A recreation of the iconic truck chase from The Dark Knight (2008) movie directed by Christopher Nolan
Warning: Some intense action violence
I do not own any of the rights to the audio material in this video.
Song: Always a Catch
Artists: Hans Zimmer & James Newton Howard
Album: The Dark Knight (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
That was legit 10/10 love that Joker figure
This is great! I can't believe how smooth you got the camera movement.
Hes so good!! right?
Well done You got it perfect
Bro this great! I really want to know how you built the batcycle
This really pleasantly surprised me. Usually scene recreations aren't my cup of tea when it comes to brickfilms, but this one has a sense of personality to it. I don't know how you've done it, since it's more or less shot for shot, but there's still a good amount of originality on display here. Also reminds me of some classic Batman brickfilms from way back; I think it's the custom minifigs and cardboard buildings. Great job.
This is really good
loving this!
This is so cool!
0:10 Joker's face: Batman again...
nice scenery, super smart to make custom like buildings, looks great!!!
This is great! :) very accurate and nice smooth movements :D
Amazing!! Love the accuracy!
you need shit ton more subs man this is great
Love this, keep up the good work!
Fantastic job!
Awesome work man!
This is awesome!!!!
Amazing
You deserve so many more subs! Well done!
Wow man! Your great at it, you need way more subscribers and likes! I’m gonna share this to some friends!
Thank you!
@@bluestaircaseanimations making any new ones?
@@nicolestodard306 Will return to animating once I finish studying in a couple months :)
nice job how did you get that batman dark knight lighting?
First of all, the animation looks amazing. Also, the muzzle flashes look like they are glowing. Do you use led light or something (what do you use)?
Thank you! What I did was I put a standard Lego cylinder on the end of the Joker's gun and shined a flashlight against it. I took two photos: one with the flashlight, one without. In Preview, I traced out the glowing muzzle flash, copied it and dragged it into the clean (non-flashlight) photo. Then repeated the process. The reason I did this was because it the flashlight was evident in the original shot and I didn't want that light spill. It's a long process. I'm hoping to use some LED bricks someday :)
@@bluestaircaseanimations thanks, it turned out amazing!
@@bluestaircaseanimations also wht fps do you film on
what if he was called freddie freaker
I'm not even close to your skill!!
😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁🐸