Yes
No
Yes - but only 'grounded' street-level characters
Honestly I don’t know what Hamada has planned for the DCEU but looking at his track record it’ll likely lead to huge success. He spearheaded the Horror division over at WB and is one of the reasons why WB is the dominant producer of horror films (Universal is their biggest competition). Looking at the upcoming slate, next year will be a huge year for DC and it’s future! Batman, Black Adam, Flash and Aquaman is an incredibly strong slate of films! We haven’t had a Batman solo in 10 years, Black Adam stars The Rock (a huge international star), The Flash is the DCEU first crossover event in 5 years spoilers:end of spoilers and the last one is a sequel to DC’s biggest film of all time. Huge year for DC!
rumored to feature all the past Batmen (Ben Affleck, Christian Bale, Michael Keaton) possibly Pattinson)
Besides being movies I'm not sure what the connection between It: Chapter Two and Flashpoint are?
I actually liked Chapter Two, it was fun, but it was clearly inferior to Chapter One.
I hope Flashpoint isn't a very bad movie, but it's definitely not giving me the "this is gonna be a good movie" vibes currently.
That's not too damning, since he apparently directed Chapter One too and that was a creepy but absolutely fantastic film. And Chapter Two wasn't actually bad, just not as good as the first. So a mixed to mostly positive bag. But even a great director can only do so much with a bad script or studio interference.
It's early days yet. I don't like what I know of this movie so far, but a good teaser trailer can always change things around.
I think its a way for people, especially those who didn't care for Snyder's DCEU, to move on from that continuity completely. They're assuming that this is the DCEU reboot earth basically, and that once WB is done with Gadot, Momoa and Miller, focus will shift to this new universe.
Giving it a label like ''Earth 2'', even if it only ends up being an internal designation, doesn't help either since it leads people to assume this is going to be a full-blown universe with multiple DC characters and not just a self-contained universe for Reeves' Batman.
Ultimately, who knows? My instincts tell me this is going to be a Batman-exclusive earth. But easter eggs and props from the set photos themselves tease the existence of a shared universe. And let's not forget that had Nolan not been vehemently against it, WB would have loved the Nolanverse to serve as the launchpad for the DCEU (its been rumored that Christian Bale was offered an insane amount of money to return for what eventually became BvS). So Reeves' grounded vision or not, you can imagine them pushing for it to be the start of a new shared universe.
I don't have a strong opinion about this idea.
"You know the deal, Metropolis. Treat people right or expect a visit from me."
I seriously doubt Pattinson would be on board with introducing a shared DC universe with his Batman. He’s made statements that seem to indicate that he doesn’t think too highly of superheroes in general.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/enter...hy/2591148001/
"Batman is not a superhero," Pattinson told host Willie Geist. "It’s weird, I always balk at it. It doesn’t count. You need to have, like, magical powers or something."
Other heroes, for me.
Yeah, Battinson starts off with just Alfred. But by end of movie or beginning of the sequel, we see him take in a young Dick Grayson, and tries to give Dick a "normal" life, while trying to keep his secret of being Batman from him. Dick obviously finds out, throws himself into a bad situation, but Battinson bails him out. From there, Battinson realizes Dick will keep doing this, and makes a deal; Dick trains for an amount of time, and when Battinson decides he's ready, suits him up, but under his supervision (and by 16 or so). From there, we can expand into the wide DC universe. First with Batgirl and other Gotham heroes, and then the Teen Titans when Dick heads out alone.
Elsewhere, establish a better Superman than what Snyder made, and have a crossover NOT with them fighting as the big promo, but as more of "testing out the other guy" kind of thing, but team up to save the day. The team up, of course, would come after Superman's first film at the least. And go from there, with a bit of unseen help by a certain Amazon Princess.
I don't particularly care. For now, I just want them to focus on making good, self-contained movies. And if the need arises they can always pull a COIE and put all the good parts together and get rid of all the bad ones.
Please no.
DC are doing better making individual movies (that sometimes reference a connected universe) but should now focus on completely separate adventures. Frankly, I'd have them drop any reference to each other going forward (except Flash which, for some reason, is entirely predicated on the DCEU).
Make each film a good film rather than looking to broaden a franchise or even make sequels. That should be the very basis of film making and, like Joker, proves a singular film can make serious money.
Also, I think audiences are wholesale rejecting shared universes outside of Marvel.
DCEU failed, Universal's Dark Universe failed, the Godzilla/Kong Monsterverse failed to a degree (G:KotM didn't make a huge amount and MV was supposed to support spin-offs and other monster lead films), even Star Wars failed.
I think the general audience tolerance is that Marvel did it first (they didn't but this is public opinion), they proved they can do it, they've been doing it well for over a decade, there is huge nostalgia for Marvel doing it, and the quality of the big Avengers films.
They tend to see anything else as either ripping off Marvel, a cynical marketing device or, in Star Wars case, fatigue of a yearly schedule of movies of varying quality with a very narrow scope.
"Has Sariel summoned you here, Azrael? Have you come to witness the miracle of your brethren arriving on Earth?"
"I WILL MIX THE ASHES OF YOUR BONES WITH SALT AND USE THEM TO ENSURE THE EARTH THE TEMPLARS TILLED NEVER BEARS FRUIT AGAIN!"
"*sigh* I hoped it was for the miracle."
Dan Watters' Azrael was incredible, a constant delight and perhaps too good for this world (but not the Forth). For the love of St. Dumas, DC, give us more!!!