Search results for "3ef51acdc703f7a5d71a8cf0c5cb90e2" in md5 (8)

/int/ - Thread 214483883
Anonymous United States No.214484225
>>214483962
It would be extremely smelly
/x/ - /NG/ The Nobody General
Anonymous No.40962446
>>40962438
>just you
4u*
/co/ - Thread 149670274
Anonymous No.149672056
>>149672045
>But you know it's probably going to hurt.
>You.
/tg/ - /40kg/ - Warhammer 40,000 General
Anonymous No.96180798
>>96180767
Yeah I suppose falling from that height would hurt.
/co/ - Thread 149342146
Anonymous No.149342229
>>149342219
for you
/a/ - Ruri no Houseki
Anonymous No.280376667
>>280376602
/tv/ - Thread 212180666
Anonymous No.212181307
>>212181280
fr
/tv/ - Thread 212027755
Anonymous No.212027755
While The Dark Knight (2008) is widely regarded as a landmark in modern cinema—anchored by Heath Ledger’s acclaimed performance as the Joker—The Dark Knight Rises (2012) arguably achieved a broader and more persistent cultural footprint through the phenomenon of Baneposting. Originating from Tom Hardy’s cryptic, muffled delivery as Bane, this meme ecosystem evolved far beyond its cinematic origin, infiltrating internet subcultures, forums, and social commentary with recursive irony. Unlike Ledger’s Joker, whose legacy remains tethered to film criticism and performance theory, Baneposting represents a decentralized, user-driven cultural movement, where the audience appropriates and repurposes content in perpetuity. In this context, the meme value of Bane as a semiotic artifact has arguably generated more enduring participatory engagement than Ledger’s performance, which, while artistically superior, remains static. From a memetic impact standpoint—quantified by frequency, longevity, and adaptability—The Dark Knight Rises holds a unique position as a film whose legacy was redefined not by critical acclaim, but by networked digital folklore.