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A digitally mapped model of Tom Hardy's face and skull was used to design and construct Bane's mask. Costume designer Lindy Hemming explained that Bane uses a mask to inhale an analgesic gas, which, in director Christopher Nolan's words, "keeps his pain just below the threshold so he can function." In designing Bane's costume, Hemming needed it ...
Batman has had a number of famous faces through the years from legends like Michael Keaton to 2000s icons like Robert Pattinson.But in every iteration, he is the same surly, dark hero of the crime ...
Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) Ben Affleck ’s first appearance as Bruce Wayne arrived in 2016 after 2013’s Superman origin story, Man of Steel .
Batman frees the police and they clash with Bane's army in the streets; during the battle, Batman overpowers Bane. Miranda intervenes and stabs Batman, revealing herself as Talia al Ghul, Ra's al Ghul's daughter, and pledging to complete her father's work and avenge his death. She activates the bomb's detonator, but Gordon blocks the signal.
Bane appears in The Lego Batman Movie, voiced by Doug Benson. [3] This version's design is a combination of his comics counterpart and Tom Hardy's portrayal. A Feudal Japan-inspired incarnation of Bane appears in Batman Ninja, voiced by Kenta Miyake. Bane appears in Batman vs. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, voiced again by Carlos Alazraqui. [3]
Bane also featured as a secondary villain in 1997’s “Batman & Robin,” as played by professional wrestler Robert Swenson, and Shane West played the character on Fox’s Batman prequel series ...
In Batman #500, Jean-Paul, in his new mechanical Batsuit (which is an amalgam of Azrael's costume and the Batman's), confronts Bane in an arduous battle and prevails, although many bystanders are put at risk. Jean-Paul leaves Bane broken mentally and physically, though he struggles with the choice of whether to simply kill Bane or hand him over ...
While Adam West reprised his role as Batman from the 1960s television series in Batman: The Movie (1966). In the Burton / Schumacher films, this iteration of the character is first portrayed by Michael Keaton in Batman (1989), Batman Returns (1992) and later would reprise the role in the DC Extended Universe (DCEU) film, The Flash .