(The very last part of the post)AccursedTheory said:Presumably Goyer is the 'master architect' for what it's worth. Considering DC is doing the opposite of Marvel, having one single main series with the occasional spin off, it's a rather grandiose term.King Billi said:Does DC have their own "architect" orchestrating everything behind the scenes like Marvel has? I don't think so, which is why for now it'll still be interesting to see what the future films in the DC cinematic universe will be, the ones not directed by Zach Snyder.
The DCAU was, and is, I imagine, the defining DC universe for an entire generation of viewers. It reached way more people then the comics ever have or will, and was just a blazing master piece. And honestly, I think it's the reason the new offerings from DC are so sad - Because the DCAU did everything their trying to do now, but it did it better then anything we're getting. Brutal Justice League? DCAU did it better. Government/The Public vs. JL? DCAU did it better. Building a universe where Superman/Martian Manhunter/Wonder Woman don't make 99% of the rest of the JL useless and redundant? The movies aren't even pretending to do that. Vigilantes vs. 'Heroic' heroes? They did that better to.Bob_McMillan said:And I love the pre-52 DCAU. That shit is the definition of childhood for me. And what does DC do? Replace it with shit like Teen Titans Go and Son of Batman.
It's just frustrating to see DC fail so miserably at something they already aced. And while my personal preference would be a live action version of the Justice League (Unlimited would actually be my preference. Gimme some of them C listers, DC. I want to see the Vigilante and The Question slumming it up in some alley, not Superman leveling half a city), I understand that's not likely. But DC could at least look at what worked so well and borrow from it a little, instead of just coming at this from a completely different direction and failing.
As I've said before, DC seems hellbent on looking through 80 years of comics, movies, and animations, and picking the absolute worst versions of its universe and heroes it can find to build the movie-verse. And it hurts, bad. My only condolence is that whoever is running The Flash show has somehow gotten away with DC's equivalent of murder and injected some god damn joy into the universe.
Samtemdo8 said:Because sadly and no one wants to admit it, no one likes Superman.
Superman does have an image problem.
While I'm personally not an advocate for Lex Cranston, it's a bit more than that. For one, he's an excellent actor, who's quite capable of being both charismatic and menacing. And for two, he was already kind of Lex Luthor in Breaking Bad, in a way - A terrifying borderline sociopath who does what he does because he's the best at it, and he want's to be the best. There's of course a lot of differences, but I do see some pretty easy cross over.Then Jesse Eisenberg was casted as Lex Luthor and everyone wanted Bryan fuckin Cranston as Lex jsut because he's bald in Breaking Bad![]()
And this is opposed to Jesse Eisenberg, a man who didn't play Lex Luthor, at all. Most of the other characters in Dawn of Justice are at least somewhat similar to what we expect from them, at least close enough to be considered 'Elseworld' - Eisenberg's Luthor, however, isn't even close.
Of course it was that big. While the fight itself is a bit played out in the comics, most people don't actually read comics. This was going to be the first time the subject was going to be handled by a DC product with significant market penetration since The Batman series (Not to be confused with Batman: The Animated Series), and the first time ever on the big screen.Then the movie comes out and people are treating it as a disaster of Mengele proportions. Even people on youtube who never reviews movies before suddenly reviews it. Appearently the prospect of a Batman and Superman movie was that big.
Considering that Dawn of Justice is just Man of Steel (A movie I did actually like), just doubling down on the angst, the character count, and the bullshit, I doubt it. If anything, they ignored the criticisms leveled at Man of Steel, and basically told the audience 'You know the things you didn't like about that movie? Well, fuck you with the wide end of a rake, here's more of the same, only worse.'Honestly I feel none of this would have happened if no one said anything bad about Man of Steel. If no one criticized Man of Steel we would have had a Man of Steel 2 and a stand alone Batman movie.
I really wouldn't worry about that. WB seems hellbent on driving down the path they've laid, and damn whatever anyone says. While they do seem to be taking a lighter focus in regards to the Suicide Squad movie, I think they're chasing Deadpool (Which is Fox) more than Marvel on that one. And I really doubt WB is foolish enough to think they can apply the Deadpool formula to the main line JL story.And now I dread the possibility of DC changing the tone and direction of the movies because of that rumor of Snyder and WB having disputes and the directors for DC movies like Flash and Aquaman has left.
You can hardly blame the movie community for how terribly Snyder, Goyer, and WB are.Its so fuckin unfair that things I really want to see happen is being taken away from me. I want that Justice League movie with Zack Snyder's style and sadly the movie community is against it![]()
Well Goyer is out and not credited as any screenwriter for JL movie according to wikipedia and IMDB:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0333060/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justice_League_Part_One