Wednesday 31 December 1969

analysis - Is the pit in Dark Knight Rises a representation of Ra's Al Ghul's Lazarus pit? - Movies & TV



Everyone familiar with Batman universe would be quite familiar with Ra's Al Ghul's Lazarus pit. Given the realism shown in the Batman movies by Nolan, for instance Bane's character and his mask. In the comics/video games Bane is portrayed along these lines with tubes to control the venom which runs into his body




enter image description here



In the movie he is shown as a really strong guy with a mask to subdue his pain from his previously sustained injury.



Ra's Al Ghul's pit is known to resurrect half dead people and heal people from their severe injuries, which often explains the reason why Ra's Al Ghul is immortal (That's a dialogue even quoted by Liam Neeson's Ra's Al Ghul character briefly in the scene when he talks to Bruce Wayne when he was imagining talking to him ). Given the fact Bruce Wayne gets over his broken back in a relatively few days given his age, could we assume it's equivalent to a realistic version of Ra's Al Ghul's Lazarus pit?



I would love to hear any interesting perceptions on this topic.


Answer



At the risk of merely stealing someone else's hypothesis (due in some part to there being no official word on the matter), I would point you to this thread at superherohype.com where some excellent points have been made, including:




the chant which the inmates recite is in Moroccan; can't be coincidental that it is Ra's al Ghul's native language



Talia is the one who is born in it and escapes it, not Bane



The League seems to be the only thing from the outside world that knows the Pit's location



when Bruce was first in the Pit, he was there as a paraplegic but when he left he was fully "healed," albeit not supernaturally



One of the commentators then posted the following image which seems to correlate with the events in the film, but actually depicts a lazarus pit:




enter image description here



I can't take the credit for these ideas (which seem quite conclusive to me), but I am happy to make them available to you ;)


No comments:

Post a Comment

c++ - Does curly brackets matter for empty constructor?

Those brackets declare an empty, inline constructor. In that case, with them, the constructor does exist, it merely does nothing more than t...