I don't like his movies, but I think that Zack Snyder makes a good point here, both about pushing the envelope when it comes to interpreting superheroes in movies and about how catering to fan expectations can strangle the life out of something. I just found out today that he was on Joe Rogan. I actually want to listen to that.
(Let's also just mention that Michael Keaton's Batman, who everyone loves these days, was killing motherfuckers all of the time)
I wouldn't mind it in theory if his thought of making Batman wasn't getting ass raped in prison.
Re: Capeshit thread (comics and movies)
Posted: Mon Mar 11, 2024 9:01 pm
by VoiceOfReasonPast
He's just another subverter of expectations.
Re: Capeshit thread (comics and movies)
Posted: Mon Mar 11, 2024 9:22 pm
by Liar Revealed
Snyder had plenty of chances. He blew it. This guy hired that faggot Ezra Miller. He should be hung for that alone.
I forgot that part one of that Crisis on Infinite Earths animated adaptation came out last month. Watching a torrent now. This is fucking tedious.
I never read the original comic, but I doubt 50% of the characters were black in the original. The animation is this awful, thick-lined cel-shaded CGI. Some of the voice acting is atrocious and I can only assume it's due to the mandated race-based voice casting.
DC was saying that this could be their final animated movie, and I'm A-OK with that if this is what future projects would be like.
It’s more Warner Bros but their Mortal Kombat movies are good, can also recommend the Constantine ones.
I don't like his movies, but I think that Zack Snyder makes a good point here, both about pushing the envelope when it comes to interpreting superheroes in movies and about how catering to fan expectations can strangle the life out of something. I just found out today that he was on Joe Rogan. I actually want to listen to that.
(Let's also just mention that Michael Keaton's Batman, who everyone loves these days, was killing motherfuckers all of the time)
I don't think you necessarily have to stick to that rule, but it feels like writers are a bit lazy with Batman. He's pragmatic and brooding, so automatically he has to be this angst-ridden killer.
Going against the grain is usually more interesting, so I'd prefer to see a Batman that's more idealistic if only for the sake of variety. Or maybe he kills as a last resort and struggles with it. Or maybe not killing someone leads to terrible consequences (cue Joker escaping from Asylum again), and that can be a source of drama and conflict.