I believe they've already said there will be no Whedon footage in this version. So no mustache footage to worry about at all.Well, maybe they can reshoot Henry Cavill's scenes too an not have to worry about CGIing out the mustache.
I didn’t see this coming https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/h...oker-in-zack-snyders-justice-league-exclusive
The new cut is so different that Geoff Johns and Jon Berg have had their producer credits removed per their own request because it doesn't resemble what was released in theaters.
https://www.cbr.com/zack-snyder-justice-league-geoff-johns-jon-berg-producer-credits/
The 1978 movie is weird. The early parts with Krypton & Smallville are serious to the point of solemnity. But then there's a major tonal whiplash when you get to all of the wacky antics during the Metropolis scenes. Then, when you get to Lois' death, it suddenly turns super serious again. Which, I suppose, makes it that much more of an effective sucker punch in the gut.
Wow. That's new. Zack Snyder, is that you?
The idea of killing Lois in the 1978 movie is the complete and total opposite of what the movie represents.
I'm a little confused. When did Snyder's vision for DC comics become popular??? When he was running it, all I read were constant complaints and aggravation and frustration of what he'd done. DC has made some make overs after him bowing out from JL, I mean even Wonder Woman 84 feels more like a brighter take visually in style from it's first film and Snyder's dark music video style. I'm surprised there seemed to be a demand for Snyder's self-promotional stunt to get back into the DC movies.This is obviously not the movie Snyder would have delivered for theatrical release. It's a four hour miniseries now. And Snyder probably has more freedom to add stuff that he couldn't have for the theatrical version.
I'm a little confused. When did Snyder's vision for DC comics become popular??? When he was running it, all I read were constant complaints and aggravation and frustration of what he'd done. DC has made some make overs after him bowing out from JL, I mean even Wonder Woman 84 feels more like a brighter take visually in style from it's first film and Snyder's dark music video style. I'm surprised there seemed to be a demand for Snyder's self-promotional stunt to get back into the DC movies.
Yeah, trying to make Superman realistic, kind of defeats the whole purpose character. He is meant to be the ultimate bigger than life, idealized hero.The point of that climactic scene in Superman '78 is NOT that Jor-El was right, and that Clark fucks up by defying him. That's such an emotionally tone-deaf reading of the film that it beggars belief. The point is that this time, warnings be damned, Clark WILL NOT accept that he is helpless. He WILL NOT let what happened to Jonathan happen again. "All those powers, and I couldn't even save her" WILL NOT be the answer again. Not this time. Not this woman.
Superman is not a tale of accepting limitations and failure. It's a story of transcendence, of triumph, of being better than we are, better than we thought we could be. It's a story of moving Heaven and Earth for truth, for justice, for life and for love.
Is that "realistic"? Perhaps not. The fallacy is the assumption that realism is the purpose of narrative, or its highest mode of expression. Superman is not a documentary. He's a fable, a fantasy, a parable, an ideal. His world is better than ours, because he won't accept less, and he has the power and the will to make it so. He's the best aspirations of humanity, given fictional form and substance. Donner understood that, fundamentally and profoundly -- which is why his movie has resonated and defined the character of Superman, above all other portrayals in any medium, for more than 40 years.
I think there are ways to "humanize" him yet keep him Superman.Yeah, trying to make Superman realistic, kind of defeats the whole purpose character. He is meant to be the ultimate bigger than life, idealized hero.
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