Official Justice League Status Update Thread

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Alright. One down one to go.

Now that the FF forums are DEAD, it's time for Justice League next :D .
 
I'm not trying to troll, or start any kind of arguement here, but I don't get this mentality that just because Nolan, Ledger and Bale made an amazing Batman movie (and it was an amazing Batman movie) that nobody else can ever make another Batman film. I mean The Dark Knight Returns is an amazing Batman graphic novel, but does that mean nobody else can ever write an amazing Batman graphic novel? Weren't you guys all Batman fans before TDK? So someone else must've done an amazing Batman story, be it in comic books, films or animation before to win your allegiance in the first place, right?

I'm not knocking anyone who loves TDK (God knows I did too) but I'm just trying to point out, I'm a Batman fan first and a Nolan, Ledger and Bale fan second. I think they did an incredible job, but then so did the crew behind BTAS, proof that other people can write brilliant Batman stories as well. I think some people who loved the movie are looking back with rose tinted glass and that over time this effect will wear off.
 
This effect happens. At one time, Superman:The Movie could never be touched. X-Men 2 and Spider-Man 2 each were touted as "the greatest comic book movie" ever made. Now it's The Dark Knight's turn. Somewhere down the line, something is likely to top TDK.
 
I could have sworn that I saw several users post that Bale was Batman (there have been folks that argue that Keaton is). I don't think West's typcasting applies anymore.

Um...Bale is Batman...right now...
 
Thanks to Ita-KalEl for posting this in the Superman forum:




Warner Bets on Fewer, Bigger Movies
By LAUREN A.E. SCHUKER
August 22, 2008; Page B1

Emboldened by this summer's success with "The Dark Knight," Warner Bros.' movie studio is setting a new strategy.

The Time Warner Inc. unit, like some other Hollywood studios, is planning to release fewer films into the crowded marketplace. But the studio, known for making more big, expensive movies than most rivals, plans to make even more of those -- some centered on properties from its DC Comics unit, such as Batman.

Warner Bros. Pictures Group President Jeff Robinov wants the studio to release as many as eight such movies a year by 2011. "The long-term goal of the studio is to take advantage of what has become a very global market by focusing on bigger films that require a bigger commitment," he says. Warner Bros. films released last year grossed $2 billion internationally, about 42% more than their $1.4 billion domestic take.

Mining the comic-book franchise is central to the success of Warner Bros.' strategy. Its lineup of "tent poles" -- Hollywood-speak for big movies that are the foundation of a studio's slate -- has thinned. Warner Bros. has been slow to capitalize on DC, and it now faces a rival in Marvel Entertainment Inc.'s Marvel Studios, the company behind box-office gusher "Iron Man."

Superhero films based on comic-book legends, like "The Dark Knight," have emerged as some of the strongest players in the global market, in part because they're natural candidates for tie-ups with consumer products and games that can also be marketed globally.

"Superheroes are more global than ever in today's commercial world, existing in 30 languages and in more than 60 countries," says Paul Levitz, president and publisher of DC Comics. The characters are "a world-wide export," he says.

Marvel's 'Iron Man,' was a big success at the box office. Warner has been slower to capitalize on its DC Comics characters.

"Films with our DC properties have the opportunity to support other divisions in the company in a way that our other movies don't," Mr. Robinov says, for example, with products such as a Superman game or toys. By 2011, Mr. Robinov plans for DC Comics to supply the material for up to two of the six to eight tent-pole films he hopes Warner Bros. will have in the pipeline by then.

While big ambitions can result in a huge payoff, they can also end in huge losses. Warner's car adventure "Speed Racer" bombed at the box office in May. The film, said to have cost as much as $150 million, has taken in only $43.9 million in the U.S. Some other big-budget Warner films, such as spy comedy "Get Smart," also have failed to meet expectations.

Earlier this year, Warner Bros. shut its two art-house labels, Picturehouse and Warner Independent Pictures. The studio currently releases 25 to 26 films a year. By 2010, Mr. Robinov plans to pare production to 20 to 22 movies a year.

A movie referred to internally as "Justice League of America," originally said to be for next summer, was planned as one of the studio's major releases. With that film, starring a superhero team, Warner hoped to spark interest in DC characters like Green Lantern who haven't yet attained the level of popularity of Batman. But script problems, among other things, have delayed the movie.

The studio said last week that "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," originally slated for November release, would come out next July -- on the same weekend that "The Dark Knight" opened this year. The Batman sequel made more than $150 million in the U.S. that weekend. "We just needed a July movie," said Alan Horn, president of the studio, at the time.

Warner Bros. also put on hold plans for another movie starring multiple superheroes -- known as "Batman vs. Superman" -- after the $215 million "Superman Returns," which had disappointing box-office returns, didn't please executives. "'Superman' didn't quite work as a film in the way that we wanted it to," says Mr. Robinov. "It didn't position the character the way he needed to be positioned." "Had 'Superman' worked in 2006, we would have had a movie for Christmas of this year or 2009," he adds. "But now the plan is just to reintroduce Superman without regard to a Batman and Superman movie at all."

One of the studio's other big releases planned for 2009, "Watchmen," is the subject of a high-profile copyright lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California by News Corp.'s Twentieth Century Fox.

Based on the premise that superheroes are real people grappling with their own problems, "Watchmen" is an apocalyptic vision of their world. Fox says it is seeking an injunction to enforce its copyright interest in the film. Last week, a federal judge ruled that it may have rights to the property. News Corp. is the parent of Wall Street Journal publisher Dow Jones & Co.

With "Batman vs. Superman" and "Justice League" stalled, Warner Bros. has quietly adopted Marvel's model of releasing a single film for each character, and then using those movies and their sequels to build up to a multicharacter film. "Along those lines, we have been developing every DC character that we own," Mr. Robinov says.

Like the recent Batman sequel -- which has become the highest-grossing film of the year thus far -- Mr. Robinov wants his next pack of superhero movies to be bathed in the same brooding tone as "The Dark Knight." Creatively, he sees exploring the evil side to characters as the key to unlocking some of Warner Bros.' DC properties. "We're going to try to go dark to the extent that the characters allow it," he says. That goes for the company's Superman franchise as well.

The studio is set to announce its plans for future DC movies in the next month. For now, though, it is focused on releasing four comic-book films in the next three years, including a third Batman film, a new film reintroducing Superman, and two movies focusing on other DC Comics characters. Movies featuring Green Lantern, Flash, Green Arrow, and Wonder Woman are all in active development.

Many of the studio's directors credit Mr. Robinov for taking Warner Bros.' films in a darker and deeper direction. Christopher Nolan, who directed "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight," says Mr. Robinov "really encouraged the logic of the villain" from "Batman Begins." That led to focusing heavily on the Joker in the sequel. "At the script stage, Jeff really wanted us to be very clear on the Joker's lack of purpose," he says.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121936107614461929.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
 
it was also posted over in the dc comics films section too earlier, it was a good read. So with them saying they are possibly looking to get 4 films done within the next few yrs thats batman 3(hopefully with nolan on board), green lantern(very likely to get "greenlit") then as i said over in that thread toss up between flash/green arrow(probably more likely to happen), and wonder woman. Since they have no clue what to do with supes right now.
 
One thing is clear, a JL movie is a long ways away.

With "Batman vs. Superman" and "Justice League" stalled, Warner Bros. has quietly adopted Marvel's model of releasing a single film for each character, and then using those movies and their sequels to build up to a multicharacter film. "Along those lines, we have been developing every DC character that we own," Mr. Robinov says.
 
One thing is clear, a JL movie is a long ways away.

With "Batman vs. Superman" and "Justice League" stalled, Warner Bros. has quietly adopted Marvel's model of releasing a single film for each character, and then using those movies and their sequels to build up to a multicharacter film.


Excellent news.

"Along those lines, we have been developing every DC character that we own," Mr. Robinov says.

That's quite a lot of DC characters, Jeff. :D
 
Well we might have the Justice League forums closed or moved and the Superman Forums revamped sooner rather then later it seems.
 
It's been a wild ride. *cues Green Day song*
 
Well we might have the Justice League forums closed or moved

Do you think most threads would be saved, Showtime? I'd hate to lose so much informative threads if, or rather when, the forum closes down.

and the Superman Forums revamped sooner rather then later it seems.

Yep.
 
That is up to the big boss. He is in charge of what stays and what goes. He does ask for our input of course, which is why he is great to work for, but it is his call.
 
Maybe a JLA movie in 10 years, if we're lucky. A dark and brooding JLA too, just like how everyone wants it.
 
Super Hero Hype!

Tear Down This Forum! :bh:

One down, one to go. Fantastic Four down, now Justice League is next :word: .
 
Its sad to see the jla threads go, how many threads are now in the dc comics thread is it just this one or a few others? And i do agree now with all this news it is the right time because if this is their plan to reboot superman, and get others characters like gl/ga or which ever they pick we probably wont be getting jla film to 2012-2015 range which does suck a little bit hopefully it will be better then what miller was going to do.
 
Guys, it was the right thing to do.

It happened 7 months too late.
 
Yea totally glad miller's jla is officially dead now, when ever they do plan to get it down in the next few years hopefully it will be taken in the right direction and all that.
 
^LOL, looks like you got your wish. :woot:

So long Justice League: Mortal! :hehe:
It's like I was saying Flawless Victory, it is not only possible that the forum will shut down, it is ESSENTIAL. It was inevitable. Wishing had nothing to do with it :D .

The folding of the Justice League forums, 8/22/2008 will be a day long remembered in the history of this great message board, the Super Hero Hype. People will say, "Where were you when The Vile One said TEAR DOWN THIS FORUM!"

My biggest disappointment was that this project got as far as it did. Because at the end of the day, I think a Justice League movie is a great idea down the line. But in a time where Marvel is totally planning to have multiple plans converge, it sounds ridiculous to me that WB who owns everything can't do the same thing.

I'm disappointed they spent all this now WASTED time, money, and development on a movie that's now halted when it could've been moving on with Flash and Green Lantern. Movies that could be big hits, they just need to find that balance and the right execution. Iron Man's living proof that it can be done. It's not all just about Spider-man, Superman, Batman, and the X-men anymore.
 
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