The Dark Knight Rises: Why Bane Has To Wear A Mask

The Dark Knight Rises: Why Bane Has To Wear A Mask

The Dark Knight Rises introduced audiences to Bane, played by Tom Hardy, a major DC villain who stands out as he has to wear a mask at all times. In DC Comics, Batman has encountered a large variety of villains, many of whom have become a part of pop culture, and as such, have joined the Caped Crusader in his many adaptations to TV and film. While the most iconic of these is perhaps the Joker, another major villain is Bane, who made his big-screen debut in Joel Schumacher’s Batman & Robin in 1997 and was given a second chance thanks to Christopher Nolan in 2012’s The Dark Knight Rises.

After the failure of Batman & Robin, Batman was given a new opportunity on the big screen with Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy, comprised of 2005’s Batman Begins, 2008’s The Dark Knight, and The Dark Knight Rises, and placing Christian Bale in the coveted titular role. Each movie saw the Caped Crusader facing a different villain (with Cillian Murphy’s Scarecrow appearing in all three installments), with The Dark Knight Rises bringing Bane back to theaters in a much more grounded and darker way than Schumacher had before, giving him a different origin story and a new reason to wear his now-iconic mask.

Nolan Changed Bane’s Mask And Story For Dark Knight Rises

The Dark Knight Rises: Why Bane Has To Wear A Mask

The only moment during The Dark Knight Rises when Bane is not seen wearing the mask is during a flashback, during which Bane helps Talia al Ghul escape from the Pit, an underground prison where both are being held, though Bane is attacked for helping her find freedom. While Bane’s backstory and real name are never revealed in the film, Christopher Nolan did confirm the reason he’s so attached to the mask. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Nolan confirmed that the mask dispenses an anesthetic that keeps Bane’s pain controlled, and the flashback sequence explains the need for this, as the attack in the Pit left him with serious injuries.

Nolan significantly changed the purpose of Bane’s mask in The Dark Knight Rises from its DC Comics roots. In the comics, Bane was experimented on with the Venom virus while incarcerated, and though he almost died as a result, he found that the drug increased his physical strength, but he needed to take it every twelve hours. The drug was administered via tubes that led directly into his brain, and the mask helped to keep these tubes protected. Nolan also changed the look of Bane’s mask, as in the comics, Bane is Latinx, and his mask is inspired by luchadors, reflecting his cultural background, though Nolan chose to omit this.

Bane’s most defining physical characteristic is what made him so menacing, and in the comics and Batman & Robin, it was also the source of his physical strength, though Bane was a brilliant mastermind with or without the Venom virus. Christopher Nolan managed to keep the essence of Bane, his origin, and the purpose of the mask while also giving his story an even more tragic twist, even though he curiously left out the character’s important cultural background. Even so, Bane’s new look was fitting for the tone of Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy, which chose a more brooding, gritty approach to Batman, Gotham City, and its villains.

Bane’s Mask Was Supposed To Distort His Voice Even More

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Bane has an incredibly distinctive voice in The Dark Knight Rises, assumed to be distorted because of the mask itself. In the original plan, Bane’s voice was set to be deeper, raspier, and with added respirator sound effects akin to Darth Vader in the Star Wars franchise. However, this voice was changed after test audiences found it difficult to understand the villain, practically eliminating Bane as a viable and impactful threat as he couldn’t even be understood. Prior to the film’s wide theatrical release, Nolan re-recorded Bane’s voice for The Dark Knight Rises, landing on the sinister and menacing tone that better fit the character.