I watched the Ultimate Edition last night. Here's my review...
I seem to be in the minority given its critical reception, but I really enjoyed BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE. It was a blast catching it on the IMAX screen at the time of its release. Still, I recognised it had its share of flaws, albeit not enough to justify the savage lashing it got from many sources, I feel. So, I was interested to see if the Blu-Ray Ultimate Edition, with its additional 30 minutes if runtime, would help amend these issues. I'm pleased to report that it does indeed, with almost all the theatrical cut's major flaws at least partially fixed. The result is what should be considered the definitive version of the film going forward.
What does the Ultimate Edition fix? First off, the narrative of the film has a clearer shape. Parts that felt rushed before, characters making rash, abrupt or out-of-character decisions? They are now given more thorough and grounded context. Henry Cavill's Superman feels less like the brash, aloof bully the truncated cut presented him as and more as a frustrated idealist struggling to grasp the human angle of crime in Gotham and finding himself horrified by Batman's violent methods. I really liked Ben Affleck's Batman first time round, but was a little uncomfortable with just how dark and near murderous he had become, but the film makes overt what was before only implied: that this is only recent, uncharacteristic behaviour, Batman pushed to the extreme by the recent events surrounding Superman's arrival and he is in desperate need of being pulled back from the brink. I had felt since first viewing that Jesse Eisenberg's Lex Luthor was unfairly maligned, and that conviction is only strengthened here as we see in greater detail just how masterful and monstrous his scheme to destroy Superman and corrupt Batman is. In full context, it really is clear that this Lex Luthor is a vicious, evil little s***, and one of the most viscerally unpleasant villains to ever be in a superhero film. Even Lois Lane, underserved a bit in the original cut, gets to be more of an investigative reporter this time round.
There are still some issues, of course. The religious allegory is perhaps a bit too frequent and on-the-nose. Zack Snyder's direction - while mostly stylish - does at points become overwrought: those slow-motion bullets, man! I think the human persona of Clark Kent is still a bit underdeveloped, particularly as pertains to his job at the Daily Planet, though that's more a failing of MAN OF STEEL that comes to a head here than necessarily a fault of this film. And while the last hour is an all-action smackdown, there could maybe have been some more action earlier rather than much of the first two-thirds being almost all build-up. And yet, on that last point, that unusual structure is in a way a strength, too. Even more apparent in this version of the film, much of the film's first half is like a pressure cooker, the screw turning and turning and the tension rising to the crisis point of the Senate Hearing. Then from there we begin the next phase of intense build-up into the final confrontation. But this isn't really a film about action and fights, though it does have those. It's a film about icons and ideas, and it's kinda bold to take the stance that the cultural icons of Batman and Superman merit a 3-hour film, used to explore notions of dark thoughts and dangerous ideas taking root in even the best of us, how media can inform hysteria, in a manner that feels more eerily relevant now in a post-Brexit (pre-Trump?) darkest timeline 2016 than it even did a few months ago.
It's funny, I watched DUNE a few weeks back. That's another movie that was panned on its release, and watching it I still don't like it. But it has found a following as an arch, baroque, unwieldy exploration of ambitious big ideas against a crazed genre backdrop that was ahead of its time and misunderstood. And I feel BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE is due a similar critical reassessment in years to come.
9/10