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by speedRS
5069 days ago
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I can see similarities between the allegory and film in terms of the populace being blind to the so-called "truth" of the world until Bane forces it upon them; even that though is like an inversion of the cave situation, I would suggest. Apart from that though, I'm not sure that I see the correlation, unless you're suggesting that Batman himself is the guy in the cave (not literally the Batcave). Was there anything specific that made you think that's what Nolan was going for? |
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I think batman so far believed that his lie about Dent's death had done good to the City and his city did not need him any more. All was well with the Gotham city. This is the imagined truth aka the shadows on the walls of the cave.
Batman's rise from lazaris pit is symbolic in the sense that with lot of hardship and pain batman realizes that there is truth beyond his knowledge. Gotham needs hope in the form of the same symbol that he had created 8 years ago.
Just like the free man in the Plato's allegory Batman could have just escaped because he did not owe anything to Gothamites. (Catwoman did suggest that). But he considers his moral responsibility to go back to Gotham with hope.