@@danielalvarado3846 Rather, it is a surprise that he appeared in a very well-known title 10 years ago as a mob character with only a few dozen seconds of action!
@@justi139 I mean technically there is, they have access to the trading desk. Before they raid they buy a heavy short position and when they're in there, they execute a large holding dump and cash in
@@pitied3744 It is you, only bots say things like picking a class like someone gives a f*ck, like good for you favoring intellect and charisma but why should we care?
@@serillian6742 "No one cared who I was 'til I unzipped my pants. This will be extremely painful... for them. Time to smash this family... with NO SURVIVORS!
I love how Bane just walks in and does his business. No grandstanding. No monologue. Just simple and efficient flexing. That's a power move of epic proportions.
Hardy doesn’t get enough credit IMO for this role. You talk about showing emotion and intensity through only partial facial movement, eyes, and general demeanor; he crafted his own Bane. Knock-out performance.
He is not a movie star 😂 He had a supporting role in Top Gun, where he was like the 6th lead. The movie he started in was the biggest office flop of 2021. The Devotion had a 100 million dollar budget and grossed like 20 million. How is that a movie star? 😂
Miranda Tate walks in at 0:06, she hides under the table behind the guy at 1:25, Bane acts aggressive as a distraction while Miranda instructs him with paper as seen at 1:37, Bane proceeds to nod at Miranda at 1:50, incredible attention to hidden details so obscure no one's even talking about them
This comment deserves way more likes. I've seen this movie about 8 times and never once noticed that. Absolutely incredible details that makes a divise ending somewhat less divisive.
I don't buy the middle two, but I can on the first and last one. A random woman appears to just stroll in, but we never see her face. Could be her silently going to start things for their transfer. The last one, he does appear to nod to someone we can't see. Probably assurance from her that despite what follows, they will succeed regardless, which they ultimately do.
Bane throughout the movie "Thank you" while taking back his helmet "What a lovely, lovely voice" while waiting to blow up the arena "Gratefully accepted" while stealing Batmans armory. "Admirable, but mistaken" While fighting Batman he is admiring his technique and letting him know its the wrong approach. Say what you want, but he is very polite.
Notice how the investors don’t thank the shoe shiner but Bane thanks the guy for holding his helmet Edit: It seems a lot of people think I’m glamorizing bane. Which I’m not in any way. He’s of course an evil terrorist but my point was not that he was good. This detail is a really intricate way of showing Bane’s ideology and the motivation behind his revolution and his invasion of Gotham.
@@josephmelton4721 He didn't say they were good guys. Joker was about chaos. Bane was fulfilling Ra's Al Ghul's last wish and was destroying Gotham to save itself from it's corruption. They aren't good guys, that doesn't mean they don't have motives.
@@jarvisb.6013 No because those are most likely cops working with the league of shadows, so they’re intentionally sabotaging the polices efforts at preventing the escape
This movie really wasnt all that great. A lot of it just doesnt make any sense, from this stock exchange attack ONLY effecting Wayne (and people believing he sold everything), Bruce losing all the muscles in his leg for no reason just for it to make no difference later, to sending the entire police force into an obvious trap, and the goddamn nuke going off with zero casualties less than a mile or two from shore really put a hamper on the experience. I mean bane was fun to watch, and the pit scenes were pretty good too, but this is by far the worst of the trilogy
@@turmoil9 No, stocks of public companies. Human capital stocks are not traded on the stock exchange. They are traded at the recruiting and employment centers.
Nolan was done. Even though rises is a great film you can for sure tell he wanted to end the story and move on. This trilogy was the best but we will not see this take on it anymore. Snyder has brought it back down to a joke
“This is stock exchange there’s no money you can steal here” “Awww damn really? We planned this all out for nothing? Damn. Alr guys you heard the man pack it up! So sorry for the inconvenience”
@@logicplague you wont the survivors gene pool might be changed enough to survivor or they were isolated enough to never run in to it. But civilization calapse is kind of something i would like to avoid. just because right now the likelyhood of death is low doesnt mean it will stay low.
@@gj9157 theres many renditions of joker and ledgers joker covered many variations so stfu. Whereas bane isn't even like this in the slighest, hes not suppose to be a random white guy hes suppose to be a huge hispanic former wrestler prison guy.
Gotham police: "We don't need a batman" also Gotham police: "I'm not risking my men for your money." dude, you can't pick and choose which crimes are worth your men and also complain about a masked vigilante doing the job you won't.
i thought it was a good way of showing how the people, and more specifically in this case cops were disgusted at the upper class of gotham which served as the explanation for how bane could so easily use the masses to overthrow the rich
i don't think this is the correct interpretation here- they're not keeping people on the outside because they don't care about the crime, it's because they're correctly treating it as a hostage situation rather than a robbery like the stock guy wants them to
+Wolverine6637 His mother taught him right; aside from the whole attempting-to-destroy-the-city-and-kill-innocent-people thing of course. But other than that...
Did anyone notice that flipping a coin is a common metaphor for arbitrary chance? It's not a reference to Two-face. Two-face is just one manifestation of the idea of arbitrary decision making.
Everybody's money tied to a stock market is somehow a very Soviet Union thing? 😂 I know you just making a joke but it's a pretty bad one if it doesn't make any sense.
@@bilalbaig8586 Actually telling the "wrong kind" (moking USSR, leaders of USSR, communism etc) of jokes would send you to gulag for real. Prisoners in gulag actually had a way to keep telling the jokes while inside the gulag. They agreed basic numbers for specific jokes and then they could just say "number 3", get a nice laugh and the guards had no idea they were making those "wrong kind" of jokes right in front of them.
I love how this scene allows you to have some sympathy for Bane and his cause. The first minute of this scene is pretty much rich ass Wallstreet guys treating the working class people like shit. And in a super direct way, it shows that this class struggle fuels the rise of Bane. With growing economic inequality in Gotham a rebellion like Bane's was inevitable, mass waves of crime were inevitable, the chaos that The Joker predicted was inevitable. Instead of trying to defuse the bomb Batman and Gordon stuffed it under the rug. If they didn't lie then crime would probably be as strong as potent as ever, but there would be no revolutionaries taking over the city and trying to nuke it. Bane really was Gotham's reckoning. Someone meant to destroy the people of Gotham who took advantage and exploited. He takes a simple root to stop this evil. Literally just killing them and having anarchy, maybe there could have been a better solution if they hadn't let the gunpowder light up. Maybe people would have tried to make different types of changes to alleviate the class struggle. Instead they stocked up gunpowder. Until Bane brought the match.
The thing about the villains is different goals. Joker wanted to destroy the system, and install anarchy in its place. Although Bane too wanted to destroy the system, he wanted to install fairness and have everyone be at the same financial level.
You guys forgot how the League of Shadows just want to destroy the hegemonic empire of each time in human history. Bane just uses the circunstancial in his favor. They are not revolutionaries. They are using the need of a revolution and the turmoil of Gotham to achieve their goals. That's why, after basically doing the french revolution, Bane says: "This great city... It will endure" and cut to the bomb being armed.
Plothole time. As soon as the Stock Exchange was taken hostage, all transactions for that day would be frozen. Bruce Wayne couldn't lose his company with this plan.
@@hakatapawa7115 I'm no American either....but generalizing a whole population is EXTREMELY arrogant and ignorant...you're more so, and that's coming from a Canadian
@Alejandro Feo Cecin Thanos: No However Wisdom to know all I seek to know about your little planet Bane: You had to bring terror with you to realize that as for me I was born in it Thanos: I'm thankful Bane: To you
Thanos: I am inevitable... Bane: I am Gotham's reckoning. Thanos: I have the Power Stone. Bane: ..and this..gives you... *POWER* over me? Thanos: you're quite the fighter, Bane. Bane: you fight like young Man!
This was a pivotal moment in Bane's plans, and you can tell he's stressed but plays it cool. This is where his entire plan could've failed, had he or his men made any mistakes. Bane is cool, calm, and collected but the anxiety is still there, especially when they're waiting for the data transfer.
Spihk Heartbust!? Go now quickly Bozeman Hotmail Recipient have not received a reward yet for Flipping over a Police officer; so now what about David & Goliath??
I love the small detail at 2:17 where the policeman is tunnel visioned by his working class perspective that he can't grasp the importance of the robbery. Just goes to show how intelligent Bane is since he can see both sides of the social hierarchy.
@@imjustafaiz I dunno bout that. Does sound like a plothole. But if I had to make some explanation, I'd just say he probably used his tunnel systems to blow up under the trade center beforehand to bring the vehicle in, just like he did with Wayne Tech