Bane reveals the truth behind Harvey Dent, frees Blackgate's prisoners and takes over Gotham. All material owned by Warner Bros. For entertainment purposes only. Buy the movie on Blu-ray.
I read a comment on one of the videos of this film where someone described a scene which would've appeared if Heath Ledger hadn't died, where basically Bane goes into the Blackgate prison and comes across the Joker's cell. He stares at him but walks past. The Joker goes mental but then starts laughing because he knows Bane fears the Joker. I don't know if this is bs or if they planned this but boy do I wish they had added it.
@@keandregreen5628 You underestimate the simple fact this is a Nolan film; subliminal nods and features to the past and present are a speciality of his
Yeah it's pretty great as written but also the audience likes the fact that by the end of the film the people of Gotham acknowledge Batman as being its true savior and not Two Face
People really underrate Bane. He managed to do what the Joker attempted to do, and he was a far more formidable threat, phisically and mentally, to Batman.
Without the Joker in this series is testament that the character would’ve gone far beyond what the Bane character could fathom. The world enforced its ideals on powerful nations and the end result is still “madness”. Most people don’t want it but it might’ve gone that direction in cinema..
Not mentally, I don't think bane had one scene that matched the scene of *LOOK AT ME* in the dark knight, but he's a great villain not the joker level though.
The Joker predicted this entire movie in a single scene. Just let that sink in for a second. "They need you right now, but when they don't, they'll cast you out. Like a leper." "When the chips are down, these 'civilized people', they'll eat each other." "You see, I'm not a monster. I'm just ahead of the curve."
@@itsover6668 Its a disease that contagious that's why they lepracy not sure on spelling people who have it are called leper and were casted out of their towns and homes for having the disease
Everyone talks about Heath and Tom and christian, justifiably so but Gary Oldman doesn't get his fair share. Truly the gold standard for commissioner Gordon
@Bu Rida 🤣🤣🤣🤣 sorry but this is your point of view mate ! For me the best joker is Heath Ledger. Joaquim Phoenix is a excellent actor, a really appreciate him... But for me, best joker is Heath Ledger... The joker is a great movie but The Dark Knight joker is better than the joker movie... It's my point of view.
4:11 I absolutely love her realisation that the world she always wanted where poor steals from rich is finally happening and she understands the horrors of it.
I was just thinking that too when I rewatched it. She LITERALLY has that " this is...wrong" look on her face when she turns around. Not partaking or enjoying it not even a bit. Amazing camerawork, acting and writing in that scene, love it.
@@I-speak-U-shut-it Dude, he is not much older than Hugh Jackman was when he took the role, and he's already been in a number of comic book and action movies, someone please make this happen.
Gary Oldman killed it as Commisoner Gordon. His reasoning to why he lied about Harvey Dent was heartbreaking. Shows how in reality, the law does fails us
His lie was SELFLESS and he burdened it upon him. It actually shows how hard it is to be a cop. To save the city from the dark truth, he burdened it upon himself
This was the worst line of the scene because he should've just called out Blake's strawman. The truth would not have just given parole to some reformed criminals. It would've prevented the mob from ever spending a day in jail in the first place and oppressed the entire city as a result. At the end of The Dark Knight when Gordon was thinking more clearly, he knew that his own hands and those of the Batman were both becoming dirty for the good of the city.
@@LuisMendez-lz1ik it’s cause it’s truth we have more in common with villains in the movie than the damn hero. Bane this speech joker speech to Harvey killmongers many speeches the throne room
@@antjack6192 I get that, but I mean Bane in general is way smarter than he appears to be and this isn’t just the speech. Just referring how he found out who Batman was (comic) before others
“Honest”. Bro said Gotham will endure with every intention to blow it up and claimed he gave the trigger to a random citizen when it was his accomplice. Lol
He is acting there putting on a show for the crowd to get them on his side like he's not dooming them all and to make them believe as if he read it for the first time..
I really never understood why Gordon was called corrupt for the end of The Dark Knight. It was Batman's idea anyway and it's not like he went with it to embezzle money or something. He agreed that the people needed a symbol to look up to and it should be Dent because he represented the police. Yeah it was a lie but a well meaning one that didn't really even benefit Gordon himself.
When I was in the 10th grade (in 2013), we had an elocution competition in which each participant would have to narrate a famous speech. Nearly all narrated famous speeches like Blood, Toil, Tears and Sweat by Churchill or the Emancipation Proclamation by Lincoln, or even Rocky's speech to his son... Bane's Blackgate Speech was just a year old then, yet one participant chose this as his speech, using props- a mask and a few sheets of blank paper as Dent's photo and Gordon's speech. He won 1st place. It was unreal.
Tupacstole Mybike Originally Bane would have freed the patients from Arkham asylum but abandoned the joker. This would lead into joker and Batman teaming up to defeat bane.
Bane: “and cast out into the cold world that we know and endure” That sentence always sticks to me because it’s true less fortunate people are left behind in the real world and it’s sad 😞 I should know because this is what my life is becoming.
And the way he delivers that "Cast out" line is phenomenal. You can sense in that moment that he actually felt and endured the other side, the wrong one, "the cold world". Pure anger, experience and disappointment in his words.
I think that Bane epitomizes God's justice and the wrathful fury of Christian Anarchists against the totalitarian communist state/ There is nothing as psychologically violent, heartless and cancerous as the master and slave dichotomy of conventional economics/ The egoistic rich accrue monetary wealth at the expense of the working poor/ Too bad that the general audience is incognizant of the fact that law and order is the crime and behavioural science is the dogma of the criminally insane dominations and dominions of this world/ Batman is an ideological fiend and political activist for gov't authorities and I'm glad he got annihilated by Bane/
@@user-zz1uf6kx6x Politicians are cartoon figures and their role is to be the mouthpiece for the despotic will of the totalitarian state/ Voting is akin to choosing your method of execution/ Why do people vote? Flies are attracted to shit/
Dude Tom Hardy’s acting is just spectacular. You can’t tell that he is who is under that mask. Bane’s sheer voice is addicting. Bane’s speeches are just masterpieces. He sounds like a proper leader and a proper threat. Truly outstanding villain.
Scarecrow will trump banes takeover in "Arkham knight" it seems...on a side note "villains taking over a city" is one of my favorite story plot devices.
Imagine Ledger is still alive during this film, and somewhere deep in the prison, Joker is hearing Bane's speech and quietly said to himself, ‘I had warned you Batsy’...
I always thought they should have had a Joker silhouette appear in the pit behind Bruce when he imagines Ra's al Ghul's return, chuckling and telling Bruce he told him this would happen.
Read that in Mark Hamill's voice. 😂 Ledger's joker wouldn't say a thing, he would just sit in the prison alone in front of a TV, clapping. Hamill's joker would talk or laugh by himself because he's a maniac. Ledger's joker on the other hand, may be an anarchist but also is a genius to an extend, everything he does is with an intent. He wouldn't make any small talk or gesture without it being directed to anyone. His intension is to get the reaction from the people he's talking to. That's why you don't see Ledger's joker talks or laughs to himself, he does it to piss some people off, usually according to his plan. 😂 Like how he did to Batman while he's punching him to get the whereabouts of Rachel & Harvey. "You got nothing on me."
The ZombieMan He was half-right. The people who suffered worst were the ones who had it best beforehand. The middle-class kept out of harm's way and the poverty-stricken were stuck in the same place.
......they do not want to appreciate him because it means he is a better actor than the one they have an emotional attachment to...who shall go unnamed.......when i saw this scene...i couldn't believe it...it was like ... he was a cross between MUSSOLINI....and MARLON BRANDO...just genius level...of acting..and you could see him just reveling in it...every actor wants the chance to do a big scene like that...every actor...
They were so close with making Bane another amazing villain just like the Joker. If only they didn't end his story by making him a puppet instead of a mastermind like he seemed to be. I didn't even mind that they didn't give him his "Bane juice" that made his muscles grow because of how well written and acted he was in this film.
@@trentonmcdonald9708 What I meant was that this was not the Bane from the comics or the cartoons. That was a completely different person and it made no sense to use Bane as the villain because in the show, and comics he's more of an aggressive mad man than someone who carefully plans out what he does. Plus the original Bane spoke SPANISH AND WAS FROM MEXICO. I was just saying I didn't mind all of that not being in the movie I just hated him being a puppet at the end when he was so well written for 90% of the movie.
I understand where you are coming from on this matter. Respectfully, I hold a differant perspective: Talia was now the head of the League of Shadows by birthright. Just as Ra's had the authority to excommunicate Bane, so too Talia now had the authority to reinstate him back into the Order. After her biological father (Ra's) died, she sought out her adoptive father (Bane) to bring "true justice" upon Gotham. By assigning Bane to take the lead in Gotham's ultimate distruction, she would have already known of his fiercely independant way of doing things. I have no reason to believe that Talia was micromanaging every event that took place. Instead, I believe she trusted in Bane's experiance and intellect to accomplish the purposes she desired: • Eliminate the Batman and all opposers. • Break the spirits of Gotham's citizens • Ultimately distroy the city. There are moments in the film where I noticed Talia's subtle disapproval of Bane's choices of action, such as when she and Lucias Fox are summoned to the upper board room after the takeover. This tells me that while Bane respects Talia, he does not fear her. "I am the League of Shadows". This implies to me that he views Talia's position as being that of an organizational figurehead, while he views himself as the true power behind the throne.
"You see their _morals_, their _code_, it's a bad joke. Dropped at the first sign of trouble. They're only as good as the world allows them to be. I'll show you. When the chips are down, these... these civilized people, *they'll eat each other*. See I'm not a monster. I'm just ahead of the curve."
+Edon Dehari And he was right. Perhaps, not in the movie but in the real life. But at least he showed that Harvey Dent could break bad too. Now think about some person or politician who helps to make the world a better place. And imagine what would happen if that person would lose his/her family because some punk shot him. Except Batman (who is only fictional) I do not think that anyone could just move on with their lives after they have seen the true nature of people. Bruce's father got killed by a man whom he was trying to save. That is the problem you see: People do not need to be saved. They do not want to be saved. And they do not deserve to be saved.
It's absolutely brilliant how The Dark Knight treats Batman and Gordon's deception as heroic, then Rises flips that entire idea on its head by showing the damage that hiding the truth can do. "Maybe it's time we all stopped trying to outsmart the truth and let it have its day."
Batman's part in the deception was treated as anything but heroic. He was ostracized because of it and hunted. This reveal was 100% meant to weaken Gordon's stance in the city since at this point Bane no longer considers Batman to be a threat.
David Stacy treated as heroic to the viewers. D.K. painted Batman’s decision as one of sacrifice and honor, willing to throw himself away for the good of Gotham. This movie turns that around, showing THE VIEWER that the lie was not what was good. It’s not about what the people in universe thought.
It's simple: Fascism vs Communism. Bane tries to give the "power to the people" but ends up making everything worse because of it. Batman tries to keep the peace with authoritarian power which is the "Harvey Dent Act" but this creates a cult of personality and a violation of rights. It's socialism (Fascist sense) vs individualism.
@@Leon-zu1wp Are you joking? Bane isn't a communist. Everything he says about giving Gotham to the people is, by his own admittance, a lie. His plan is and always was to bomb the city. He's giving the people false hope in the knowledge that their scramble for survival will torture Batman more than just bombing them outright will. He says repeatedly and often that his true intention is to fulfill Ra's Al Ghul's agenda and destroy Gotham City. The game he plays with the people of Gotham City is just salt in the wound. He isn't a revolutionary, communist or otherwise.
As someone who actually caught the thing you’re implying, and had a parent who caught it early on and was down for nearly a year and whom I’m not entirely sure will ever fully recover, I take offense to that.
@@jwalinbhatt1750 Nolan wrote both.. I know people identify it has Heath's Joker, but it was Nolan's vision of Joker. And this third movie was probably technically the best of the three he made.
@@DarthYannious Nolan was the Director and he co-wrote the film. Knowing Nolans films I can 100% guarantee that The vision for Joker was his. Not the guy who directed "Unborn" lol. Nolan brought him on to keep things in line with the canon, as he was a comic book writer/fanatic.
Tom Hardy's Bane may be one of my all-time favorite movie supervillains, mainly because of how they portrayed him here compared to other versions of his character compared to other versions of him. Bane is not only a hulking, muscle-bound figure, but an incredibly smart one with a way of persuading and manipulating people as a demagogue of sorts. He appeals to the interests of the underclass of Gotham City, and uses them to do what he feels is right (i.e., deposing the city government and taking complete control). While other versions of Bane in film (haven't read the comics but I can assume what he's like) portray him as just a hulking monster, the Tom Hardy version is just as much that, but ten-times more cunning and manipulative. He uses the masses as his lackeys, a means to an end, if you will. He cares not for who lives or dies as long as Gotham City is destroyed. Just... an awesome villain in my opinion.
The Comic Bane is an orphan born in a South American prison who is subjected to Venom experiments. He ultimately gains Super Strength thanks to the Venom. He is a crooked criminal who gets hired by Maroni to wreck havoc in Gotham and deal with Batman.
The comic Bane is clever as well. He broke everybody out of Arkhan to force Bruce to work non-stop to get everyone back in. He waited for Bruce to reach the point of physical and emotional exhaustion. Then he moved in.
That's One Interesting Pfp Ya Got there you won’t gain anything writing up a rhetorical call out to someone’s grammar on RU-vid kid. Go feel superior somewhere else
God this is so well written. People complain about the Dark Knight Rises plot holes but they don't realize the genius of this scene. Does ANYONE notice that the speech is about class-based oppression and societal justice systems? No? Ok...
Marky Baloogah It's basically Robespierre and the French Revolution, albeit clumsily executed. Talia is Madam Defarge, and Batman is Sydney Carton or the Scarlet Pimpernel. Bane is starting Gotham's own Reign of Terror.
The whole thematic concept, not this scene in particular. We never actually see the rich and the empowered do anything bad to the poor and disenfranchised, we have be to be *told* about it. Sure the criminals are angry, but they don't make a very sympathetic group of "oppressed victims." This was written after the '08 recession crises --- Nolan had a lot real-life material to work with.
Todd Bollinger Early in the film, we see people like Dagget being assholes, and especially the stock market scene, along with the very opening scene at Wayne Manour. It did show the rich being assholes a lot.
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@@CuirPhotodotNet Yes the plan was coming to fruition, and bane was relishing in it, but deep down he didn't care about the league of shadows or Gotham. He was doing it for talia.
@@Studio732JRL .....oh yes like Janet Jackson said the league had done nothing for him lately...and he was going to be very amused at the anarchy in Gotham City......he really was down for Talia at the end where she is putting his nozzles back in you could see he loved her...she was the only one who cared about him....
"The powerful will be ripped from their decedent nests, and cast out into the cold world that we know, and endure." Such a poweful presence from Hardy. No doubt one of the best actors today.
K A I’m talking about the elitist scum who are forcing small business into default because of a plandemic and the fact that these elitist scum don’t care. I don’t begrudge the rich but the scum who are oppressing the middle class should suffer
One of the best Comic Book monologues ever. Every body movement and sentence was incredible. To me, Tom Hardy and Ryan Gosling are the best actors in our era.
Michael Ziegler I'm not sure if "future" is the case anymore. And "terrorist" is a label that comes from very specific perspectives. Hell, back when the US was just a British colony, the whole bunch could have been called terrorists. But because they won, they call themselves revolutionaries. Like I said, a matter of perspective.
Khorothis Technically Bane is a terrorist, he employs his tactics through extremist violence and murder. Creating a hole in a prison complex, then giving them guns to take control of the city. Promising liberation, though going to detonate an atom bomb. Even though he exposed in society what was already there, the oppression. Someone who seeks to lead the masses through the production of fear, is a terrorist. Technically Batman is a terrorist too, he inspires nothing but fear in criminals. Though he employs a no killing rule, and mostly seeking to inspire hope in society. So he's less of one than Bane.
Michael Ziegler I wholeheartedly agree but sometimes you need horrible things to happen to get a point across. I just hope we don't do something so stupid we can't fix in the process.
In many ways, Bane is an interesting mix of Ra's al Ghul and the Joker. Very much like Ra's al Ghul, he is obsessed with destroying Gotham to pave the way for what he perceives to be a better future, but for him, it's not just about destroying Gotham, it's making a mockery of the norms and rules of society. Of tearing down Gotham's idea of civilization by forcing the people of Gotham to descend into anarchy and chaos, to turn on one another if only to survive. "When the chips are down, these civilized people? They'll eat each other". Bane destroys not just Gotham, he destroys the idea of Gotham, the humanity of the people of Gotham by letting the worst in them take over.
Of course but I feel like it was a bit too comic like for the movie. Bane would need more of a political approach. His whole plan is based off the French Revolution besided the bomb.
I think it was moreso the idea of Gotham tearing itself apart from the inside, and the bomb was just a final means to decimate those who felt that they were getting justice for being falsely lied to by Gordon.
Deonta B that's exactly, it would give so much more depth and realism to that film if bane was some sort of vicious, outspoken, populist politician taking over the reigns in Gotham and letting the crime to flourish and therefore destroy the city from the inside
Guten Exactly like how people were blamimg bush for 9/11 or the violence in the black communities. Even katrina was blamed on the govt and people were saying the damn exploded. This man just blew up a damn a football stadium and the cities bridges and the government doesn't even get involved. There is no damn way bruce wayne would have got into gotham if that's the case.
This is based on the French Revolution, the poor rebelled against the rich, courts were in session, and even the king of France was executed. The only difference is Robespierre who instigated much of the killings believed in what he said unlike Bane.
Pksoze To an extent, but like you said; Bane's 'liberation' was just a ploy to make Bruce suffer even more and carry out Ra's Al Ghul's plan in an almost poetic fashion. Also, pretty much all of Bane's army were 'bad guy' mercenaries and prisoners who were only interested in causing chaos and doing as they pleased, where the regular populace did not support what was happening. During the Revolution people actually believed in the cause and were generally in support of it.
Pksoze ... and then the french government executed thousands, including different people who didn't agree with them. Then the monarchy took over again, killing those who didn't agree. You see, this circle of violence doesn't end, you just swap one evil leader for another.
Batman _ from Bourbon to a republic to Napoleon to another bourbon to a republic to another napoleon to yet another republic...then they were taken over by national socialist Germany.
Yeah he was lying to them all along. He just wanted to see how people would kill each other when there's no government, thus proving joker's point when he said, " when the chips are down, they'll eat each other."
Well yeah hence the jail scene. He gives them hope (false hope) just to see them trample each other only to would have destroy the city anyways. If it wasn't for batman of course.
Fun Fact: I used to work in that building Bane is making his Speech from. It's an Biology Lab. Animal Testing. It's completely unmarked and many people mistake it for the Museum that's a few blocks down the street from it. (Side Fun Fact: That Museum is actually where part of Silence of the Lambs was shot when speaking about the Moth, which I also worked at, overnights, and is the only reason I know that. You actually see the Museum in the background at 0:04, right in the middle.) Anyways, back to the lab and Bane's Speech, it's not across the street from where the reporters are - reason why it kinda looks weird and why they and Bane are never in the same shot. Where the Reporters are is Downtown, where Bane is is a few miles away. In college central. Where University of Pitt is. Side, Side, Side fun fact: I applied to work as a PA on set but wasn't hired. (sad face)
@@johnnyd7381 they did, during 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, and that was not a pretty picture. What you don't understand is , fundamentals. The guy with 2 bags of grains is considered rich when compared with the guy with 1 bag of grains, which could be anyone, including you, when the system fails.
I love how he pronounces "child" in the sentence "he tried to murder my own child". It almost like he was speaking through tears at that line. That's the way Gordon would've said it.
With hindsight, I think maybe Bane even felt some sympathy. After all he suffered mutilation to save Talia from a terrible fate at the hand of the prisoners
The little gesture he makes after “we give it back to you… the people…” Hardy killed this role and trilogy is untouchable as far as the Batman series goes
This is why I enjoyed the Nolan Batman films over other comic book flicks. They looked and played out as movies beyond a mere comic book medium. They echoed themes of despair, hope, financial and social inequality. The undertones of its themes were made clear. It's rare to see such intelligent blockbuster films today.
I think those themes were explored in the comics as well. What Nolan's films have over the comics is how Nolan blended the comic book world of Batman with the real world. That and the structure of TDK's story which was fucking brilliant.
When Gordon says "I hope you had a friend like I did" it really nails the dynamic between him and Batman. He probably trusted Batman more than anyone he'd ever know and (at the time) he didn't even know who he was.
Just see the looks on their faces. The disillusionment that is racing in their minds; Harvey's descent into evil, Batman and Gordon's coverup. Their sense of what justice is has been shattered.
@@imperatorofman isn't the NYPD police commissioner resigning and taking up to 800 police with him who are also resigning? How many will that number grow too? Will they defund the police like other liberal citys?
LOL I wish sadly the protesters we saw all across the US are not anti-rich if anything all the corporations rich people brands are all supporting the protesters
@@koslim You probably have figured out what the song is called since you posted 9 months ago. However, the song is called The Fire Rises by Hans Zimmer.