I wanted to share what a user on Reddit pointed out about this film and the year of 2012's impact on creating this...online film criticism/discourse that's too analytical, nitpicky and in poor faith.
I think it's very true. So many video essays...
"There were several films released during the summer of 2012 which began the conditioning of online film criticism that has damaged a way a lot of people view movies up until this very day. The Dark Knight Rises was one of the biggest films to spearhead that.
Every last moment or decision was held up to massive scrutiny and subjected to flawless logic. This film is one of the biggest victims for people having zero concept of what a plot hole actually is. Not saying you can't take issue with the film, it is flawed, but it's no accident that channels such as CinemaSins and Honest Trailers really rose to prominence that same year.
"Criticism" that throws out engaging with theme, tone or subtext and instead exclusively abides by some checklist that can't separate fantast from reality.
The fact that the legacy of Rises is 'drrr plotholes' is unbelievably absurd and the fact that it not only has endured but bled into every facet of criticism for all media is so strange."
I have felt this for a long time. It was the beginning of the "divisive blockbuster" era, where the release of certain films became an exhausting event.
I don't think it was some sort of conspiracy or anything, but it definitely marked a moment in time where movie bloggers/Youtubers started monetizing the idea of nitpicking a movie to death. I suppose it was an easy target for that because it was super ambitious, had narrative/time "jumps", and the series had the somewhat mistaken reputation of being uber-realistic even though they always were heightened reality and big blockbusters. I always felt like there was a certain mean-spiritedness and pile-on effect with the hate TDKR got. Unfortunately that type of thing has only gotten progressively worse since then to the point that TDKR still feels like the "before times" in terms of the rise of online toxic fandoms and everything turning into a culture war issue. Obviously it goes way bigger than just nerd culture. Although weirdly TDKR seems to be sounding an alarm about this incoming societal collapse and how fragile "peace time" can be.
Anyway, none of it really bothers me anymore. I can completely understand not liking Rises or it being someone's least favorite of the trilogy. There are times I have my own complicated feelings about it. I just think people have to be real that there are some undeniably brilliant aspects of it, and it's still a Chris Nolan Batman movie which means at the very baseline there's: amazing production value, jaw-dropping practical setpieces, fantastic performances, memorable moments, quotable lines, ambition, big themes and something to say about the character and society as a whole. You can choose to ignore all of that if you want and only focus on the negative, but I don't know why you would.
I mean sure...is Talia's death scene pretty goofy? Is there a reasonable debate to be had about whether her character's inclusion was necessary or undercut Bane? "OF COURSE!" But do things like that detract from the overall experience to me? No way. The movie is too jam-packed with great stuff for me to let things like that entirely tip the scale.
On the Talia issue, I personally think the movie was kind of damned if it did, damned if it didn't in terms of bringing her in. Obviously people loved the idea of Bane being the final boss. I would've been fine with that too. But the movie also deals too heavily with the LoS and themes of legacy not to address the al Ghuls, and Talia is a big part of all of that in the mythos. Maybe it was too full of a circle for some people, but I think the movie focused on Ra's way too much not to bring that storyline full circle. I also think it helps address the issue of Batman killing Ra's in Begins. He pays a price for that. Just like he also pays a price for Dent's death and the aftermath of that. The movie is about consequences, so I think it was the last important loose end to tie up. I also feel like the Miranda/Talia character is more like a hybrid of Talia and Nyssa in terms of her overall story, so I don't look at her as a straight adaptation of Talia.