That's a facile oversimplification. You can't assume an uncooked meal is as good as a cooked one. You can't say a new software program still in the testing phase will perform as well as a thoroughly refined and debugged version. You can't expect an incompletely built car to be as safe to drive as a completed one. So it is nonsensical to pretend that an unfinished movie will invariably be equal in quality to a finished movie except as a matter of taste. That's just not how it works.
What. The fuck. Are you talking about? Who said anything about the unfinished version being better or worse? I certainly didn't say that even the
finished version
will be better. I'm saying that the quality of the finished Snyder Cut, as compared to the theatrical version, will lie in the eye of the beholder.
As I said, sometimes the early edit is better than the final theatrical cut, but it is irrational to assume that there is never any objective improvement in quality between the two.
I'm not assuming anything. Except that the Snyder Cut is (and in its finished version will be) vastly different than the theatrical version. Whether it's better, equal, or worse, remains to be seen.
And, yes, there are things that can be relatively objectively measured in a movie, like how coherent is it, whether it is clearly structured, how well executed the themes are. Now, there are very good movies that are deeply flawed in some, even all of these categories, and there are bad movies that succeed in all these categories. Because
in the end, quality in movies, as in any artform, comes down to personal taste.
General argument and specific argument are two different things. My point is that just because some directors' cuts are improvements, that doesn't mean they all are. Yes, the theatrical JL was deeply flawed, but it could be that the original cut was even worse. Given Snyder's previous films and Whedon's previous films, I think it's highly probable that the original cut was worse. People are always curious about what they didn't get, but that doesn't mean it'll be better than what they did get.
I see you making both a general
and a specific argument. As for the quality argument, see above.
Not rewarding bad behavior, just creating unrealistic expectations that all you have to do is make noise and start an online petition and eventually the studios will give in. Most of the time, fan petitions accomplish nothing. Even the legendary Save Star Trek letter campaign was more hype than reality, since there's no compelling evidence that NBC was ever going to cancel the show anyway, and what really saved it was the producers' agreement to reduce the budget, which is what saves most on-the-bubble shows in their later seasons.
The campaign has been going for
years, with very expensive billboards and magazine ads, too.
Frankly, I doubt we would've ever gotten the Snyder Cut if the pandemic hadn't shut new production down and left Hollywood starved for material to release. This is not a response to overwhelming demand so much as a compensation for failing supply.
It may have been a factor, but if there hadn't been a huge campaign showing popular demand, this would not have happened.
Also, there's the "Amok Time" principle -- "you may find that having is not so pleasing a thing after all as wanting." I suspect a lot of people who've mythologized the SC in their minds are in for a big disappointment, and it's best not to get those hopes up too much.
Yes, the greatest pleasure lies in anticipation. Of course, bringing that thought to its ultimate conclusion would mean that it's better to never get anything new ever again, because one might be disappointed. Seriously, it's like you're thinking of people as small children who don't know what life is.
Still, I'll concede that I'd be happier about all this if it were a version I actually wanted to see.
This is something you actually have to concede?