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Visual effects company Double Negative provided the 700 different effect shots needed for The Dark Knight, which Nolan used only as a last resort. This figure was relatively small compared to other contemporary films, but the significantly larger IMAX resolution made the respective task longer to complete.
DNEG (formerly known as Double Negative and stylized as D N E G) is a British-Indian visual effects, computer animation and stereo conversion studio that was founded in 1998 in London, and rebranded as DNEG in 2014 after a merger with Indian VFX company Prime Focus; it was named after the letters "D" and "Neg" from their former name. [2]
The Dark Knight is a 2008 superhero film directed by Christopher Nolan, from a screenplay co-written with his brother Jonathan.Based on the DC Comics superhero Batman, it is the sequel to Batman Begins (2005), and the second installment in The Dark Knight trilogy.
The Joker is a character portrayed by Heath Ledger and the main antagonist in Christopher Nolan's 2008 superhero film The Dark Knight.Based on the DC Comics supervillain of the same name, he is depicted as a psychopathic criminal mastermind with a warped, sadistic sense of humor who defines himself by his conflict with the vigilante Batman.
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The Dark Knight Returns (alternatively titled Batman: The Dark Knight Returns but originally titled Batman: The Dark Knight) is a 1986 four-issue comic book miniseries starring Batman, written by Frank Miller, illustrated by Miller and Klaus Janson, with color by Lynn Varley, and published by DC Comics.
Noel Murray of The A.V. Club gave Part 1 a grade B+, saying that "there are ways in which the animated Dark Knight Returns gets across Miller's vision even better than the comics page did." [ 16 ] Kofi Outlaw of Screen Rant gave Part 2 three out of five stars, criticizing the outdated Cold War subplot as "a major distraction from an otherwise ...
With the absence of a Dark Knight game, EA reportedly missed US$ 100 million in potential revenue. [6] The Brisbane branch of Pandemic was shut down shortly after the Batman: The Dark Knight debacle in February 2009; [10] some staff moved to Los Angeles to finish The Saboteur. The studio was closed entirely in November the same year. [4]