Pfeiffer-Pfan
Cool Rider
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Now we just need another article confirming Gal is actually staying as Wonder Woman. It's tradition at this point.
Honestly, at this point, I only care about Reeves getting to finish his Batman saga.
Thar Universal runor has been around for a bit and it's always makes me laugh. Comcast isn't buying WBD and Variety pumping that is even more proof of it. There is just too much debt and a lot of conflicts. It works be a mess.
We'll know that when someone actually does a good job building a DC cinematic universe. The DCEU was the worst way to go about it, it's not really fair to judge potential on the concept based on thatHonestly, and this might be a cold take, but DC on film arguably could work better with more disconnected properties. Don't get me wrong. There are plenty of DCEU films that I do enjoy and the thrill of seeing characters together akin to what we got in the MCU is something I'll never regret, as I did enjoy BvS, ZSJL, The Suicide Squad, and so on. But mismanagement from Warners has fumbled the ball so many times. It's not exclusive to the DCEU. Look back to the fallout with Superman II. But with Superman, Batman, the Nolan trilogy, Joker, and even Watchmen to an extent- those all tell stories within their own world. Yeah, you've got the occasional Catwoman, but we don't talk about that movie. It's the same with TV shows like Gotham or the DC Universe/Max shows like Titans, Doom Patrol, Stargirl, and Swamp Thing. Regardless of your views, they focused on building their own worlds without needing connective tissue in a way that, say, the Marvel Netflix shows did tell their own stories within the larger context of the MCU.
Point is, we've seen that these properties can thrive when a creator just tells the story they want to tell without being shackled to a greater cinematic universe. I get that people want the team-ups. People like seeing characters they've grown up reading or watching on TV come together on the big screen. And I get that James Gunn wants all things DC under one silo, but that will still be a challenge and it might be better to just do more separate, unconnected projects. The most memorable DC films, I feel, aren't the ones that are part of a greater film universe the way that a lot of MCU films are. Not to say there aren't fantastic Marvel films outside of the MCU. There most definitely are. But I think DC could thrive if the studio just lets a director do their thing and not think about connecting it to something else or set up some other character. We just saw it sort of work with Blue Beetle. Yeah, that film was caught in the middle of regime shifts, but for the most part it told its own story that you could watch without really thinking about when Blue Beetle's going to face off with Cyborg or something.
We'll know that when someone actually does a good job building a DC cinematic universe. The DCEU was the worst way to go about it, it's not really fair to judge potential on the concept based on that

I mean if you think about it even the F4 and the X-Men will remain into the sidelines for years until we actually get to see them, but at least you know that they'll focus on them eventually (even if I don't expect much quality-wise). But yeah it's kind of like buying a whole restaurant to merge into a bigger one but only keeping two tables. Fans focused so much on the thing they kept and ignored how the vast majority of IPs and original movies pretty much got screwed.Don't get me started. While the larger conversation among our kind was 'This means Disney gets the X-Men and FF,' there's a plethora of Fox content that has either gone underutilized or, like you said, lost into oblivion. At least in the case of FX and FXX networks, or even (Fox) Searchlight, Disney seems to have left those largely alone without any sort of rebranding. But it's inevitable that when a company that owns a comic book IP is brought up for sale, that is going to dominate the conversation.
Gunn has only ever said that the individual stories are more important than the interconnectedness for him. Nothing really suggests otherwise as of now. I don't think you'll have to watch CC to get or enjoy Legacy, for instance. The slate as is doesn't even really point to some major interconnectedness just yet.
You can tell there came out something new, mostly weird speculation...because the usual rather whiny "Im not excited anymore for this that hasnt started or i have seen a second of it" and "Oh this will all be doomed....doomed i say" etc.
The usual stuff on repeat.
Like, the stuff is away 2 years, how about we wait and let it be built?
In 2 years we can still come back and cry doom and death.
But doing it 2 years before anything is even shot, is feeling kind of overly dramatic to me.
I let them cook the stew before i say its bad or so.
Studios that aren’t marvel attempting to launch shared universes and immediately face planting is such a common story in the industry that if you’re going to be discussing the launch of a new one it only makes sense to acknowledge, cynicism is a valid takeaway from this.You can tell there came out something new, mostly weird speculation...because the usual rather whiny "Im not excited anymore for this that hasnt started or i have seen a second of it" and "Oh this will all be doomed....doomed i say" etc.
The usual stuff on repeat.
Like, the stuff is away 2 years, how about we wait and let it be built?
In 2 years we can still come back and cry doom and death.
But doing it 2 years before anything is even shot, is feeling kind of overly dramatic to me.
I let them cook the stew before i say its bad or so.
I understand complaining about people acting like a movie will suck before it actually comes out. I don't get complaining about people saying "I'm not excited for this" or "This might not end up actually happening".
And in my experience, the people who complain about posters being "doom and gloom" end up complaining about that whether something's been released or not.
For the better part of 20 years, and with few exceptions, WB/DC have consistently mucked up their wider superhero division. Numerous examples of films either sucking or straight up getting cancelled in the middle of development, with "Batgirl" being a recent and notorious example. We're in the middle of a particularly unsuccessful year for the film division, and WB may be sold again within 2 years, possibly resulting in yet another regime change.
Do I think some people live to complain about DC no matter what they do? Sure. But if I'm being honest, DC/WB lost the benefit of the doubt a long time ago. When WB/DC actually stops doing the "usual stuff on repeat", so will disgruntled fans.