He's speaking to his fans, though, I don't see the harm.
He's speaking to his fans, though, I don't see the harm.
Zack Snyder has some very strong words for people who don't think superheroes like Batman should kill.
He says people who feel that way need to "wake the fuck up", and that "they are living in dream world".
Which I find ironic, since for me at least, the whole point of superheroes like Batman or Superman is that they do live in a dream world.
While he's putting it pretty crassly, I don't think Snyder's comments were really targeted at anyone specific, more just expressing the worldview that he brings to those heroes. And it's not like he just brought it up out of nowhere. It was at a Q&A at a screening of the movie.
I'm pretty flexible with what interpretations of Batman I'm willing to accept. I think that Batman committing premeditated murder is going too far. But recklessly disregarding potential casualties while engaging in very violent fights with these goons is enough of a gray area for me to go with it. I mean, if we're going to get really puritanical with the whole Batman-doesn't-kill thing, I always felt that those fans were too lenient on Batman Begins with its technicalities of "It's a miracle no one was killed" and "I won't kill you but that doesn't mean I have to save you."
However, Snyder is very succinctly putting into words a big chunk of my problems with his version of Superman. I've been saying for years that the problem with Man of Steel and Batman v. Superman is that they're Superman movies made by someone who doesn't believe in Superman. The films are constantly giving side-eye to the notion that someone can be so powerful and also be so altruistic at the same time. And given Snyder's long term plans for Justice League sequels where Superman snaps and becomes a villain after the death of Lois Lane, it shows that he really doesn't understand the purpose of a Superman story at all.
It's interesting that he brought that Watchmen perspective to the DCEU given that he kinda missed the point of Watchmen by fetishizing the violence too much.
While he's putting it pretty crassly, I don't think Snyder's comments were really targeted at anyone specific, more just expressing the worldview that he brings to those heroes.
I think that Batman committing premeditated murder is going too far. But recklessly disregarding potential casualties while engaging in very violent fights with these goons is enough of a gray area for me to go with it. I mean, if we're going to get really puritanical with the whole Batman-doesn't-kill thing, I always felt that those fans were too lenient on Batman Begins with its technicalities of "It's a miracle no one was killed" and "I won't kill you but that doesn't mean I have to save you."
However, Snyder is very succinctly putting into words a big chunk of my problems with his version of Superman. I've been saying for years that the problem with Man of Steel and Batman v. Superman is that they're Superman movies made by someone who doesn't believe in Superman. The films are constantly giving side-eye to the notion that someone can be so powerful and also be so altruistic at the same time. And given Snyder's long term plans for Justice League sequels where Superman snaps and becomes a villain after the death of Lois Lane, it shows that he really doesn't understand the purpose of a Superman story at all.
I'd be more comfortable with a deconstructionist Superman movie if I felt that we already had a definitive Superman movie that we could go back to. (Much as I love Christopher Reeve's portrayal of the character, his movies were never actually that satisfying.)
I'd be more comfortable with a deconstructionist Superman movie if I felt that we already had a definitive Superman movie that we could go back to. (Much as I love Christopher Reeve's portrayal of the character, his movies were never actually that satisfying.)
Up until the time changing ending, which leads to the question of "why doesn't he just do that all the time"
Superman '78 is sublimely satisfying.
That ending works perfectly -- dramatically, thematically, and emotionally -- in the context of the film. I'm not particularly interested in noodling over its implications beyond that.Up until the time changing ending, which leads to the question of "why doesn't he just do that all the time"
That ending works perfectly -- dramatically, thematically, and emotionally -- in the context of the film. I'm not particularly interested in noodling over its implications beyond that.
Superman '78 is sublimely satisfying.
Sorry, no.Until Luthor shows up, then it devolves into an overindulgence of camp.
I mean, if we're going to get really puritanical with the whole Batman-doesn't-kill thing, I always felt that those fans were too lenient on Batman Begins with its technicalities of "It's a miracle no one was killed" and "I won't kill you but that doesn't mean I have to save you."
The problem with doing superhero movies is that American moviemakers and audiences are conditioned to expect the hero of an action movie to kill the villains, so superhero movies have tended to be adapted to fit that trope
Well it's hard to not feel underwhelmed by ending with a supervillain just going to jail,
especially when (if they're well-done) the audience thinks they'll pretty easily and quickly break out (and even casual viewers know that is what happens in other/past versions, in the comics and television).
I would prefer jail to the hero always needing to kill. That isn't underwhelming to me.Well it's hard to not feel underwhelmed by ending with a supervillain just going to jail, especially when (if they're well-done) the audience thinks they'll pretty easily and quickly break out (and even casual viewers know that is what happens in other/past versions, in the comics and television).
But what's interesting is how well Superman himself manages to transcend that despite Snyder's attitude. His Superman may not be completely effective or entirely trusted (at least until he dies and is retconned into being someone everybody loved and relied on emotionally), but as a character, he feels throughout like someone unshakably committed to helping people.
I agree that the Reeve movies were imperfect in a number of ways, but even if they had been much better, they're from another era and another continuity. If WB wanted to start a new Superman film universe from scratch, then they should've started with building it up before they got around to deconstructing it.
Up until the time changing ending, which leads to the question of "why doesn't he just do that all the time"
There've been a number of popular superhero movies even just going from the turn of the century in which the main villain survived the end. X-Men, The Dark Knight, Thor, The Avengers, CA Civil War, Spider-Man: Homecoming (as @Christopher mentioned), Ant-Man & the Wasp, and just recently in Aquaman.
I would also add Daredevil to the list where they go to jail.
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