Bane was not completely lacking agency, as he worked alongside Talia and even disobeyed her at one point (opting to kill Batman instead of letting Talia’s bomb atomize him). This removed the agency, leadership, and fascinating obsession with Batman that Bane had in the comics, reducing his comic counterpart’s compellingly simple motivation.Īlthough Bane’s rewrites ruined his villainous appeal from the comics, he was still a compelling villain in the film. Revenge on Batman for defeating Ra’s al Ghul in Batman Begins (coupled with the Dark Knight being the biggest obstacle for the League’s plans) was part of Bane’s motivation, but he primarily sought to finish what Ra’s started and help Talia. ![]() Rather than being born in the corrupt prison of Peña Duro, The Dark Knight Rises made Bane an inmate of “the Pit,” and rather than becoming the prison’s most formidable member, he received his training from the League of Shadows for protecting Talia and helping her escape.
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