Batman and Catwoman chase the truck carrying the bomb, using the Bat and the Batpod respectively. All material owned by Warner Bros. For entertainment purposes only. Buy the movie on Blu-ray.
+Collins Lionel It's not really something you're meant to question, it's a comic book movie after all. That being said, I find it amazing that (aside from the wheel-spinning) they made this thing for real.
@@TechnologicallyTechnical well the batpod is not in the comics.I believe it is possible to make this vehicle but certain essential technologies are not up to the standards.
+Steelbourne Saul The funny thing is today people complain about one or two guys that might died through batmans actions during the Nolan films...but in Burtons version he drives in with the batmobil and simply guns down everyone..no complains there..
bryn eka It’s a re-recording so it’s not budget cutting. It’s meant to tie together the defeat of the main villains in the trilogy. Ra’s Al Ghul, The Joker, and Talia Al Ghul are all defeated with the same music playing.
That’s because it’s a mixture of special effects and visual effects. Everything you see was actually there and is being enhanced with CGI. The perfect blend which a lot of directors don’t really use anymore sadly :(
@@j.t2348 he was an executive producer for it. Also there's no way you can make a giant Michael Bay style battle with mostly special effects, unless you somehow make every building explode within certain radiuses every minute
Its awesome how this scene uses all three Bat vehicles: Tumbler from Begins, Pod from Dark Knight, and Bat from Rises. All three movie vehicles came together.
Victor Orozco that's what I thought as well, but then someone brought to my attention that the same cue is also played when Batman throws the Joker over the ledge in TDK. So it seems more like a "the villain in charge falls" cue lol
Ikr! I was only 12 when I saw this in the cinemas and my love for Batman wasn't that big at the time, but God.. I would do anything to see this stuff in the cinema again now.
@@Steve211Ucdhihifvshi Scorsese was right about Marvel movies. They're just a bunch of computer nerds challenging each other to make the fakest scene possible. Fast food films
Not trying to sound mean, but how the hell is that symbolism? I’m pretty sure it just turned out that Catwoman is on the ground and Batman is in the air.
@@Dingo-wk5ed It may or may not be intentional, but yes, because cats don't fly, and bats don't walk. Catwoman on that bike has a silhouette like a black panther (with a bit of squinting) chasing down the roads, while a huge bat above distracts her pursuers. I like that analogy.
Radonatos I guess I just see it as oh that’s cool. I view symbolism mostly as something that has a grand meaning that enhances a viewing experience and makes the film much more interesting. Like the origami Unicorn in Blade Runner, or the entirety of The Holy Mountain.
That Cop on the bridge should be fire and the bridge cop shoud've realize that he blew up that bridge for nothing. Sometimes in my dreams, I see myself beating up that cop on the Bridge.
3:21 Notice that music plays whenever a villain in this series gets taken down. Batman Begins: train goes off course, and Ras dies. Dark Knight: Batman tosses Joker off him and rescues him at the last second. Dark Knight Rises: Batman blasts Talia off the road and to her death.
That's been the entire trilogy, all the way back to Begins. And when you take the collapsing dream layers at the end of Inception and the spinning docking scene from Interstellar, you realize just how well Nolan can do a tense climax. Really looking forward to Dunkirk.
JT Peterson Just Google images of the "withdrawal from Dunkirk" and picture Nolan and Zimmer working on recapturing that on the silver screen. Nolan has found the balance between arthouse indie filmmaking and blockbuster appeal. This is really hard to do especially in this cynical culture of black and white, no more grey areas where people either really love or really hate something
I love how Batman is so reluctant to kill throughout the first two movies but over here he's just like, "Fuck this shit, I'm gonna blow that truck to kingdom come." And then he proceeds to blast the truck with a barrage of missles, killing Talia and the truck driver.
Uh, no. The truck crashed and killed Talia because *she* would not alter course. If Batman was trying to kill them he would just have put a missile into the cab of the truck.
Though the fact that that tumbler was left totally in tact and those inside survived without a scratch just goes to show how tough those motherfucking tanks are.
I love the scene at 1:24 and onwards because it shows that Batman and Catwoman are both soldiers, risking their lives for Gotham City while in pursuit of Talia and the bomb. There's no greater feeling that being a soldier in a war you have to fight. She could've left but she stayed and aided Batman in his high-speed chase of Talia and the bomb. Incredible.
0:51 I LOVE the way Officer Blake said, "You Maniacs!!! You Sons of Bitches!!! You're Killing us!!! Yeah, Follow your ORDERS!!!" It's so EPIC! And he's also sounding like his Jim Hawkins voice from Disney's Treasure Planet (2002) Whenever Jim is screaming or yelling.
I really like the action and special effects for this movie, with Batman and Catwoman using futuristic-like armored vehichles with weaponry! The two fight scenes with Batman and Bane are pretty cool as well!
This movie has 8.5 on IMDB. Nolan's Batman movie are the highest rated superhero movies on that site. Who told you that it's horrible? Critics and the audience loved it. I don't really care for what critics or ratings say, but this movie is far from horrible.
SepticHead There's a somewhat vocal group on the internet that overanalyze this film to death and enjoy pointing out its flaws in comparison to what "Batman would do." And not in the clever HISHE kind of way
I mean... the history could have been a lot better, because this gives space to a lot of plot holes. Certain things that would make this movie better than the dark knight. Not that I don't absolutely love this movie...
look at the way how he casually piloting the Bat... not so serious.... focused but at the same time exhausted, frustrated, tired, calculating and calm, conveying how batman feels, to the audience without overacting...Tats wat i call as acting...!
Man, the effects on the Batwing (yeah, I know it wasn't called by its original comic book name in the movie) are flawless. It looks so much more believable than Batwing in BvS.
EgocentricHead very little cgi besides when it was flying high up. When it’s close to the ground it’s a real vehicle that was attached by a hydraulic a to a truck. Nolan keeps everything as real as possible while enhancing with special effects unlike most who do the opposite
I personally find the Bat Pod pretty amazing, the introduction of it the dark knight when the tumbler explodes was pretty badass and the way batman used it was tight
Bruh imagine gordon in the back of the truck like “yo what the fuck is going on out there” he jumped out and batman was like yo you were still in there my bad bro i thought you got out lol
I hate to admit it but yes you are absolutely right. I was friggen over the moon with this chase scene. But Avengers still had their epic moments which this one doesn't. This one was just an epic ending away. But still love this film so MUCH!
I genuinely believe this is one of the most suspensful wrap ups to a movie ever made. The soundtrack playing with parts just ... sped up. Theres literally 2 mins left before they even get tge cable on lol
I've always enjoyed the comic book scenario when villains team up with the heroes to save the day. Sure, you can't really call Catwoman a true villain in this movie, but it was still awesome to see her come back for this fight.
Thus is the most beautiful memorable scene, especially when gordon ask batman that people should know who saved them and in return batman replies epic response!!! That is good to watch
I loved the dynamic with Catwoman on the bike and Batman in the plane. It felt like they were both in their comfort zones during this chase and working together, they sent Talia to a death very similar to her father's.
Anyone else ever recognized the parallels between Thalia's and Ra's' death scenes in the Nolan trilogy? It's like, he is crushing with the train, and she is crushing with the truck. If you compare both scenes, the setup and the camera angles are almost identical, only mirrored. Even the music queue is exactly the same. I outright LOVE this little detail, it is so amazing.
There's sadly a major difference. Ra's Al-Ghul died knowing he had failed; Talia died thinking she had won. Kinda soured the ending for me, as Talia was the least likeable villain of the whole trilogy - arrogant, underhanded, motivated not by misguided zealeotry or utter insanity but by a daddy-complex. She at least deserved to suffer the humiliation of failure in her final moments.
Harry Whitehead I think it goes beyond a daddy complex... Talia and Bane were pretty much born in that pit, all they've known are suffering and pain with hope taunting them from above. They wanted Gotham to feel the despair they felt. Like Dent, they blame the world around them for their own misery and take it out on others. This is the difference between Batman and his rogues - he chose to fix the shit cards life had dealt him while his enemies for the most part refuse to learn from their falling and take it out on the rest of humanity
Flaws and all... this is the most emotional Batman film to me. Many things come to mind as I re-watch it, but the big stand out is how his purpose behind becoming Batman in the first place is finally fulfilled. He wanted to inspire good in the people of a corrupt city, has his doubts about it in The Dark Knight... and finally leads its people to stand up for themselves (spearheaded by the unlikely trio of the police commissioner, a scientist and a professional thief!). Again, I have my reservations about the Nolan films... but when they work they do so big time.
3:07 HOLY COW Batman just killed someone! He killed that driver!!! And I guess he killed Talia at the end too. I guess when a nuclear explosion is imminent, there is no better time than this to break all the rules.
I realized that Nolan has better persecution scenes than with body fights. The Dark Knight with the motorcycle, or Batman Begins trying to rescue Rachel with the Batmovil, or like this scene.
Selena took out the first 2 tumblers and the men in the tumbler that was hit by the missile survived. As for the guy in the truck, the glass actually didn't shatter when it was hit. My theory is that the force of the blast knocked him unconscious. Probably died a moment later though as Talia appears to kick him out of the moving truck.
look im a huge marvel fan, and i can tell you at first i had my doubts about ben affleck's batman but now i absolutely love it he looks exactly like the comics and the arkham games and i liked bale, but ben affleck is a better batman look at the way he fights and the way bake fights Batfleck is more batman-ish and ben affleck's batman would kick bane's ass in this movie easily
The Punisher That depends. What makes Batman is not really his physical fighting abilities, it's his detective abilities and more often than not his conflict with his own darker desires. This version of Batman looks more like his classic outfit and fights a lot like the Arkham games, but I'm honestly not convinced that's all it takes for him to be a great Batman. There is a reason the Joker is Batman's foil. This Batman has lost a little bit of what separates the two of them with his blasé attitude towards killing. Don't give me wrong, I'm not saying he isn't doing a great job. But, the only thing he really has going for him so far is the fact that he can fight.