He fled from Gotham General Hospital off-screen just before the Joker blew it up. Motivated by his need for vengeance, He becomes the villain Two-Face begins to pursue those responsible for the death of Rachel and his disfigurement. He begins by visiting Michael Wuertz, and after a brief interrogation to find the other traitor in Gordon's unit, answers that he does not know. Two-Face spins his coin on the table to decide the man's fate. It lands black, and Wuertz' life ends by gunshot. Two-Face then visits Maroni, having waited for him in his car.
As the two sit in the back seat, Maroni is tricked into revealing that the other traitor in Gordon's unit was Anna Ramirez. Although Two-Face flips the coin for Maroni's judgement, it lands in the mob boss' favor. However, Two-Face circumvents this by also judging Maroni's driver. When it lands bad heads, Dent buckles in and shoots the chauffeur in the back of the head, resulting in a car crash that leaves Maroni's fate uncertain, but likely dead.
Then, having kidnapped Ramirez, Two-Face forces her to trick Gordon's family into leaving their dwelling and coming to the warehouse where Rachel Dawes had died. The deed done, Two-Face chastises Ramirez for her betrayals of both Gordon and Rachel, and she in turn pleads that she only did it to save her mother, who desperately needed the funds for her hospital fees. Two-Face silences her with a vicious "Don't! Fortunately for Ramirez, it lands in her favor, and Two-Face just knocks her unconscious.
With Gordon's family as his hostages, Two-Face then calls and taunts Gordon into coming to the ruins of what was originally his apartment. Gordon arrives and is knocked down and disarmed.
As Gordon pleads with Two-Face to release his family, the former D. Before he could flip the coin, however, Batman appears and reasons with Two-Face, saying that those responsible are the three of them, and that only the three of them deserve punishment.
Two-Face believes this to be a fair assessment, and flips the coin for Batman. It lands bad heads, and with a shot to Batman's stomach. Then, assuming this has killed Batman, Two-Face points the gun to his own head, but the flipped coin comes out on good heads, permitting him to survive by his own judgement. Finally, Two-Face turns to Gordon, still intent to decide the boy's fate. But as he flips the coin, Batman, who was wearing body armor and is unharmed, tackles him off the edge of the floor, letting the villain plummet to his death.
With Dent dead, the problem remains that his murders that day would destroy the prosecution for good, and cause the people of Gotham to lose hope. With no choices left, Batman agrees to take the blame for the murders, preserving Dent's public image.
Gordon is reluctant, but agrees, holding a memorial service to honor Dent. Harvey's death inspired the creation of the Dent Act , in which a criminal that was arrested would be denied parole, thus allowing the streets of Gotham to be clean of crime. His death also led to "Harvey Dent Day" where the city celebrates the honor of their former White Knight.
Eight years after his death on Harvey Dent Day, Gordon attempts to tell the people about the truth behind Dent's death, but felt that they were not ready and resolved not to. However, Gordon's speech was stolen by Bane , former member of The League of Shadows, who read aloud the paper he holds about the "madman" that tried to kill Gordon's son, causing all the inmates of Blackgate Prison to become angry and inspire them to help Bane take over the city.
After Gotham was retaken by Batman and the GCPD, the Dent Act was then eliminated and all of Dent's other possible accolades were retracted due to the revelation of his corruption and his reputation was tarnished. Harvey Dent starts off as selfless, charismatic, astute, idealistic, fearless and cerebral.
He showed slight cynicism and borderline cruelty towards criminals, such as Lau and Thomas Schiff. He was also extremely self-confident and rationally independent. He was motivated by his care for the people of Gotham and was selfless enough to do anything in order to protect them, even endanger his own life to the mercy of someone as sadistic and masochistic as the Joker. Largely because of his past of being a victim of repeated child abuse by his father, a retired cop, and the cops' failure to help him and his mom, he also had a pronounced hatred of the corruption that infamously plagued the Gotham City Police Department.
However, after Rachel's death, Harvey was embittered beyond sanity and became murderous and smug. He also implied when encountering Detective Wuertz that he considered himself "half-dead.
He was ruthless, callous and showed all the signs of becoming a sociopath: High intelligence, paranoia, carelessness, violence, manipulation, elusiveness, mercilessness, and disregard for the people's, and his own life. He also showed signs of deep-seated nihilism although not to the extent of the Joker during this time by declaring his belief his murderous actions were the closest thing in the world to true fairness during his final confrontation with Batman and James Gordon.
Similar to the Joker, he also was shown post-transformation to back out of earlier promises and at the same time technically keep his word, which is best demonstrated by how he dispatched Sal Maroni: After confirming who the cop who sold Rachel out was, he tried to flip a coin while threatening Maroni at gunpoint, doing so because he said earlier it "didn't hurt [Maroni's] chances" at surviving, and later proceeded to technically spare Maroni from being directly shot by him due to the coin landing good side up, but then proceeded to shoot Sal Maroni's driver after choosing his fate via coin flip due to it going bad side up.
During his final confrontation with both Batman and James Gordon, Dent, when told by Gordon that the cops became concerned with his disappearance and that the place was surrounded, Dent said "You think I want to escape from this? There is no escape from this! This was also reinforced when he willingly put a gun to his own head when deciding to judge via coin toss those most responsible for what had occurred, with it being strongly implied that he was willing to kill himself had the coin gone bad side up.
After his death, he became incredibly charismatic: The people of Gotham looked up to his legacy and for what he was believed to have stood for. Batman decided that Harvey Dent was the hero of Gotham, not him, showing that he knew that Dent would appeal to the people as the fallen idol. However, Dent's legacy was tarnished when Bane revealed the true circumstances of his death. He was still capable of showing mercy to a certain extent, as he spared Ramirez from being killed despite her role in selling him and Rachel out to the Joker, and by extension the latter's death settling only for punching her out instead , spared Joker, and avoided killing Sal Maroni directly via gunshot.
However, it's heavily implied if not directly stated that he only spared them because the coin went good side up. On that note, he implies with his final words to Wuertz before shooting him that he would have spared Wuertz if his coin went good side up. Harvey Dent is a pretty tall young man dressed in a dark business suit consisting of an Arrow-tailored dark blue or gray jacket, matching dress pants and a navy silk necktie with double pin stripes. Underneath it he wears a high-collared white dress shirt.
He is always seen with a handsome face consisting of a strong jaw, sparkling blue eyes, wavy blond hair and winning smile. As Two-Face, Dent is dressed light gray framed notch lapel suit with the jacket's left side darkened with scorch marks, a red and navy slim-cut repp striped tie and a low-collared white dress shirt underneath. The left side of his face is burnt away as well, leaving behind a hideous expanse of blackened muscle and scar tissue, consisting of a bloodshot eye bulging from a naked socket, a ragged gap in his cheek offering the glimpse of an exposed jawbone and a strip of raw gristle stretching vertically across what remains of Dent's smile, furtherly implying his unstable psyche.
Producer Charles Roven described Dent as initially the "white knight of the city". Wayne sees Dent as his heir, which comes back to the theme of him realizing that being Batman will be a lifelong mission, and the tragedy that follows when Dent is corrupted.
Whereas Two-Face is an evil villain in the comics, Nolan chose to portray him as a twisted vigilante to emphasize his role as Batman's counterpart he also seemed to act as a tragic villain , and Eckhart, who has played corrupt men in films such as The Black Dahlia , Thank You For Smoking and In the Company of Men , notes: "He is still true to himself.
He's a crime fighter, he's not killing good people. He's not a bad guy, not purely," while admitting: "I'm interested in good guys gone wrong. Nolan and David S. Before Eckhart was cast in February , Matt Damon was rumored to have passed on the role, and he confirmed in December that he was unavailable for it due to scheduling conflicts. Mark Ruffalo audition for the role.
Nolan chose Eckhart, whom he had considered for the lead role in Memento , citing his "extraordinary" ability as an actor, his embodiment of "that kind of chiselled, American hero quality" projected by Robert Redford, and his subtextual "edge". For Two-Face's make-up, Eckhart warned, "When you look at him, you should get sick to your stomach.
Being the guy under all that, well, that was a lot of fun for me. It's like you would feel if you met someone whose face had pretty much been ripped off or burned off with acid There are fans on the Internet who have done artist's versions of what they think it will look like, and I can tell you this: They're thinking small; Chris is going way farther than people think. Before the premiere of Batman Begins , co-story author David Goyer had considered ideas for future Batman films.
In the third, the Joker would go on trial, scarring Dent in the process. In the early comic books, Two-Face's facial scarring was depicted largely as a distorted version of his unharmed face.
The scarred portion was green in color, with distorted lips and eyebrows, along with an enlarged eyeball. This was the signature look for the character until the DC Universe was rebooted in In the film, Dent's face is scarred not by an acid attack, but by an explosion that affects his whole body. As a result, his injuries are a lot more severe and are exacerbated by his refusal to be properly treated.
Some signature traits of the character's look are still there, such as the enlarged eye, but it's a different set of injuries altogether. Both versions of the character share an antagonistic relationship with Batman, but for different reasons. On the surface, they might appear similar, but one is born from trauma caused by a physical attack, while the other is created largely because his lover dies and he does not. In the comics, Dent blames Batman for not stopping the acid attack that scarred his face and ruined his life.
It's one of the clever ways that Christopher Nolan used the Dark Knight trilogy as a thematic parallel to help drive the entire narrative across in each of the three films. The comic book version of Two-Face is well known for wearing clothing stitched out of different materials, with one side representing his Dent persona, while the other represents his villainous alter-ego. The two sides are meant to clash in order to signify his obsession with dualities and opposites.
In The Dark Knight , Two-Face wears the burnt suit that was on his body when Batman saved him from the explosion that scarred his face. This might have been because Harvey had nothing else to wear, or because he wanted to show the world how the traumatic event had irreversibly changed him for the worse.
In the comic books, Two-Face is not entirely beholden to the fate of his signature coin toss. There have been several instances where he decided to ignore the results, suggesting that he's more in control of his decisions and behaviors than it appears.
The film provided a bit of foreshadowing in the first act when it showed Harvey Dent talking to Rachel about his lucky coin. That item would take on a symbolic meaning after he survived the attempt on his own life. His slightly angrier temperament led Batman and Commissioner Gordon to develop a slight distrust for him, believing that it was slightly possible that he could be the vigilante dubbed " Holiday.
Dent was horribly scarred on the left side of his face. Dent escaped from the hospital and descended into madness. As Two-Face, his trademark was crimes involving the number two. His obsession even shows in his clothes, which are usually composed of two halves made out of very different materials. At all times, he carries a double-sided coin with one side defaced, which he constantly flips to make any choices.
Two-Face flips the coin at critical junctures: The scarred side would usually result in a crime, but the clean side would allow Two-Face to do the right thing, such as returning his loot or refraining from a murder. After his first few encounters with Batman, Two-Face attempted to abandon all ties with his own past life, including his loving wife Gilda. This, however, proved too much for the good side of his personality, and he began attempting to visit Gilda, claiming he had regained his face through plastic surgery.
Gilda, however, soon saw through the fabrication, and this unhinged Dent even more. Finally, he was apprehended by Batman, with the help of his partner, Robin. Shortly after, a certain Dr. Ekhart performed plastic surgery on Dent's face, seemingly repairing it for good. While the facial reconstruction managed to partially heal Two-Face's fractured mind, Ekhart's assistant, Mr. Wilkins, began to place suspicion on Harvey Dent once more by committing crimes disguised as Two-Face.
Batman, however, saw through the disguise and helped Two-Face clear his name. For two years, Dent led a normal life until actor Paul Sloane , scarred in the same manner as Dent had once been, was driven mad, beginning to think he was really Dent as Two-Face. Batman arrested Sloane for several attempted robberies and had his face restored, in the same manner Harvey Dent's had once been. Dent, however, was caught in an explosion a few years later, which undid the plastic surgery and scarred his face once again.
Maddened again, the revived Two-Face hired the Crime Doctor to kidnap Paul Sloane and scar the actor's face again, to mirror the transformation that had occurred in Dent. Although restored as Two-Face's twin, Sloane proved more fortunate, and had his face repaired again after being rescued by Batman. Dent, meanwhile, was brought to justice again and placed behind bars, with his renewed mental and physical scarring seemingly more permanent this time. In the aftermath of the earthquake that left Gotham City in shambles during Cataclysm, Two-Face escaped custody and kidnapped Commissioner Gordon to put him on trial for his actions during No Man's Land, with Two-Face as both judge and prosecutor.
Gordon played upon Two-Face's split psyche to demand Harvey Dent as his defense attorney. Dent cross-examined Two-Face and won an acquittal of Gordon. Montoya was able to reach the Dent persona in Two-Face, and was kind to him.
He fell in love with her, though the romance was one-sided. After the earthquake that ravaged Gotham, Two-Face outed her as a lesbian and framed her for murder, hoping that if he took everything from her she would be left with no choice but to be with him.
Montoya was furious, and the two fought for control of his gun until Batman intervened, putting Two-Face back in Arkham Asylum.
A short time later, Two-Face met the brilliant surgeon, Dr. Thomas Elliot. Although Elliot specialized in neurosurgery, he was competent enough to repair Dent's face via plastic surgery. Dent's sanity was restored, and the menacing "Two-Face" persona seemed to be gone forever. Thomas Elliot was also the villain known as Hush, and he had hoped to manipulate Dent into acting as one of his many pawns in a campaign against Batman.
With renewed sanity, Dent stood by the side of law and order and betrayed Hush, catching him in enough time to save Batman's life, and shooting him into the Gotham river. Having regained his trust, Dent was trained and conditioned by Batman to act as Gotham's primary vigilante protector when he, Robin and Nightwing all took a one-year hiatus to train during the Lost Year. When confronted on the issues by Batman, in his anger at being distrusted, the Two-Face persona resurfaced, and talked Dent into scarring his face and returning to his life of crime.
Harvey Dent has returned to his Two-Face identity and committing crimes. In Justice League of America 13 Vol. After the Injustice League was captured by Amanda Waller and the Suicide Squad , Two-Face was exiled to a distant planet with most of the other villains.
Upon escaping with his life, Dent returned to Gotham City to reestablish himself. Two-Face soon carved out a piece of Gotham's local mobs for his own, sharing an underworld empire with The Penguin. He appears in Battle for the Cowl: The Underground, which shows the effects of Batman's death on his enemies. A returning Black Mask , however, soon topples Two-Face's criminal empire, claiming it for his own.
Dent is forced into hiding, but ponders the possible death of the original Batman when Batman seemingly reappears, being caught on security footage to let Gotham City know that the Dark Knight lives on. Two-Face studies recent video tapes of Batman and notices that he is smiling. He deduces that there is a new person under the cowl, which is in reality Dick Grayson.
Two-Face then searches for a person with teleporting abilities he can hire who can take him to the Batcave. Two-Face selects three candidates, and when he locates the one who is willing to hire himself out to him, murders the other two. Two-Face is teleported into the original Batcave, although his intrusion is soon discovered by Alfred Pennyworth. When the new Batman investigates the cave, he is ambushed by Two-Face.
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