Who is enemy in dark knight rises




















In the case of Batman Begins one of Nolan's more underrated films , the man behind the curtain in question is Ducard, the man who trained Bruce and the head of the League of Shadows, Ra's Al Ghul.

Even though his masterplan to have Gotham tear itself apart by the use of an aerosol version of the fear toxin is a little over the top, the Demons head still proves himself as a mighty foe. Using a decoy to throw off his true identity and not to mention his swordplay, athletics, and brilliant although cliched mind, Ra's is a strong manipulator who almost gets the better of Batman and is only barely beaten by the world's greatest detective. Fear is an incredibly potent weapon.

Fear can turn the bravest of men into cowering and mewling children and when your Jonathan, the Scarecrow, fear is the ultimate weapon and tool of destruction. The unfortunate fact many viewers overlook a number of aspects of Batman Begins , with Cillian Murphey's Scarecrow being one of them.

They seem to forget that, despite being a flunky of sorts of Ra's Al Ghul, Scarecrow sowed seeds of fear throughout Gotham, turning Carmine Falcon mad, providing the chemicals that would be Ra's Al Ghul's weapon against the city and even dosing Batman and showing him his deepest fears.

Only powerful can pull that sort of thing off You merely adopted the dark I was born in it, molded by it. Played excellently by Tom Hardy, this menacing masked terrorist manages to uncover Batman's true identity, exposed the lie of Harvey Dent, turned Gotham into a No Man's Land for five long months, and, in a scene ripped straight from the comics, break Batman's back. Among the editorial team Dixon in particular was concerned that the newbie baddie be well-received by readers.

Comic book characters who become popular tend to be almost created by mistake: One-off characters like Wolverine, who's now iconic, or the Silver Surfer, who was created just to be a friend for Galactus.

Bane made himself into Bane, but with much darker purposes. He only had a couple of lines — and I wouldn't even call it dialogue. Obviously now Bane will be much more prominently featured in a film that promises to be a huge hit. So, yeah, I'm not complaining at all. And what other dastardly foes can you expect to see in "The Dark Knight Rises? By now everyone has become pretty familiar with the look and, um, unique sound of Bane, who is portrayed by Nolan's "Inception" star Tom Hardy.

But there's a lot more to Bane than just a cool vest, a big breather and an unintelligible growl. First appearing in the comics back in , Bane was created as basically a villainous version of Batman himself: Driven to avenge the death of his father at the hands of an evil government, Bane dedicated himself to become the ultimate revolutionary warrior, spending years training his body and honing his mind in single-minded pursuit of his goals.

Where Bruce Wayne's idealism led him to protect Gotham, however, Bane's idealism leads him to try and tear down political institutions he deems corrupt. And instead of a bevy of high-tech gadgets, Bane gains his edge by inhaling a powerful drug through his mask, one that gives him inhuman stamina and deadens pain. Just how all of this pans out is something you'll have to watch "The Dark Knight Rises" to discover. But considering Bane is most famous among comic book fans for defeating Batman — breaking his back in the process — let's just say that not every story has a happy ending.

There are many versions of the character, but the more prominent one is as a master psychologist who becomes obsessed with Batman and his true identity - to the extent that at one point he even started to dress up like him. Killer Croc would have made for a fascinating choice for the closing chapter of Christopher Nolan's Batman movie trilogy. Killer Croc would therefore have been a surprising and fascinating detour from that commitment.

How would Nolan have been able to explain a creature such as Croc existing in Gotham? Unfortunately fans never got the chance to see that happen, though there was a passing reference to Killer Croc in The Dark Knight Rises. After the Joker, there was no character more in-demand than the Penguin. The Penguin is a smart-dressing gangster who can flourish within the worlds of both politics and organized crime.

This rumored version of the Penguin would have been what Heath Ledger's version of the Joker would've hated: the ultimate schemer and genius manipulator, and a criminal mastermind who hides behind the political circus to accomplish his deeds. He's the one person that can challenge Bruce Wayne Enterprises using both the judicial system and the underbelly of Gotham at once. Of all the villains to terrorize Gotham, many in and around Hollywood felt the most obvious choice within the Nolanverse would be the Riddler.



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