it is clichéd
and uneventful.
Crossfire finds detectives Chris Allen and Anna Ramirez escorting
a psychotic prisoner into dangerous territory. Allen is skeptical
of Batman’s vigilante methods, while Anna admires the Dark
Knight for his ability to help the crime-ridden city. A bullet-frenzied
crossfire puts Allen and Anna in a dire situation that ends in
a dramatic rescue by Batman himself. Crossfire is not only animated
in a much more appealing style, it is more serious, more intense,
and certainly more engrossing - it is arguably the best chapter
in the collection.
The third episode, Field Test, demonstrates Lucius Fox at his
mechanical best. After he creates a device that essentially makes
Bruce Wayne bulletproof, Batman sets out to test the variable
mechanism. In a battle between a Russian mobster and an Italian
gangster, Batman proves to himself that endangering his own life
is the only acceptable risk in vigilante justice.