"Yes with the hard evidence as I don't really like to lie to people. Additionally I am not biased."
Best joke ever
"Yes with the hard evidence as I don't really like to lie to people. Additionally I am not biased."
Best joke ever
If you just assume everything he says is in Bizarro speak, it makes a lot more sense.
On the subject of Bizarro speak, who thought giving Bane a voice that sounds like a muppet was a good idea?
I loved Bane's voice. His marvellously over-the-top delivery is one of the highlights of the film for me.
The Harley Quinn Animated version of Bane is hilarious.
There came a time when the Old Gods died! The Brave died with the Cunning! The Noble perished locked in battle with unleashed Evil! It was the last day for them! An ancient era was passing in fiery holocaust!
Personally I didn't like it. He wasn't intimidating at all. I am unsure what effect they were trying to pull off with it.
In general, I am so over villains who give long monologies about how humanity sucks. It was one thing which killed Ultron for me in Avengers 2 - he just kept talking.
Bane’s voice, the potholes, and the “lets send every cop to the tunnels” mostly.
He would be called the Asphalt Al when he fought the Human Torch, later he would be renamed The Potholer.
There came a time when the Old Gods died! The Brave died with the Cunning! The Noble perished locked in battle with unleashed Evil! It was the last day for them! An ancient era was passing in fiery holocaust!
I liked the intonation of Bane's voice, but it's the modulator/muffledness that was the hard part.
Apparently that was Hardy's idea, basing it off both boxer Bentley Gorman's solid toughness but also the philosophical schemer of the source material (hence the voice inflections). To me ultimately it highlighted Bane as thoughtful and intimidating, but ultimately no real bite* past a certain point (like a carnival barker or braggart -- the dog and pony show), in a way mimicking how he was Talia's pawn and not the big bad we were led to believe for 90% of the movie, or how the tides turned quickly once Batman figured out to attack the mask.
*I really don't mean this as a criticism of the movie, either. If done well, it's a good twist. If it's done well here in the movie, I'll let the rest of you decide
For me, the buildup to the twist was excellent, but the follow-up was weak. The subtle hints that Bane was not the child who escaped were really well done. The problem is that nothing is done with Talia once she's revealed as the mastermind. She stabs Batman from behind and drives the truck. That's it. This is the daughter of Ra's al Ghul, the man who trained Bruce, and someone who as a child pulled off a physical feat which Batman struggled so hard to do even when he was recovered and back to full strength. And all of that might as well not matter with what little she does once she reveals she's the villain.