I feel like in 20 years there is gonna be a fascinating documentary about what the eff happened behind the scenes with this franchise.
Eh, I feel like Skwad sequel is one of the easiest to course correct.
Superman can't be a hero that fails or make moral compromises. I think it was Mark Waid who said something like "Superman is here to make possible what is impossible". To be "super" is his thing.
Suicide Squad was a bad movie, but at least it was a good time. You can go with your friends to the theather, watch the movie, and complain or laugh about how bad it was (you can like it too). Superman in MoS and BvS was not a good time. At all. It is painful to watch him try to be something he can't be: a regular "believable" superhero.
Superman can't be a hero that fails or make moral compromises. I think it was Mark Waid who said something like "Superman is here to make possible what is impossible". To be "super" is his thing.
I'm still waiting on a HDTGM Suicide Squad podcast show.
Thatd be fantastic but theyll likely never do it considering their penchant for always picking 20+ year old movies. Closest theyve got to touching the DCEU was a rant from Paul and (mostly) Jason about much they hated BvS.
you got a working link to this shiz?
I was talking DCEU as a whole. But yeah Suicide Squad has some very easily identifiable problems that could be corrected in the sequel. Even Ayer said in hindsight someone like Enchantress was a bad idea to use as the villain.
Disagree. It's this type of mindset that handcuffs the character to the point where creators won't touch him. Right and wrong isn't always black and white and neither should Superman's actions fall under that appalling microscope. Superman can and should make moral mistakes or fails at a task. The most important thing is that he makes things right after said failure's. Superman is the ultimate teacher of hope. Sometimes the most beautiful morals come from failure. It's not about failure. It's about the response to such a thing. Superman can live that reality.
I love the "make possible out of the impossible" quote but I do think superman can fail and make moral compromises, but it's a fine line that one must carefully tread. What ever happened to the man of tomorrow, Red son, kingdom come and hitman #34 are all good examples of superman failing in some way but these stories were well written and had a silver lining of hope and levity, which Snyder's crap didn't have. At the end of the day it's all about the execution.
To clarify, I think that he can make mistakes and learn within the scope of the same story. What I meant about not failing is that he shouldn't be put in an impossible situation, and fail to resolve (like Zod putting him in a position to kill him or let him kill innocent people, and Supes not finding other way)
How could we know and Clark know killing is bad if he didnt kill?
I feel like in 20 years there is gonna be a fascinating documentary about what the eff happened behind the scenes with this franchise.
There needs to be one, it's crazy what's going on in the CBM world these days.
A character no one knew existed 3 years ago making over a billion and JL barley scraping in over 650M.
Yeah, right? Black Panther, a B-List character, has now made over $1 billion, while Justice League only made $657 million. And the budget for Black Panther was about $200 million while Justice League was about $300 million. And all those people claiming that DC characters are too corny and need to be made grittier? Well, Justice League made nowhere near as much money as a movie with remote-controlled rhinoceros's.
If someone told me 10 years ago that a superhero movie making 650+ mil is a box-office bomb I would tell them they've lost their ****ing mind. Times in Hollywood sure have changed and not necessarily for the better.
If someone told me 10 years ago that a superhero movie making 650+ mil is a box-office bomb I would tell them they've lost their ****ing mind. Times in Hollywood sure have changed and not necessarily for the better.
Thatd be fantastic but theyll likely never do it considering their penchant for always picking 20+ year old movies. Closest theyve got to touching the DCEU was a rant from Paul and (mostly) Jason about much they hated BvS.
If someone told me 10 years ago that a superhero movie making 650+ mil is a box-office bomb I would tell them they've lost their ****ing mind. Times in Hollywood sure have changed and not necessarily for the better.
Sadly, it's just the level of expectation levelled at JL to do £1B+ or be regarded as 'failing', which is BS frankly.