BvS' reach may have exceeded its grasp, but at least it reached. TDW is inoffensive, disposable studio filmmaking at its finest; it was also the first MCU film I didn't bother to see in theaters.
Frankly I'm surprised (though I probably shouldn't be) that users here seem to prefer mediocre filler to an admirable attempt at something different. Sure, BvS stumbled (rather spectacularly), but to me that's better than going the safe and ultimately forgettable route.
Yeah, I can't give it that credit, because Batman and Superman in one movie is so safe, you can make a horrible movie and still make 800M. Batman being in it at all was always a cowardly mandate. It was the epitome of a safe move, and the only ambition it had, to rush to the big teamup is not only tainted because of the telegraphed greed for money, but was reached for so ineffectively, it's hard to admire, rather than laugh at. It's not like a great Batman Superman story is some great feat that hasn't been done literally thousands of times. Because of that, it's relatively simple to reach, but Snyder was weighed down by trying to hold on to Randian morality while trying to reach up for superheroes who are in direct opposition to that philosophy. I do not admire people who try to do relatively simple things and fail because they have ignorantly burdened themselves. I pity such people, generally. With these things in mind, the cultural context for these characters, BvS isn't so bad it's good, it's just sad, pitiful and a waste of everyone's time and resources.
TDW actually becomes mediocre, imho, for a similar reason, in that in trying to play up Loki, the fan favorite, the safe move, instead of developing Thor, the actual carrier of the theme, the film lost it's heart, purpose and way as a Thor movie. If it was trying to proffer a nonsensical message that doesn't fit the characters, as well as introduced Captain America, Iron Man and Hulk to the world in a series of gifs on Selvig's computer, it would be rated just as badly, I think.