I know that to a lot of fans this is the be all end all of importance, but is it really necessary? I mean of course those other iterations exist and matter, you can watch them literally any time you want to. Is it legit something that needs to be stated? Makes me worry that we're not getting Keaton and Affleck because they're wicked rad and should be Batguys always, but to reinforce a weird continuity issue."It's inclusive in the sense that it is saying all that you've seen exists, and everything that you will see exists, in the same unified multiverse."
Nitpick there aside, this all sounds good. I'm really excited to see Affleck Batman and Keaton Batman! I hope Affleck gets his own BATMAN movie soon.
Last edited by Flash Gordon; 12-07-2020 at 10:20 AM.
I do wonder what “restarts everything” means though. Will they still use Flashpoint to reboot Superman for example? Or is that just typical marketing hyperbolic bs?
This would be more frustrating and stupid than it is if the actor playing the Flash didn't suck, so we're not losing out on much anyway.
Trouble in paradise. Gadot got a big fat payout from the studio since the new deal will hurt her box office percentage deal, but other stars like Margot Robbie didn't get that deal.
Last week, when Jason Kilar, WarnerMedia’s chief executive, announced that 17 more Warner Bros. movies would each roll out on HBO Max and in theaters à la “Wonder Woman 1984,” talent was handled in a very different manner. To prevent the news of the 17-movie shift from leaking (and to make the move speedily rather than get mired in the expected blowback), WarnerMedia kept the major agencies and talent management companies in the dark until roughly 90 minutes before issuing a news release. Even some Warner Bros. executives had little warning.
The surprise move left agencies on a war footing. Representatives for major Warner Bros. stars like Denzel Washington, Margot Robbie, Will Smith, Keanu Reeves, Hugh Jackman and Angelina Jolie wanted to know why their clients had been treated in a lesser manner than Ms. Gadot. Talk of a Warner Bros. boycott began circulating inside the Directors Guild of America. A partner at one talent agency spent part of the weekend meeting with litigators. Some people started to angrily refer to the studio as Former Bros.
I don't blame any of these people upset at Warner Bros if they were not even consulted on a decision that will very likely result in them losing millions upon millions of dollars they were expecting.
This is an extraordinarily stupid move on the part of AT&T's Warner execs and the long-term consequences for this are likely to be quite severe given that Netflix and Disney+, and AppleTV are both up and running and willing to pay through the nose for their films.
Apple was offering 800 million for Kong vs. Godzilla and then Warner does this to the producers without even consulting them? Eeesh.