I can't wait 

I also like the idea that there's a crazy Superman worshipping militant cult. I know in the comics that crazy followers and copycats are more Batman's thing (hell, that's how he recruits half his team mates) but I don't think I've ever seen it done with Superman before.
I've been more than half-hoping this DCCU would ignite on impact and fail to launch, because I'm not at all sure I need another cinematic universe to keep track of besides the MCU and the Arrowverse, but I admit this gave me great pause.
This may sound strange, but after watching the teaser again last night, for the third or fourth time, I started looking at BvS as the spiritual successor to Snyder's Watchmen. Gods walk the Earth, there are men who trust them, there are men who will challenge them, and what does this do to humanity? Man challenging the gods is one of the oldest stories in literature, and it's one that comics occasionally tackle. (Final Crisis, with Batman's assassination of Darkseid, may be comics' most literal "man versus the gods" story of recent memory.) True, Superman is a weak and puny god compared to Dr. Manhattan, but there's a bit of each of Nite-Owl, Rorschach, and Ozymandias in Batman. Yet I can see the ideas that underlie Watchmen in BvS.
Christopher[/ said:Of course, that would require Superman to do something he didn't quite pull off in the previous film, which is actually to become Superman. Not just be a passive, reactive figure doing whatever the nearest male authority figure instructs him to do (up to and including snapping Zod's neck), but assert his own will and make choices guided by his own morality, so that he can lead others. If this movie is about Superman (and, by implication, Snyder) admitting the huge mistakes he made in MoS and striving to make sure they don't happen again, then it may even make me more forgiving of MoS.
Lets hope they explore that theme better than Superman IV.On the one hand, the ideas suggested in the narration, the questions being raised of the impact of Superman on the world and the ethics of superhuman power, sound like they could be very interesting.
But after Star Wars i'm underwhelmed and slightly disturbed at the thought of a mentally imbalanced Superman movie. Hope Batman kicks the shit out of him.
I'm thinking that the voice modulation of Batman only happens in the battle suit. That in his "regular" Batman suit he uses a normal gruff voice.
Though much of the voice effect is Bale's own doing, under the guidance of director Christopher Nolan and supervising sound editor Richard King, the frequency of his Batman voice was modulated to exaggerate the effect.
As somebody touched upon earlier, the vibe I'm getting is that Superman is in a situation not unlike John Lennon's description of being a Beatle...that they were the only sane ones in the middle of all the insanity.But after Star Wars i'm underwhelmed and slightly disturbed at the thought of a mentally imbalanced Superman movie. Hope Batman kicks the shit out of him.
I don't know what gave you the impression that this is "a mentally imbalanced Superman movie." Just because pundits are questioning Superman's morals or intentions, that doesn't mean they're actually right.
I might be mistaken but the voice we hear in the trailer shouting "NO" is Superman from MOS before he kills Zod.But after Star Wars i'm underwhelmed and slightly disturbed at the thought of a mentally imbalanced Superman movie. Hope Batman kicks the shit out of him.
I don't know what gave you the impression that this is "a mentally imbalanced Superman movie." Just because pundits are questioning Superman's morals or intentions, that doesn't mean they're actually right.
My one gripe is that in terms of the lighting etc (think the colour bathing Superman's face in the scene where the people with white faces are behind him), it seems much more like a Zack Snyder film in the vein of 300 and Watchmen. Hyper-stylised. Obviously some will welcome this and while I enjoyed those films, they're not really what I hope to see in this one. I may be in the minority but I liked his step away from all of that in MOS and it's more grounded aesthetic.
I'm thinking that the voice modulation of Batman only happens in the battle suit. That in his "regular" Batman suit he uses a normal gruff voice.
I hope so. It'd be odd to have voice-changing tech deemed a necessity because otherwise it'd strain credulity when the whole concept of Batman strains credulity.
They could be going the direction Christopher suggests and "constructing" a more traditional superheroic world. Or they might take a more Squadron Supreme/Kingdom Come approach and have these heroes always struggling with how much they should attempt to assert their will on the world. I think that either would be a valid approach...the latter could be a lot more interesting if done well.
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