DETALHES que você PERDEU em BATMAN O CAVALEIRO DAS TREVAS RESSURGE 🦇 - Summary

Summary

This video highlights various Easter eggs, references, and details from the movie "Batman: The Dark Knight Rises" (2012). Some of the key points include:

* The movie's logo foreshadows an important event, and the film includes references to the comics, previous films, and other pop culture.
* The video points out various details, such as the use of a bookcase to hide the Batcave, the newspaper calling Catwoman "The Cat," and the appearance of Crispus Allen, a character from the comics.
* The film includes nods to other Batman movies, such as the use of a similar suit and the inclusion of a character named Robin.
* The video also highlights some continuity errors, such as a character's tablet being put away and then reappearing.
* The film's themes of class struggle and revolution are compared to the French Revolution and the book "A Tale of Two Cities."
* The video also provides some behind-the-scenes information, such as the use of a life-size Bat model and the fact that Tom Hardy's voice as Bane was redubbed due to test audience confusion.

Overall, the video is a comprehensive analysis of the movie's details and references, and is likely to appeal to fans of the Batman franchise and comic books.

Facts

Here are the key facts extracted from the text:

1. The logo of "Batman: The Dark Knight Rises" simulates breaking ice, alluding to condemnation.
2. Commissioner Gordon quotes Harvey Dent's campaign motto from the previous film.
3. The phrase "I Believed in Harvey Dent" is also from the comics.
4. Miranda Nolan, Christopher Nolan's cousin, plays the role of a maid in Wayne Manor.
5. Dagget references fellow billionaire and eccentric Howard Hughes, portrayed by Leonardo DiCaprio in "The Aviator".
6. The photo of Martha and Thomas Wayne burned in the Wayne Manor fire is seen in Bruce's room.
7. The portrait of Rachel, Bruce's romantic interest, is also seen in his room.
8. Thomas Wayne's stethoscope is found in the wreckage and is kept on a small altar.
9. Selina Kyle's necklace is a remake of the one that belonged to her mother.
10. The scene where Selina steals the necklace mirrors her first appearance in the comics.
11. The name "Ondrejko" is the same name used by the Joker in the mayor's fake obituary.
12. The Batcave hidden behind a bookcase is reminiscent of the 1960s Batman series.
13. The newspaper calls Selina "The Cat", just like her first appearance in the comics.
14. The word "robbery" is spelled wrong in the newspaper, with letters reversed.
15. Selina's true interest was not in stealing the necklace, but in stealing Bruce's fingerprints.
16. The fingerprints are handed over to criminals.
17. Blake visits Bruce and reveals he knows his secret identity.
18. The doctor who treats Gordon is the same doctor from "Amnesia", another film by Christopher Nolan.
19. Bruce visits Gordon in the hospital, where he is seen by the same doctor.
20. The soundtrack continues where it left off when Batman reappears.
21. The countdown on the criminals' tablet corresponds to the time of the scene.
22. The strange thing is that the same channel reports differently on each TV.
23. Bane activates the detonator, trapping the police in the sewer.
24. He kills the only person capable of disarming the atomic bomb.
25. The R on the card has the same design as Robin's.
26. Bane was given a revolutionary tone, similar to the communist Vladimir Lenin.
27. The Nolan brothers based part of the story on the book "A Tale of Two Cities".
28. Bane Knitting is a reference to Madame Defarge, a character in the book.
29. Selina hands Batman over to Bane.
30. The child's story foreshadows that the child will not be the one to escape from prison.
31. Bane's mask completes Batman's, as his opposite.
32. Bane uses the same blow from the comic to break Batman.
33. Batman is saved by Catwoman, and they begin to chase the truck with the atomic bomb.
34. The scene is very reminiscent of Terminator 2.
35. Jim Gordon is the character with whom Batman exchanges his last words.
36. The only solution for the bomb not to destroy Gotham is to explode it on the high seas.
37. The round shape and the way found to get rid of it seems to be taken from the 1960s film.
38. Batman supposedly dies, playing the same song as his parents' deaths.
39. The autopilot was fixed, and that's why Alfred finds him at the end.
40. Another member of the family, Rory Nolan, son of director Christopher Nolan, appears in the film.
41. To ensure the ending's secrecy, Bruce's funeral scene was engraved with another name on the tombstone.
42. Digitally replaced in post-production.
43. Christian Bale was on set so there would be no suspicion.
44. The statue of Batman forms a smiling face, reminiscent of a clown.
45. The hair, nose, eyes, and smile.
46. The statue's blue cloak resembles the color of Batman's original cape.
47. In the last scenes, it is revealed that Blake's name is Robin.
48. The character carries characteristics of several Robins.
49. An orphan like Dick Grayson, a street kid like Jason Todd, and a detective who discovers Batman's true identity as Tim Drake.
50. The letters N and W could be a reference to Nightwing.
51. Villain Bane is played by Tom Hardy.
52. The actor revealed that he based Bane's voice on Bartley Gorman.
53. A boxer from the 1970s known as "King of the Gypsies".
54. Due to the test audience not understanding anything he says, the studio redubbed all of the character's lines.
55. Nolan's trilogy has a tradition of incomprehensible voices.
56. Brett Cullen would later play Thomas Wayne in Joker.
57. Tom Hardy measures 1.75 while Christian Bale measures 1.83.
58. To compensate for this difference, they needed to use platforms and simple resources such as positioning the camera from bottom to top.
59. Nolan used practically the entire cast of Inception.
60. Many Bat scenes were shot with a life-size model.
61. Supported by cables, or suspended on a base with hydraulic controls.