Yes. That's exactly how he felt. He wanted those who had been disenfranchised and screwed over by those who had it all to rise up and take control of their city from those who controlled the power. A city doesn't have to be dirty and disgusting to have very, very poor people who are consistently screwed over by very, very wealthy people.... Look at New York.
How were the people of Gotham being screwed over by the wealthy, though? The film never shows us this.
The only corruption and corporate greed we see is from Dagget, who was trying to screw over Bruce Wayne, who isn't exactly the city's masses.
Nolan tried to play on the sympathies of the American people, but it doesn't quite work as motivation to destroy a fictional city.
In my opinion, the film's explanation and reasoning for Bane's motives is weak. And that is part of film's flaws. Bane's plan was all over the place. Blow up the city, start a revolution against the corrupt (in a city you claim is no longer corrupt, thanks to the Dent act), and finally he's doing something that doesn't really make any intellectual sense (fulfilling the wish of Ras, the man who exiled him for saving his own daughter's life), for love.
What was supposed to separate Bane from the Joker was his decisive intelligence. "It's all part of the plan". He had a plan, and wanted to execute it. However, the plan was weak in context, and at times he just seemed to be wanting different things.
Agreed. And that's largely, I think, because Bane didn't really have his own motivations. They were Talia's, borne out of a plan for revenge, which is also pretty cliche a motivation.
Bane was a glorified thug. I'm starting to think they watched the episodes of BATMAN: THE ANIMATED SERIES with Bane in them and didn't actually read KNIGHTFALL or LEGACY.
But this film is so deep, and complex and dense. But it's not incomprehensible. All of the information is there.
Deep? Not really.
Complex? Eh...in that its convoluted, I guess, but its not a terribly clever way to put together a film.
All of the information is arguably there, but that doesn't mean it's well handled or written.
Bane had a plan. And it wasn't to blow up the city.
Bane's plan was to give the control of the city to those he felt deserved it. The people.
No, his plan was to make them think they were in control. And I'm not even sure it was his plan.
He was against the greed that the wealthy and the powerful had. It wasn't out and out corruption, as in "corrupt cops" and the "mob" which the Dent Act DID stamp out. It was corruption in the form of capitalism. Where the poor are forgotten and disenfranchised, while the wealthy pick the city clean.
Which the movie never showed.
Bane said exactly what the bomb was being used for. "This is the instrument of your liberation." He didn't want to detonate the bomb. He doesn't want to blow up the city. The bomb was the leverage that he was giving the poor and the disenfranchised to take the power from the wealthy. He "gave the trigger to a regular citizen" so that the regular citizens would have the power over the ruling class.
The bomb was his leverage to keep outside forces from intervening. And he planned to use it. The regular citizen nonsense was just to divert suspicion from Miranda.
Bane didn't want to watch Gotham's people suffer. He wanted watch those who used to run Gotham suffer. People who he thought were part of a broken system. Gordon, the Mayor and even Batman were included in this. That's why blew up the luxury boxes at the football game but left the regular fans unharmed. He encouraged the regular citizens to kick the rich out of their penthouses. Those who were being "judged" by Crane were all of the ruling class -- I saw no blue collar people falling through ice.
This is true, but his reasoning for it is silly, and he mainly (Talia) wanted Bruce to suffer.
And Bane subscribed to the belief that it was his responsibility to restore order in Gotham because it was a belief held by Talia, the woman he loved. And it was a belief held by Ra's, a man he respected but whose approval he could never earn.
So he basically didn't have his own motivations.
Bane gave Gotham the time limit on the bomb to force their hand. If they took control of their city in the allotted time he would have placed the bomb back and ruled over this new Gotham. But Gotham did NOT "take control," instead, many tried to take back control from Bane. And because of this -- the bomb's timer continued to tick down...
See -- I don't think the plan was to just destroy the city. They wanted to reshape it. But they were prepared to die and prepared to take the city out if failure seemed possible, and people didn't cooperate. They wanted to make Bruce watch as he and the "old guard" (Gordon, Mayor Garcia, the Wayne Family, etc) lost control of Gotham and it fell into Bane's control.
But when the time came, and Talia and Bane saw that Gotham was never going to accept their new world order, the martyrs that they were -- had no choice but to destroy the city....and they wanted Bruce to live through it, die in it, and experience every death.
Uh...no.
He very much planned to blow up Gotham City. He told Bruce as much, and since Talia was behind it all, this was her plan all along.
Would have been nice to see Bane and Talia at odds a bit, perhaps with Bane wanting to rule Gotham, or with her wanting to rule it, or...something, but no. They just wanted to make Bruce suffer and then blow it up.
Bane had a pretty clear plan, and equally clear motivation.
The problem is that his motivation amounts to "punishing" Bruce Wayne and Gotham City, and that his motivation was basically just an extension of Talia's, and Ra's Al Ghul's from BATMAN BEGINS.
And other than "I follow orders", we're never given a reason why Bane would feel this way.
Heck, even that, Bane being someone who blindly follows orders and turns into a more assertive character who tries to wrest control of the city from Talia, that could have made a compelling motivation/character exploration, but it wasn't explored.
There's not nealry enough of the rich hurting the weak to make his actions make sense. Its not well handled. And its not very deep.
I'm not sure we all did see the same thing. We have people asking the following:
-How did Bane know Bruce was Batman?
-How did Blake know Bruce was Batman?
-How did Alfred find Bruce in the end at the Cafe?
-How did Blake find the Batcave?
So on and so forth. MOST of the questions are basic and easily answered by watching the film. And when you are asking how Blake knew Batman was Bruce... and there is an entire scene dedicated to Blake telling Bruce how he knew... It makes me think you went to the bathroom at that moment. Or that you don't watch the screen and see the coordinates to the Batcave written on a piece of paper in the bag in Blake's passenger's seat.
Here's the thing. Yes, this is in the film. But with the exception of Blake finding the cave, the rest is not well handled, and is basically just shoehorned into the film to begin with.
I'm off to bed. This has been fun. I understand that you liked the movie, and I'm with you -- it has it's flaws... But I think it's getting a bum rap with some of these "flaws."
A flaw is a flaw.
A filmmaker making a movie that COMPOUNDS those flaws because he and his writing crew didn't think things through...that makes for a messy film.
For instance, the shot of Batman in The Bat. I get what it is. But its inclusion is what is confusing people, and leading them to question the realistic nature of Batman's escape based on the "trap" he was in as a character.
The film is full of weak executions and awkward filmmaking like that.
There are some REALLY good ideas in this movie. A lot of them are half baked because of ther way the film is assembled.