EDIT 10char is stupid
Yes.
No.
Yes and no.
Wonder Woman did great after BVS.
Aquaman set DCEU records after JL.
Snyder being associated with JL hurt the movie a lot. That said JL probably is one of my favorite DCEU movies and I would enjoy watching the director's version. Not everyone likes his direction but I enjoyed the spectacle of Man of Steel and hated BVS.
No, not at all. It would have been better than getting a movie that was only partially finished, but no it wouldn't have been successful.
BvS was already way too exhausting and they shot themselves in the foot, narratively. You're going to tell The Death of Superman...and this is how you do it? People barely have an established idea of who Superman is in a 2010s context.
No.
Batman V Superman was a crap idea to start with, and the execution was worse.
HATED it with a passion.
I think his take on Justice League would have turned people away in droves. Too dark. Too angsty.
Snyder seems to have forgotten that the appeal of superheroes is the joy of escaping the real world. Becoming more than you are.
His superhero films have no joy.
"My name is Wally West. I'm the fastest man alive!"
I'll try being nicer if you try being smarter.
I understand these points and I'm not going to argue with them because it's painfully obvious the majority of fans and the general audience agreed.
Personally, I loved what Snyder was doing. He was taking these fictional superheroes and overlaying them with mythology and philosophy. One can argue the execution of that vs. the simple fact that, as you said, most people probably weren't a) expecting that type of take on the genre, or b) simply wanted light hearted fun and joy.
To the latter point, I don't think we would have had either of those things in his movies, BUT, it should be noted that Snyder and his wife said before that this was supposed to be a journey for Superman and the League. It was supposed to be dark at first and through the middle, but by the end of his planned 5 film arc, all the heroes would have found themselves and really been gods among humanity and would have been more of what most people wanted to see. They started with a deconstruction of the heroes and it was just not for most fans and the general audience.
I think it also needs to be said again that here we are, nearly 7 years later (MoS), 4 years later (BvS), and over 2 years later (JL - but that's not entirely his movie) STILL discussing and having thorough debates (and ridiculous and petty arguments) about his movies and what they meant AND what they did. I don't see that happening with the other side near as much or even with any of the other DC movies. I'm not saying anything other than there was an impact, albeit mostly negative, but nonetheless, we're still discussing it all. It's very interesting to consider.
Last edited by Wandering_Wand; 12-29-2019 at 09:02 AM.
Sorry, I was not going to sit through five movies of Superman being a sad sack for him to eventually realize serving humanity is a privilege and not a chore. I literally had to make myself watch JL after seeing it months on the shelves at the local library.
As for why people aren't talking about the superhero movies on the other side, well, for the most part, people are in universal agreement as to their quality.
Keep in mind that you have about as much chance of changing my mind as I do of changing yours.
The Zack Snyder films have a fanbase because people enjoy them. You just aren't going to see a movement for the #ReleasetheSnyderCut
if they didn't. Maybe the appeal of superhero comics for some is escapism, but that isn't true for the community as a whole.
Not to mention, Zack Snyder's two major influences are Watchmen and The Dark Knight Returns, which are often ranked as some of the greatest superhero comics and are very much mainstream. Its strange how a director that clearly demonstrates a greater knowledge of the medium then most people working on superhero films today is so often framed as being anti-comic.
#InGunnITrust, #ZackSnyderistheBlueprint, #ReleasetheAyerCut
When you have Superman and Batman in a movie, only one of them should be brooding. Snyder's JL would have the whole team brooding and killing things as viciously as possible. That's not how fans who grew up with the Timmverse view these heroes.
It's correct to say that Johns, Berlanti, and the Arrowverse guys had a better understanding of DC heroes than Snyder, and audiences rewarded them for it.
Watchmen and the Dark Knight Returns are self contained, deliberately bleak and deconstructive graphic novels that work coherently and are not mainstream takes on the characters.
Using that tone to launch a shared cinematic universe featuring some of the most beloved comic characters of all time and trying to compete with Marvel is not a wise move. As we've seen demonstrated in their reception. Watchmen is a self contained work so nobody cares how dark those characters are, and TDKR specifically works as a possible future for Batman. Using it as the basis for when Superman and Batman first meet and set up the JL? Completely misses the point.
Yeah, and even with Batman I don't think he should be overly broody.
Can we have less of a psychotic, overly violent douchey Batman and the more restrained, mysterious Dark Knight detective who is straight up buds with Superman please?
Considering how poorly his initial foray into the shared verse was in BvS, I'm guessing no, it wouldn't have been a success. I mean, he and WB managed to screw up the first ever on-screen depiction of Superman and Batman together. You have to have a special kind of no-idea-what-we're doing to make that land with the thud it did. I have no reason to believe the original vision for JL would have been any different.
"They can be a great people Kal-El, they wish to be. They only lack the light to show the way. For this reason above all, their capacity for good, I have sent them you. My only son." - Jor-El
These novels aren't self-contained though, they inspired a generation of creators and their influence is self-evident throughout the industry.
I mean, MoS was probably written and produced without the mindset that it will serve as the lynchpin for future movies. If you want to argue that it wasn't the most profitable finacial move, fine, but I care about the product foremost and not how much money it made.Using that tone to launch a shared cinematic universe featuring some of the most beloved comic characters of all time and trying to compete with Marvel is not a wise move. As we've seen demonstrated in their reception. Watchmen is a self contained work so nobody cares how dark those characters are, and TDKR specifically works as a possible future for Batman. Using it as the basis for when Superman and Batman first meet and set up the JL? Completely misses the point.
#InGunnITrust, #ZackSnyderistheBlueprint, #ReleasetheAyerCut
MOS was intended as a trilogy. When WB late-decided they wanted some of the MCU money Snyder retooled it into a 5 movie arc with BVS and JL movies
No, narratively they very much are self contained stand alone works. Their inspiring other creators has nothing to do with changing that very clear fact. They weren't designed that way, and using them to launch movies that need to appeal to as broad an audience as possible (especially families and kids) to be profitable is very unwise. Casual audiences don't care about their impact on the comic industry.
You can care about the product, but financially it didn't quite meet expectations (though didn't do badly either). And as a lynchpin for future movies it failed. Both because, while it had potential, it was flawed. And it's follow ups were really bad and didn't appeal to the wider audience enough that it needed to thrive.
There is enough blame to go around. I blame the studio first and foremost. Snyder just did what he was naturally inclined to do, he was just straight up the wrong guy for the job.