The Dark Knight isn't your traditional, read, conventional, Hollywood crime drama, either. It's a $180,000,000 trip into extreme paranoia and not-quite-graphic sadism. It's the first comic-book film about existential terror, with a principle character --ie, The Joker-- that isn't just a terrorist, he's an embodiment of terrorism itself --heh, he should have been named The Synecdoche.But you've proven my point. Dark Knight is not your traditional batman film, as it's marketed as a crime thriller and was toted as a movie that is a "realistic" comic book.
It's hard for me to see The Dark Knight as a conventional mainstream blockbuster. It's something of a puzzlement.
Nerdery has been becoming mainstream for some time.Batman has not been nerd for some time.
Kaiju is always nerd (even when of the shaky-cam variety).Cloverfield, not nerd...
Sure it is, because the line between nerd and mainstream is blurring, as has been for a long time.REst assured, nerd is still not bankable.