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" ... Chris Nolan’s sequel doubled down on what worked about Batman Begins, offering a sprawling, intricately plotted and literate blockbuster that blended Michael Mann-style action, Sydney Lumet-style crime melodrama and just a dash of pulpy superhero thrills. Rewatching it ten years later, it still holds up as a bracingly intense thriller, offering a near breathless pace (especially that high-wire and Joker-intensive second act) and superb performances from Gary Oldman and Health Ledger as the yin and yang of a city on the verge of either triumph or disaster. Even with an increased scale and a whole Harvey Dent story to tell, Nolan keeps much of the focus on Batman himself, as the Caped Crusader finds himself tested by the limitations of his arbitrary moral code. ... "
" ... French fashion house Louis Vuitton made headlines last week with an eye-catching campaign for its Pre-Fall 2020 collection: A star-studden homage to pulpy genre paperbacks from the 1980s. In it, Léa Seydoux is menanced by a giant spider, Samara Weaving deals with a valentine from a werewolf, and Jaden Smith stares down a robot apocalypse. ... "
" ... I can’t speak for Bruised, but Berry’s most recent pulpy bruised-forearm thrillers, The Call and Kidnap, are pretty terrific pieces of old-school Hollywood moviemaking. ... "
" ... Inspired by the cinema of Martin Scorsese and Derek Cianfrance’s The Place Beyond the Pines (2012), Wild Indian is a crime thriller told from the point-of-view of the Native American community. It’s proof that Margules and Lifshitz aren’t only interested in all horror all the time, and embodies what Lifshitz describes as “Trojan horse genre, which is to say taking broad, accessible, exciting, and pulpy concepts and material, and giving it an injection of life and personality.” ... "
" ... It’s a pulpy spy thriller with a twist. The protagonist isn’t an action hero; Alex (her current pseudonym) is the titular chemist, a molecular biologist recruited by government intelligence agencies to develop and administer chemical cocktails that can draw information out of terrorists and other bad guys. It’s torture, something the character is honest about. ... "