Because if there's a 1 percent chance that Lex isn't a threat, then Batman has to take it as an absolute certainty!How is Lex not a bigger threat currently and more deserving of being put down, than Superman who might be in the future?
I think the last scene, when Batman chooses not to brand Lex is meant to signify that he has now been inspired by Superman and regained some of the ethics he had earlier in his career. It is implied in the conversations with Alfred that Batman wasn't always a killer, but somewhere along the line after all the tragedy, he lost sight of that.My friend and I were discussing this movie (she just went and saw it) and her big problem with the end was, if Batman is okay with actively trying to kill Superman because of the potential threat he possesses, why then is Lex still alive? Why did they bother to grab Lex out of harm's way when Doomsday took a swing at him? How is Lex not a bigger threat currently and more deserving of being put down, than Superman who might be in the future?
^ It was a misunderstanding. A few people thought she was "Jenny Olsen" but that was cleared up when Man of Steel came out.
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By the way, right up tot he point, near the end when Alfred said 20 years of fighting street criminals had to be worth something, all evidence pointed to the fact that Batman didn't exist till Superman fought Zod through a city and left thousands dead, because why else would Superman/Clark just now have a hard-on for a consistent threat to order that had been a monument on the landscape for 20 years?
There was one thing that did make me chuckle: Joe Morton playing Silas Stone, creator of Cyborg. Joe Morton, aka Miles Bennet Dyson, creator of Skynet. You'd think he would no not to create cyborgs.![]()
Are you saying the person killed was miscredited as Olsen or are you saying bring in another person and name him Jimmy Olsen too. The latter is just ridiculous.
With Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice, has Warner Bros. finally turned a corner?
After an abysmal run of expensive underperformers including Jupiter Ascending, Pan and In the Heart of the Sea, the studio launched its effort at a Marvel-style film universe with the DC Comics movie that had been touted as proof the regime installed in 2013 and headed by chairman and CEO Kevin Tsujihara was getting on track. But a dizzying 69 percent plunge that followed its March-record $166.1 million domestic opening ($422.5 million worldwide) means Batman is not a clear win.
Some competitors say the film may turn a profit but hardly will be the money gusher studios hope for when they pour massive resources into making a giant tentpole with a big star — with a budget in this case said to be in excess of $300 million, and Ben Affleck. "The biggest problem," says the head of a rival studio, "is that it is not turning [DC] into Marvel. The audience has communicated, as have the critics." One agent notes BvS likely won't get to $1 billion despite launching the universe with "two of the most iconic characters in history." Pointing out that Jurassic World pulled in $1.67 billion globally, he continues, "you can't tell me Batman v. Superman is so much less valuable."
Several sources say Warner Bros. executives were convinced they had the goods with BvS and were shocked when negative reviews began pouring in. Now, with DC movies dated through 2020, the outcome has led to a flurry of rumors that the studio will make adjustments — maybe add a new producer? — rather than allow BvS director Zack Snyder to proceed with the two-part Justice League. But sources with firsthand knowledge of the situation say the studio has no such plans. One says the filmmakers naturally will evaluate what went wrong with BvS, but when it comes to Justice League, "we're not going to take a movie that's supposed to be one thing and turn it into a copycat of something else."
Hmmm:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/warner-bros-mulls-releasing-films-881265
But sources with firsthand knowledge of the situation say the studio has no such plans. One says the filmmakers naturally will evaluate what went wrong with BvS, but when it comes to Justice League, "we're not going to take a movie that's supposed to be one thing and turn it into a copycat of something else."
I believe once this BvS hatefest dies down and SS and WW come out to a hopefully better and calmer reception, BvS itself will be seen much more positively in retrospect and won't hamper JL's prospects.
Perhaps she could marry him posthumously.They could have married because they were so alike. It would be a semi-stand-in.
Perhaps she could marry him posthumously.
Kor
Well it would probably be helped if the director's cut actually fixes a lot of the problems critics and people had with the film.
Well it would probably be helped if the director's cut actually fixes a lot of the problems critics and people had with the film.
I gotta say, I'm not a big Marvel guy but I finally watched the first episode of the new Daredevil and his initial fight with Punisher was more thrilling and exciting than all of BvS put together.
I can't really see how that would be possible myself. Even if they could somehow make the movie flow better and seem less choppy, it would still be a pretty slow and dull story with grim and unengaging characters.
I agree. The movie had some flaws but I enjoyed it much more than I thought I would. That said, I would certainly like to see somebody else besides Snyder take over the development of the DC movies. I'd like to see something a little more faithful to the comics. Unfortunately, DC comics itself seems to have a number of editorial problems right now and even that universe is a bit of a mess.I don't think the Director's Cut will help as much for people who didn't like the movie.
But I do think the eventual calming down of this overwhelming media negativity directed at it may persuade some people to reevaluate their opinion of it. Anything positive is getting drowned out right now by alarmist sensationalist headlines that are unfortunately turning a lot of people off from even seeing it or giving it a fair chance.
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