stillanerd
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With regards to the ending, it's not the least bit ambiguous at all. There were more than enough indications that what we saw at the end was as straight-forward as it purports to be. The autopilot being fixed. The missing pearls. The repaired bat-signal. The supposedly unaltered will, even though it has instructions for both John Blake and Wayne Manor to be made into an orphanage. Heck, Bruce even knows what Alfred's fantasy is because Alfred straight up told him, so it's clear that he and Selina intentionally went to that cafe knowing full well Alfred would be there. Compared to Nolan's other films, the endings to his Batman films are very clear-cut, so I do think some are trying to be a bit too clever by half in this case.
EDIT: Granted, I understand why. Christopher Nolan's films have a tendency to make things not what they appear to be at face value, so they think that, like Inception's ambiguous ending, there had to be more to what, for all intends and purposes, was very straight-forward. Never mind the fact that Bruce Wayne's supposed demise WAS the moment in which things didn't appear as what they seemed to be and that, thematically, it made far more sense for Bruce to still be alive and be with Selina at the end.
Exactly.
But Bane DID warp the truth. He stated that not only was Gordon complicit in covering up Harvey Dent's crimes as Two-Face, but that the entire city government was in on the conspiracy. He's rubbing it in Gotham's face that the guy they thought was nothing but a murderer and outlaw was the real hero all along and the guy they were told was the "White Knight of Gotham" was the real villain, that he was nothing but a propaganda symbol used by Gotham's elite to prop up their "corrupt regime." Besides, he was also trying to stir the hatred amongst the Blackgate prisoners that had been boiling for the past eight years, by also telling them "See? None of you should have been put in prison in the first place."
While it's true Bane doesn't give a **** about the people and wants to get revenge on Batman for Ra's al Ghul's death by "fulfilling [his] destiny," the whole idea is to give Gotham a false sense of hope that they could survive, just as he thinks he's giving Bruce a false sense of hope by placing him in the pit that only one person has ever escaped from and saying, "all you got to do is climb out and you'll be free and that there's no guards to stop you." Remember, he never told the people of Gotham they only had five months until the reactor exploded; all he said was that the bomb was armed and that a "citizen" had the trigger-mechanism. Again, the whole idea is that he's giving Gotham a false sense of hope, that Gotham will not be destroyed if they do what he says, to make them believe they still have a chance, which, once the eventual destruction happens, it will make their despair, the world's, and especially Bruce's, that much greater.
EDIT: Granted, I understand why. Christopher Nolan's films have a tendency to make things not what they appear to be at face value, so they think that, like Inception's ambiguous ending, there had to be more to what, for all intends and purposes, was very straight-forward. Never mind the fact that Bruce Wayne's supposed demise WAS the moment in which things didn't appear as what they seemed to be and that, thematically, it made far more sense for Bruce to still be alive and be with Selina at the end.
And if everyone wants to have the conspiracy, out there, theory that Bruce is actually dead (even though we SEE him alive) -- why can't we give thought to this theory?
Nolan cheated time. The last shot of Batman in the cock pit was from well before the clock reached 5 seconds...
This is just as believable as Alfred hallucinating.... (if not more)
I mean, c'mon man -- he's BATMAN. He always escapes the impossible without there seeming to be a chance of survival or enough time. It's what he does.
OR the entire cockpit of the Bat ejects, similar to the Batpod ejecting from the Tumbler and Batman was already well away from the blast when we see him that blast in that last shot we see him.
-R
Exactly.
Yeah. Moreover, most people in Gotham still hate Batman for being a vigilante, for destroying tons of public property. They don't know he fought Ra's Al Ghul, they don't know he was the one who defeated the Joker. Look the scene in TDK where Bruce wants to reveal he is Batman but Harvey takes his place. People hate Batman! They want him arrested. This gets worse by the end of TDK. Moreover, people hate Bruce Wayne because he's an ******* every time he's on public eyes. And, he could've said...Batman is the one who destroyed Harvey's Dent's life! He's the one who has ruined the hopes for a better Gotham.
Bane could've warped the truth, said that he's the one who defeated the outlaw. Who finally brought piece to Gotham by exposing all the lies, including his identity. This would've made the movie SO MUCH better.
It still makes no sense why he wouldn't tell.
But Bane DID warp the truth. He stated that not only was Gordon complicit in covering up Harvey Dent's crimes as Two-Face, but that the entire city government was in on the conspiracy. He's rubbing it in Gotham's face that the guy they thought was nothing but a murderer and outlaw was the real hero all along and the guy they were told was the "White Knight of Gotham" was the real villain, that he was nothing but a propaganda symbol used by Gotham's elite to prop up their "corrupt regime." Besides, he was also trying to stir the hatred amongst the Blackgate prisoners that had been boiling for the past eight years, by also telling them "See? None of you should have been put in prison in the first place."
LOL. A nice way to give hope is exploding the city with a bomb, huh?Give me a break.
Bane doesn't give a **** about the people. He wants to destroy the city and bring it to ashes!
While it's true Bane doesn't give a **** about the people and wants to get revenge on Batman for Ra's al Ghul's death by "fulfilling [his] destiny," the whole idea is to give Gotham a false sense of hope that they could survive, just as he thinks he's giving Bruce a false sense of hope by placing him in the pit that only one person has ever escaped from and saying, "all you got to do is climb out and you'll be free and that there's no guards to stop you." Remember, he never told the people of Gotham they only had five months until the reactor exploded; all he said was that the bomb was armed and that a "citizen" had the trigger-mechanism. Again, the whole idea is that he's giving Gotham a false sense of hope, that Gotham will not be destroyed if they do what he says, to make them believe they still have a chance, which, once the eventual destruction happens, it will make their despair, the world's, and especially Bruce's, that much greater.
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