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  • 3
    Feb
    2013
    9:49pm, EST

    'Dark Knight' villain Bane takes heat for Super Bowl blackout

    By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

    When some of the lights went out shortly after halftime at Super Bowl XXXXVII, the online jokes went on. Many joked that an electrifying performance by Beyonce and Destiny's Child at halftime took out the Superdome's power, but others pointed to a more sinister entertainment connection -- "Dark Knight Rises" villain Bane.

    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Bane says: It wasn't me!

    In the film, which was released in July, creepy villain Bane booby-traps Pittsburgh's Heinz Field and it slowly crumbles behind real former Pittsburgh Steeler Hines Ward. Defenders chasing him fall into nothingness as the field explodes, and Ward scores the touchdown only to turn around and stare at what had, seconds ago, been a gridiron.

    Bane also attacks the Gotham Stock Exchange, cuts the city from the rest of the world, and gleefully watches it descend into near anarchy. Which didn't, thankfully, happen at the Superdome, where the lights came back on and play restored in less than an hour.

    Joked a Twitter user with the fitting name of The Batman, "Investigation confirms not even Bane's power outage attempt can save the 49ers."

    "How epic would it have been when Super Bowl power went out to hear Bane's voice on the tv say "you think the darkness is your ally?" wrote the Yesh Gaming account.

    The Bane jokes soon became so thick that even their very popularity became the joke. Wrote Brian Lynch, ""Grandpa, where were you during The Great Superbowl Blackout of 13?" "Making Bane jokes to strangers, lad. Making Bane jokes to strangers."

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  • 24
    Jan
    2013
    7:41am, EST

    Christian Bale calls young leukemia patient in hospital

    Justin Lane / EPA file

    Christian Bale.

    By Aaron Couch, The Hollywood Reporter

    Christian Bale has hung up the cape, but he continues to perform good deeds. The actor known for playing Batman recently spoke with Zach, an eight-year-old Batman fanatic who is fighting leukemia.

    In a video posted on YouTube Friday, Zach seemed a bit shy, but at his mother’s prodding told Bale about how he pretends to be Batman and has convinced his younger brother he actually is the Dark Knight.

    “Oh really? He believes that you are,” Bale said before breaking into laughter.

    PHOTOS: Batman through the years

    Zach also told the actor about his cardboard Batmobile and his realistic Batman costume. Bale found common ground with the young fan by telling him about England, which he said was similar to Zach’s native Seattle.

    “I don’t know if you can hear it in my voice, but I wasn’t born in America,” Bale said. “I was actually born in a country called England. A lot of people tell me that Seattle is a lot like England, because it’s kind of rainy.”

    Watch on YouTube

    Bale thanked Zach for watching his films and said the boy embodied the film’s message. “The whole point of the movie is anybody can be Batman. Anybody can be as strong as that and help people and put good out into the world,” Bale said.

    As Bale wrapped up the chat, he said he’d tell “the lady who plays Catwoman” (Anne Hathaway) -- and, yes, even the man who played the evil Bane (Tom Hardy) -- about their conversation.

    PHOTOS: Batman's onscreen villains: 10 greats from the Joker to Bane

    “Even though he was not a good guy in the film, the man who played him is a very good guy. I’ll tell him ... and the director as well,” Bale said. “He loves to hear when I speak to someone who is a big fan of the movies. It makes us all so happy.”


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Bale ended the conversation by saying speaking with Zach had made his day.

    In addition to chatting with Zach, Bale previously flew the family of a young cancer patient to Disneyland to have lunch with him and his family. He also visited victims of the mass shooting at a midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, Colorado.

    Learn more about Zach’s life and battle with leukemia at his ZachAttacksLeukemia Facebook page.

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  • 20
    Jan
    2013
    12:03am, EST

    Batmobile sells for $4.6 million at auction

    By Aaron Couch and Andy Lewis , The Hollywood Reporter

    Here’s a sticker price that could make even billionaire Bruce Wayne think twice before buying. 

    The first of six Batmobiles produced for the 1960s ABC "Batman" TV series has sold at auction for $4.6 million. The crowd at the Barrett-Jackson house in Scottsdale, Ariz., whooped and cheered, and the auctioneer hummed the theme to the classic show.

    Barrett-Jackson / AP file

    This 2012 file photo shows the the original Batmobile in Los Angeles. Batman's original ride, from the 1960s TV series, sold for $4.6 million at auction.

    The car, designed by legendary Hollywood car customizer George Barris, sold for the upper end of its early estimates.


    Photos from THR: Batman through the years

    Barris constructed the Batmobile in just 15 days in 1966. It was built for $15,000 over a 1955 Ford Futura concept model (purchased for $1). It’s been in Barris’ personal collection ever since, and contains Batman gadgets such as a Batphone and an oil squirter fashioned from lawn sprinklers. As an added bonus, it's road legal, should its new owner care to take it for a spin.

    The winning bidder was Rick Champagne, a businessman and car collector from the Phoenix area who has been attending Barrett-Jackson auctions for 15 years.

    Photos from THR: Batman's greatest onscreen villains


    Twitter Follow The Clicker on Twitter

    Champagne said he grew up watching the TV show and came to the auction determined to walk away with the car. Asked where he planned to store the car, the new owner joked, "in the living room. I'm going to tear down a wall and put in my living room."

    The Batmobile ties the record for the highest price fetched for a movie car at auction. In 2010, the Aston Martin DB5 driven by Sean Connery in "Goldfinger" set the record when it went $4.6 million. In 2011, the "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" car auctioned for $805,000, shy of the $1 million it was expected to fetch.

    Related content:

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  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    9:26am, EDT

    G is for Gotham: Video proves Dark Knight is secretly Cookie Monster

    By Courtney Garcia, NBC News contributor

    If you thought Batman sounded a little gruff in Christopher Nolan’s “Dark Knight” film series, you're not alone. There's now an explanation for the muffled speech -- Batman is also the Cookie Monster.

    sesamestreet.org, Warner Bros.

    Is the Dark Knight really Cookie Monster?

    In a viral video posted Aug. 21 on YouTube, a user has recreated a scene from the series where Batman meets with Commissioner Gordon on a secluded rooftop. They're supposedly discussing crime in Gotham City, but a sweeter, more crumbly topic naturally comes up.

    “Cookies. Do you have cookies?”  the Dark Knight demands of Gordon, though the officer appears to have no interest in the subject and blathers onward about his cause.

    “You really started something,” Gordon replies.

    “Cookie, me Cookie Monster,” says Batman.

    Watch on YouTube

    Gordon then begins a rant addressing concerns over the crime rate, escalation of terror, and appreciation for Batman’s presence in the city’s call-to-action. Yet, like most people with a raging appetite, the winged superhero has a one-track mind, and proceeds to demand his delicious treats.

    “Cookie Monster still hungry,” Batman explains.

    The conversation hits a standstill, and Batman decides to carry on his way. After the Commissioner offers a word of gratitude, Batman reiterates his "Sesame Street" ties, and takes a plunge into Gotham City, likely in search of confectionary goods.


    Follow @ NBCNewsEnt

    Though it was the evil villain Bane who reaped most criticism for his muffled voice in the latest edition of the trilogy, “The Dark Knight Rises,” Christian Bale’s growly diction has also been the subject of great debate as the film series played out.

    At Chicago’s pop culture conference C2E2 in 2008, the topic was discussed at length by Kevin Conroy, voice of Batman in the 1990s Fox animation series, who flat-out dissed the star’s performance.

    “Christian Bale is an excellent actor, he just got steered wrong,” Conroy commented. “Obviously someone should have stopped him and said, ‘You sound ridiculous.’”

    Conroy’s remarks were met with applause, though as one reader later noted online, such character direction was inspired by the original comics.

    “The growling voice is not an original idea: it is referenced in the comics,” Brad wrote on ScreenRant.com. “In “Knightfall”, Robin makes a reference to Batman’s “gravelly” voice while talking to Nightwing. Yes, the purpose is two-fold: cover his identity, and to be intimidating. I grew up watching Batman on television, and wondered why no one recognized the voice of well-known Bruce Wayne.”

    Do you like or hate the Dark Knight's raspy voice? Tell us on Facebook.

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  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    8:58am, EDT

    Original Catwoman Julie Newmar disses 'Dark Knight'

    By Courtney Garcia, NBC News contributor

    Everett Collection

    Julie Newmar played Catwoman in the 1960s.

    The original Catwoman herself, Julie Newmar, isn't thrilled by the dark direction recent "Batman" movies have taken.

    Newmar, 78, portrayed the leather-clad anti-hero in the 1960s television series. She recently told Michael Yo on Yahoo!’s “The Yo Show,”that she feels the reimagined film epic doesn’t embrace the good sentiment of her past show, and that the franchise has been moving darker for decades.

    "It's dark," she said about “The Dark Knight” franchise. "I think we had so much fun in the ‘60s, 1966 to 1968. And then Vietnam came and things sort of got darker and darker and darker."

    She attributed some of the modern movie tone to the difference in costumes, now more industrious as opposed to the lighter, simpler ensembles from her days.


    Follow @ NBCNewsEnt

    “What with all the costumes that they have to wear now, there's a lot that you can't see anymore," she said. "You know, when you have everything sort of padded out and very macho and all that kind of thing. It’s as if the costumes act for you."

    Newmar had a hand in the creation of her famed costume, noting that she “redesigned it” with a gold belt around her hips because “it looked better there.”

    Her head-to-toe leather suit has been on display at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington for the past several years.

    Newmar's 1960s series starred Adam West as Batman and Burt Ward as Robin. In a June interview with Hollywood.com, Ward also recalled an appreciation towards the more light-hearted feel of his TV show.

    “People come up to me and they say, 'We like the Batman movies, but we like what you did with Batman much better,'" Ward, 67, recalled. "And, in fact, when  Adam [West] is speaking to a crowd, he says, 'You know, when you go to the movie theaters, you see the Dark Knight. But with Burt and me… we’re the Bright Knights.'"

    But West can give credit when credit is due. The 83-year-old actor, who recently appeared on Seth MacFarlane’s animated series, “Family Guy,” said in an interview with IGN in April that, unlike Newmar, he was a"Dark Knight" admirer.

    “Absolutely. I'm a fan of anything that's good, especially when it's conscientiously good,” West remarked.

    West was also asked if he may reprise his superhero role in animated fashion.

    “I get asked about it often, but I'm not sure. I just go my own way,” he said. “If my agent calls and presents me with something, and I find it refreshing or illuminating, yeah I'll do it. To hear the fans [asking about a Batman series] it's great. It means that I'm still being considered for all kinds of different things. As you get older, that's pretty rare, and wonderful. “

    Watch on YouTube

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  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    5:56pm, EDT

    Christian Bale visits victims of movie theater shooting in Aurora, Colo.

    .

    By Jordan Zakarin, The Hollywood Reporter

    Christian Bale is making a quiet trip to Aurora, Colo. to visit with the victims of last week's movie theater massacre.

    With free time thanks to the cancellations of premieres and press appearances for "The Dark Knight Rises" in Mexico and Japan, Bale took it upon himself to visit, Warner Bros. told The Denver Post.

    More from THR: 'Dark Knight Rises' director Christopher Nolan calls Colorado shooting 'devastating'


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    On Friday, the Oscar-winner issued a brief statement expressing his sympathies to those impacted by the mass shooting, allegedly carried out by James Holmes, at the midnight screening of Bale's final Batman film.

    “Words cannot express the horror that I feel,” he said at the time. "I cannot begin to truly understand the pain and grief of the victims and their loved ones, but my heart goes out to them."

    More from THR: 'The Dark Knight Rises' cast -- What's next for Christian Bale and company?

    Last week, a petition urging Bale to visit the victims in Colorado emerged online.

    Slideshow: Shooting at Batman screening in Aurora, Colo.

    Ted S. Warren / AP

    As many as 12 people were killed and 50 injured at a shooting at the Century 16 movie theatre in Aurora, Colo. early Friday during the showing of the latest Batman movie.

    Launch slideshow

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  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    12:33pm, EDT

    String of incidents involving Batman movie causes jitters after shooting in Aurora, Colo.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Several incidents in recent days involving screenings of the new Batman movie underscore the heightened anxiety about security at movie theaters in the wake of the mass shooting in Aurora, Colo.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    -- On Monday, about 100 moviegoers in Edgewater, N.J., were evacuated from a showing of "The Dark Knight Rises" after a patron saw a man opening an emergency exit, police told NJ.com.

    The patron who called the police said that about 90 minutes into the show, a man stood up, walked to an emergency exit and spoke to someone outside. He then returned to his seat, but wouldn't come forward when the police arrived at the theater. The showing was canceled as a precaution.

    -- A 52-year-old moviegoer in Norwalk, Calif., was arrested Sunday after allegedly shouting about a gun and the recent movie-theater shooting in Colorado, sheriff's officials said Monday.

    Clark Tabor allegedly created the disturbance during a screening of "The Dark Knight Rises," sheriff's officials said.

    Several witnesses told police the suspect appeared to hold his cellphone in the air and yelled, "Does anyone have a gun?" and "I should go off like in Colorado."

    Tabor was arrested on suspicion of making criminal threats and is being held on $50,000 bail plus unrelated warrants, police said.


    No weapons were found on the suspect, in the theater or its surrounding area, or in Tabor's residence, police said.

    -- Also on Sunday, a fight broke out in a Pittsburgh screening of “The Dark Knight Rises.” No weapons were found and no arrests were made, officials said.

    -- A 27-year-old man in Arizona was arrested Friday on suspicion of disorderly conduct and threatening and intimidating after witnesses say he appeared drunk and was acting strangely during a showing of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Sierra Vista, according to The Associated Press.

    A moviegoer confronted Michael William Borboa, which led to about 50 people fleeing the theater, the AP reported.

    -- In Maine, a 49-year-old man claimed he carried a loaded gun in his backpack into a recent showing of the movie, state police said. Timothy Courtois was stopped Sunday morning for speeding when police found several guns in his car – including an AK-47 assault rifle. Courtois reportedly told authorities that he was on his way to shoot a former employer a day after watching the Batman movie.

    Warner Bros. said on Monday "The Dark Knight Rises" took in $160.8 million at U.S. and Canadian box offices over the weekend, which is lower than what the industry had estimated for the debut before the Aurora movie theater massacre. The movie ranks No. 3 on the list of top three-day opening weekends behind No. 1 "The Avengers" at $207 million and No. 2 "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part II," which earned $169 million.


    NBCLosAngeles.com and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    107 comments

    We've all been told that freedom of speech STOPS at the point of yelling FIRE in a crowded theater. Now, you can't yell "GUN" in a crowded theater either. RIGHTLY SO. Remember The Who concert from Cincinnati in 1979 when 11 people died from being trampled? Stuff like that actually happens.

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    Explore related topics: colorado, los-angeles, batman, aurora, dark-knight, james-holmes
  • 21
    Jul
    2012
    1:57pm, EDT

    'Dark Knight Rises' still on track for $165 million opening weekend

    Some major movie theater chains announced they will not release weekend box office numbers for "The Dark Knight Rises" out of respect for the victims of the tragedy in Colorado. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    Julio Cortez / AP

    In this photo taken with a fisheye lens, an audience watches a late-night showing of "The Dark Knight Rises" inside the Liberty Science Center IMAX theater Friday in Jersey City, N.J.

    By Pamela McClintock, The Hollywood Reporter

    There was an unusual silence in Hollywood Saturday morning as studios refrained from officially releasing grosses for "The Dark Knight Rises" and other titles because of the shooting in a suburban Denver multiplex that left at least a dozen dead and dozens injured.

    PHOTOS: 'The Dark Knight Rises' Premiere: Bale, Hathaway, Gordon-Levitt, Hardy Celebrate Nolan's Final Batman Film

    But insiders with access to theater grosses say Christopher Nolan's final "Batman" pic easily topped the Friday box office with a gross in the $76 million to $77 million range — the third-best opening Friday of all time after "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 2" ($91.1 million) and "The Avengers" ($80.8 million). Both those films had the advantage of being released in 3-D.

    Friday's gross includes $30.6 million in midnight grosses, the second-best midnight number of all time.

    Based on its opening day performance, "The Dark Knight Rises" appears headed for a $165 million to $170 million weekend unless business drops off dramatically. That would mark either the second-best or third-best opening weekend of all time after "Avengers" ($207.4 million) and "Deathly Hallows Part 2" ($169.2 million), and easily beats the $158 million debut of "The Dark Knight."

    Heading into the weekend, most thought "The Dark Knight Rises" would open in the $175 million to $185 million range. It's likely that the film lost some amount of business on Friday — and particularly during late-night shows — because of the theater shooting in Aurora, Colo.

    According to police, suspect James Eagan Holmes, now in custody, sported red hair and declared himself the Joker before opening fire during the midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises."

    "The Dark Knight Rises" — earning a glowing A CinemaScore — returns Christian Bale in the role of the caped crusader and introduces Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Marion Cottilard to the franchise.

    Related: Christian Bale: 'My heart goes out to them'

    Warner Brothers, who partnered with Legendary Pictures on "The Dark Knight Rises," announced Friday afternoon it wouldn't report weekend grosses out of respect for the victims of the shooting. By late evening, other Hollywood studios, along with independent distributors, said they would follow suit, at least on Saturday. Some studios may report numbers on Sunday.

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  • 20
    Jul
    2012
    11:50am, EDT

    Parents say shooting won't make them keep kids away from Batman movie

    By Rebecca Dube, TODAY, TODAY Moms editor

    Will the tragic shooting at a Colorado movie theater prompt parents to keep kids away from the new Batman movie?

    Most parents on the TODAY Moms Facebook page say no -- the scary news may cause them to hug their children a little more tightly tonight, but they won't keep their kids home from the movies.

    "Are we so unreasonable as to blame the movie now?" Sarah Gullion asked. "Yes, my superhero-obsessed little girl will still be going to see a movie she has anticipated for months and months."

    A gunman opened fire at a midnight showing of "The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, Colo., killing at least 12 people (as of Friday morning) and injuring dozens more. Police in New York, Washington, D.C. and other cities have announced plans to step up patrols at movie theaters showing the new Batman movie, which has been one of the summer's most highly anticipated movies.

    Laurie Schultz wondered what message skipping the movie would send to kids. "You can't live your life fearing death," she wrote. "That's not living."

    Danielle Fansler, a mom of five, said she would let her kids go to the movies, but will tell them what to do if gunfire breaks out. "I will tell my kids the same thing I normally do in this situation: Use common sense when it comes to these things and if faced with this situation hide and run as soon and as fast as you can in a zig-zag pattern as it is harder to shoot a moving, darting object."

    Another TODAY Moms community member, Courtnie Webb, replied, "Oh Danielle, my heart just broke when you described how you would tell your kids how to escape a shooter. We didn't have to worry about these things when we were kids. I guess I'm going to have to start discussing things like this with my son in a couple of years too."

    Other parents admitted that they'll think twice about letting kids see "The Dark Knight Rises," even though they know the chances of violence happening elsewhere are very slim.

    "I let my 11-year-old son and 12-year-old niece see Spider-Man by themselves (I was in the mall the movies are located in) a week ago and I doubt I'll ever do it again," Kristin Miller wrote. "I know we shouldn't let the actions of a sick individual alter our lives but I would feel uneasy doing this anymore."

    Others said they wouldn't let their children go to a midnight showing -- not because of fears of violence, but because they just didn't think it was appropriate for their age.

    Writes Kim Olcean Sacramone: "I think the question should be would you let your 'young' child go to a midnight showing; it really does not matter what movie it was."

    Related story:

    How to talk to children about school shootings

    Jennifer Seeger, 22, who was in the Aurora, Colo., movie theater where a gunman opened fire, speaks to TODAY's Matt Lauer again, saying she saw a lot of children in the theater for the midnight showing of the new Batman movie and recalling the shooter standing so close she could feel gun shells "burning my forehead."

     

    26 comments

    t is readily apparent that there is something wrong with America's lifestyle and culture, when young people are conditioned and hyper-stimulated by Hollywood, and all these violent schlock... to the point where they would hold midnight movies, fill up a theater, and hyper-stimulate young men and wom …

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    Explore related topics: violence, movies, featured, batman
  • 20
    Jul
    2012
    3:04pm, EDT

    Cops: Weeks of planning went into shootings at Colo. Batman screening

    The gunman reportedly never said a word while shooting 71 people, killing 12, in a soldout show for "The Dark Knight Rises." NBC News' Miguel Almaguer reports.

    By M. Alex Johnson and Pete Williams, NBC News

    Updated at 10:14 p.m. ET: A graduate student's attack in a sold-out theater near Denver showing the new Batman movie, in which 12 people were killed early Friday, was the culmination of two months of meticulous planning that included a potentially deadly booby trap left in the suspect's home for investigators, authorities said.

    Fifty-eight other people were injured, many of them seriously, in the shootings shortly after midnight at the Century 16 Movie Theaters complex in Aurora, Colo. Earlier reports had said 59 people were injured, but police revised that number at a news conference Friday night. All but a small handful of the injured had been shot, Police Chief Dan Oates said.

    Thirty people remained in area hospitals Friday night, 11 of them in critical condition, after a carefully orchestrated attack in which the suspect, identified as James Eagan Holmes, 24, bought all of his weapons and ammunition legally beginning in May.

    Late Friday, the family of Alex Sullivan, 27, said in a statement that he was among the dead, the Denver Post and The Associated Press reported. Heart-wrenching photographs taken earlier Friday showed Sullivan's father, Tom, grieving and pleading for information about his son. 


    Federal and local enforcement officials said Holmes was sheathed in a helmet, a gas mask, a tactical bulletproof vest, throat and groin protectors and tactical gloves. All of the gear was black.

    Holmes was armed with two .40-caliber Glock handguns, a Remington 870 single-barrel pump shotgun, a Smith & Wesson AR-15 assault-style rifle and as many as 6,000 rounds of ammunition, Oates said.

    The scene also appeared to have been specially targeted for maximum carnage — the local premiere of one of the most eagerly awaited movies of the year, "The Dark Knight Rises," the third in the series of director Christopher Nolan's Batman films.

    In a statement, Nolan expressed "profound sorrow at the senseless tragedy that has befallen the entire Aurora community."

    Aurora, Colo., Police Chief Dan Oates says the suspect in the theater shootings bought his weapons and ammunition legally.

    After he was arrested outside the theater, Holmes told police that he was the Joker, a reference to one of the most prominent villains in the Batman canon, a law enforcement official told NBC News on condition of anonymity. (The official said the suspect had dyed his hair red or orange, which isn't typically associated with the green-haired Joker character, who doesn't appear in "The Dark Knight Rises.")

    Aurora police said Holmes also booby-trapped his apartment with an elaborate network of wire-connected bottles containing an unknown liquid, presumably intended to go off when authorities arrived to canvass his home.

    Holmes told police about the trap before they arrived, however, and investigators hadn't entered the apartment Friday night. They were analyzing gases and examining photographs of the scene to figure out how to deal with the materials and had decided to defer any action until Saturday at the earliest, Oates said.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    "It's not something I've ever seen before," said Oates, who said that the area was evacuated and that police were expected to remain on the scene "for hours or days."

    Holmes, a graduate student from San Diego who was in the process of withdrawing from the neuroscience program at the University of Colorado-Denver medical school, put up no resistance when he was arrested in a parking lot at the theater, police said. He retained legal counsel and wasn't answering investigators' questions, they said.

    "We are confident he acted alone," Oates said of Holmes, who was scheduled to appear in Arapahoe County District Court on Monday morning to face unspecified charges. Authorities refused to speculate on his possible motive.

    One of those killed was Jessica Ghawi, a sportswriter who survived a June 2 mass shooting at a mall in Toronto in which two people were killed and seven others were injured. Ghawi blogged under the name Jessica Redfield.

    Defense officials told NBC News that a sailor at Buckley Air Force Base in Aurora was missing and presumed to have been killed. A second sailor and two airmen from Buckley were also shot. Their identities and conditions weren't available.

    'Mass chaos'
    Authorities said the gunman appeared at the front of the theater at 12:39 a.m. (2:39 a.m. ET), about 20 minutes into the film, and released two canisters of gas. Witnesses told reporters that the gunfire erupted during a shootout scene. Authorities responded within a minute and a half, Oates said.

    "It was mass chaos," witness Jennifer Seeger told TODAY. The gunman shot the ceiling and then "he threw in the gas can, and then I knew it was real."

    Witnesses said the gunman entered the theater at Aurora Town Center through an emergency exit door. But a federal law enforcement official told The Associated Press that the suspect bought a ticket and went in as part of the crowd. He is believed to have propped open an exit door as the movie was playing, the official said.

    Watch live video from KUSA

    Aurora is a suburb less than 10 miles east of downtown Denver and just 15 miles northeast of Littleton, near the scene of what had been the worst mass shooting in Colorado: the Columbine High School massacre on April 20, 1999, when two gunmen killed 12 fellow students and a teacher and wounded 26 other people before killing themselves.

    Three of the suspect's four weapons were found in his white Hyundai parked at the back entrance to the theater; one of the handguns was found in the theater.

    Law enforcement officials told NBC News that the weapons were legally bought from local stores of two national chains — Gander Mountain Guns and Bass Pro Shop — beginning in May.

    Oates didn't say what kind of magazines were used, but he said "many, many rounds were fired." Some rounds penetrated an adjoining theater and injured at least one person, he said.

    Jennifer Seeger, who sat in the second row of the theater when the gunman arrived, tells NBC's Brian Williams about her ordeal.

    James Yacone, the FBI's agent in charge in Denver, said there was no indication of a link to terrorism. Holmes wasn't on any federal law enforcement watch lists, authorities told NBC News, and Oates said he had no police record beyond a speeding ticket last year.

    The few people who had any contact with Holmes described him as a recluse who lived with his shades drawn and who, when he did meet someone, revealed little.

    "He kept to himself, didn't like a lot of attention," said Melvin Evans, a neighbor.

    Another neighbor, Kaitlyn Fonzi, said, "We never heard anything abnormal until midnight this morning, when we heard loud techno music playing" from Holmes' apartment.

    'Pain and grief ... too intense for words'
    Gov. John Hickenlooper said at a news conference that "our hearts are broken as we think of the friends and family of the victims of this senseless tragedy." He called the shootings "the act of an apparently very deranged mind."

    "The pain and grief (are) too intense for words, but we can't let it keep us from our lives," Hickenlooper said. "We are going to come back stronger from this, but it is obviously going to be a very long process."

    President Barack Obama cut short a campaign visit to Florida to return to Washington ahead of schedule.

    He called for reflection after the attack. "There are going to be other days for politics," Obama said during an abbreviated appearance in Fort Myers, where he led a moment of silence on behalf of the victims and their families.

    More on this story from breakingnews.com

    At a campaign appearance in Bow, N.H., Republican presidential challenger Mitt Romney said: "Today is to remember and reach out and remember our blessings in life. Each of us will hold family close and spend a little less time thinking about the worries of our day and helping those in need of compassion."

    'We need to go'
    Moviegoers described scenes of chaos and terror inside the movie theater.

    Tanner Coon, 17, describes seeing flashes of gunfire, which he thought were fireworks, amid the chaos of trying to escape the shooting as he was "trying to calm" his friend's 12-year-old brother.

    Tanner Coon, who was in the theater with a friend and the friend's 12-year-old brother when the shooter came in, said he told them to "get down" when he heard the gunshots.

    The shooter fired off about 20 rounds and there was then a pause and a "period of quietness when everybody started running out," Coon said.

    "I slipped on some blood and landed on a lady. I shook her and said, 'We need to go.' There was no response, so I presume she was dead," Coon said.

    PhotoBlog: More images from the scene of the shooting in Aurora

    Paris premiere canceled
    Film critics have noted the dark, anxiety-fueled themes of "The Dark Knight Rises," which reminded some of the atmosphere in the days after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. It had been projected to be one of the biggest films of the year, and theaters around the world began showing it at 12:01 a.m. Friday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Warner Bros. and the filmmakers are deeply saddened to learn about this shocking incident. We extend our sincere sympathies to the families and loved ones of the victims at this tragic time," the studio said in a statement.

    Chris Dodd, chairman of the Motion Picture Association of America, said in a statement:

    "We share the shock and sadness of everyone in the motion picture community at the news of this terrible event. We extend our prayers and deepest sympathies to the victims, their loved ones and all those affected by this tragedy."

    Miguel Almaguer, F. Brinley Bruton, Kristen Dahlgren, Bill Dedman, Jay Gray, Charles Greene, Garrett Haake, Ian Johnston, Zoya Khan, Jim Miklaszewski, Daniel Strieff, Mike Taibbi, Shawna Thomas, David Wyllie and Edgar Zuniga of NBC News and NBC stations KUSA of Denver and KNSD of San Diego contributed to this report.

    Related content from NBCNews.com:

    • Theater shooting suspect was buying guns, dropping out of neuroscience program
    • Police:'Sophisticated' booby-trap in Colorado shooting suspect's apartment
    • Families, friends anxiously await word of missing moviegoers
    • Raw audio documents eerie first moments of Colo. theater shooting
    • Mass murderers often not mentally ill, but seeking revenge, experts say
    • Woman who died in Colo. movie rampage narrowly escaped being shot last month
    • Security at movie theaters comes into focus in wake of shootings
    • People with same name as suspect hounded on social media
    • Witnesses react online to 'Dark Knight' theater shooting

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    9413 comments

    Another nut case.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: police, colorado, featured, batman, aurora, crime-and-courts, dark-knight-rises
  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    5:25pm, EDT

    'Dark Knight Rises' offers spectacularly enjoyable battle of good vs. evil

    The first showings sold out quickly for the much-anticipated summer blockbuster "The Dark Knight Rises." The third and final Batman installment may break opening weekend records. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    By Cody Delistraty, NBC News

    REVIEW: Mixing themes from the French Revolution, Occupy Wall Street and Sept 11, “The Dark Knight Rises” takes on terrorism and civilian uprising with impressive focus, and, considering the inherently dark nature of the film, a lot of spectacularly enjoyable moments.

    The nearly three-hour tale reaches epic proportions when multifaceted good versus ambiguous evil must face off, but there’s enough cheesy dialogue and beautiful women to remind you that this isn't just director Christopher Nolan's doctoral thesis, but a bustling summer blockbuster.

    Nolan’s final film of the "Dark Knight" trilogy begins with Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) as a limping hermit, locking himself up in his mansion after taking the fall for Harvey Dent. Rumors quickly spread that the once billionaire playboy has devolved into a Howard Hughes-esque eccentric.

    Wayne, of course, comes out of hiding upon the always-wise counsel of the venerable Alfred (Michael Caine), who sadly is absent from much of the film. Bruce then goes to play with high-tech toys provided by Lucius Fox (Morgan Freeman), and soon meets a new ensemble of characters including Selina Kyle/Catwoman (Anne Hathaway), businesswoman Miranda Tate (Marion Cotillard) and police officer John Blake (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), all who turn in more convincing, more fascinating performances than Bale and play roles that are just as vital.

    Exiting into a city terrorized by gigantic villain Bane (Tom Hardy) and extreme civil unrest kicked off by a Bastille-style prison storming, Batman is initially no match for his new nemesis. Both raspy-voiced Batman and Bane, who speaks through a medicine-dispensing mask, are tough to understand, but there are a few more similarities between the two. Nolan constantly asks the viewer to ponder whether one is ever truly good or truly evil -- is character ambiguous and shifted only by environment? Does individuality or an ability to work with others show heroism? Is seduction and stereotypical femininity a greater threat than brute, masculine violence? Should Bruce Wayne go heli-skiing?


    Follow @ msnbc_ent

    These are the kinds of moralistic walks Nolan takes viewers on, waxing more Dostoevsky than the year's other huge superhero films, "The Avengers" and "The Amazing Spider-Man" For "Avengers” and "Spider-Man," laughs, tongue-in-cheek actors and action were the basis of what made the films enjoyable. For Nolan, character exploration and massively scaled scenes of terrorism and class warfare -- all of which seem far too real -- create visual and visceral excitement.

    Visually, the film is tough to beat. Nolan boasted to Empire Magazine (via The Playlist) earlier this year that “Rises” is "the biggest (movie) anyone's done since the silent era, in technical terms.”

    With thousands of extras and massive set pieces, he may very well be right. Nolan also cited Dickens’ “A Tale of Two Cities” in the interview, and the sweeping scenes in which the poor violently steal from the rich, literally forcing them out of their homes, channels Dickens but also seems to foresee a dystopian future in which Occupy Wall Street acquires greater organization, more hard-liners and serious firepower. “Rises” is the French Revolution in New York -- with heavy-breathing heroes and antiheroes, not to mention an exploding football field sure to get the adrenaline pumping.

    At times, it feels like appeasing the fanboy demographic is the only reason Nolan included Miranda Tate and leather-clad Catwoman. Fortunately, their raison d’être is redeemed by a series of plot twists and an exploration of the good versus evil battle that rages inside all of us.

    Typical superhero stuff, perhaps. Yet even if the overarching ideas are typical, they’re explored and achieved so effectively that the film is at once deeply disturbing and extremely enjoyable. There's no performance here quite like Heath Ledger's Joker, but this is also sort of the point. Evil can manifest itself through the masses, not just through a single, psychotic individual. What is evil, Nolan asks? What is Batman even fighting for?

    Do you think the film can top "The Dark Knight"? Will you be seeing a midnight premiere or opening release? Head over to our Facebook page to share your thoughts.

    Related content:

    • Rush Limbaugh: 'Dark Knight Rises' villain Bane is a dig at Mitt Romney
    • Revved up for 'The Dark Knight Rises'? Check out teaser for Batmobile film
    • Holy incompatibility, Batman! Could Robin appear in 'Dark Knight Rises'?
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  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    8:09am, EDT

    Rush Limbaugh: 'Dark Knight Rises' villain Bane is a dig at Mitt Romney

    By Natalie Finn, E! Online

    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Tom Hardy as villain Bane in "The Dark Knight Rises"

    Christopher Nolan is used to having his films over-analyzed, but we doubt he was expecting this one.

    Rush Limbaugh has come under the impression that the villainous Bane, played by Tom Hardy in “The Dark Knight Rises” and Batman's most destructive nemesis yet, is a dig at Bain Capital, the financial services company once headed by Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney that's featuring prominently in President Barack Obama's campaign ads.

    Hmm, this might be more of a headscratcher than “Inception.”

    MORE: ‘Dark Knight Rises' Joseph Gordon-Levitt: Who's he calling a d-bag?!

    "Do you think it is accidental that the name of the really vicious fire-breathing, four-eyed whatever-it-is villain in this movie is named Bane?" Limbaugh lamented on his syndicated radio show today.

    Well, considering DC Comics' “Batman: Vengeance of Bane No. 1,” featuring the villain's first appearance, was published in 1993, you can certainly call it a coincidence (if you have to call it something, that is).

    Or you could call it something else. Like...

    "Ridiculous," comic book writer and Bane co-creator Chuck Dixon wrote on a Dixonverse.net message board in response to Limbaugh's comments.

    MORE: Feud alert! George Lopez vs. controversial Arizona sheriff

    But it turns out the, er, garrulous right-wing commentator did not come up with the Bane vs. Bain thing himself -- excited bloggers on both sides of the political spectrum have drawn comparisons.

    "Whether it is spelled Bain and being put out by the Obama campaign or Bane and being out by Hollywood, the narratives are similar: a highly intelligent villain with offshore interests and a past both are seeking to cover up who had a powerful father and is set on pillaging society," former Bill Clinton aide Christopher Lehane told the Washington Examiner when asked about the alleged liberal conspiracy.


    Follow @ msnbc_ent

    "The 'Bain Romney' should at least endeavor to match the comic book Bane in at least one way: prove to be a worthy adversary," Lehane continued (with, we imagine, a bit of relish). "Bane never asked Batman to apologize--neither superheroes nor super villains nor candidates for president should ever ask for apologies from their opponents if they are to be taken serious."

    Not every conservative was as concerned as the radio host, however.

    "Democrats are truly living in fantasy land if they think the Bain story is anything more than a little summertime blues for Romney," offered conservative analyst Greg Muller. "The election will be a referendum on Obama socialism and the Obama economy. Wonder if the Batmobile was made in China."

    What a joker.

    MORE: Anne Hathaway talks wedding plans at ‘Dark Knight Rises’ premiere

    And speaking of the Joker, don't tell either conservative or liberal analysts that Mark Hamill (who voiced Batman's pasty-faced nemesis in “Batman: The Animated Series” and many more cartoons for nearly two decades) told an audience at Comic-Con that Romney only "imitates human behavior."

    "He's not actually human himself, so...God bless him, I'm enjoying him running for office, but I just came out as a lifelong Democrat," the “Star Wars” hero said.

    And before anyone starts over-analyzing his choice of words, we bid you happy conspiracy-theorizing.

    GALLERY: Pics from ‘The Dark Knight Rises’

    Related content:

    • Revved up for 'Dark Knight Rises'? Check out teaser for Batmobile film
    • Best bets: Batman's back in 'Dark Knight Rises'
    • Holy incompatibility, Batman! Could Robin appear in 'Dark Knight Rises'?
    • Hathaway's purrfectly goofy reaction to meeting Batman: 'I giggled'
    • Batman could fly ... but then he'd crash and die
    Show more
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Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

Gael Cooper is the movies editor for TODAY.com and a pop-culture junkie. She is the co-author of "Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops?" and "The Totally Sweet '90s."

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Rebecca Dube is a senior editor at TODAY.com and the TODAY Moms blog. She has one adorable son, a wicked Diet Coke habit and mountains of unwashed laundry.

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