That's pretty much my hypothesis in this string of discourse!CharlesPhipps wrote: ↑Tue Dec 11, 2018 7:18 pmIts my least favorite of the three. It's not terrible but I felt like if you're going to use social inequity then it shouldn't be a smokescreen for a villainous revenge plot.
Though in this kind of case I don't really try to rewrite the premise so much as divert attention. What you're saying brings things together for me since I haven't seen the movie in ages and I only saw it probably several times. Though bringing it all together, the antagonist premise is a bit ambitious with the reveal at the end. I think Bane's motivation itself is kinda shallow and kiddie pool. Like his elaborate execution of the whole thing outweighs his own motivation.
Can you cite the circumstance of his inadequacy more specifically?MightyDavidson wrote: ↑Tue Dec 11, 2018 8:02 pm Wasn't fond of Dark Knight Rises myself. To be fair I didn't really go in to the movie open minded since I was still pissed off by the ending of The Dark Knight and the fact that the beginning of Dark Knight Rises essentially began by stating that crime was stopped in Gotham City without Batman, that Batman was essentially superfluous in a Batman movie just rubbed me the wrong way.
Just going off what you're saying, crime in general fills a motif for Batman's persona stemming from his upbringing. It's something that's technically never solved as far as I can tell, but the main stage is villains with their own backstories and meddling with Gotham opposite Batman. And the main idea is that the crime might have been stopped, but it was critically fallacious. The crime substantiates the darkness in Bruce's tunnel, and the Joker technically snuffed the bead of light out at the end of it.