Not when you have a Phantom Zone projector.Would Superman split Tuvix?
Not when you have a Phantom Zone projector.Would Superman split Tuvix?
Would Superman split Tuvix?
With the amount of time it takes to film scenes, a day and a half is barely going to be a few minutes of actual footage that will make it to the screen, so it's not really even enough to effect much of the movie.Pick-ups are not the same thing as reshoots. They may include reshoots.
A day and a half of shooting is...almost nothing. At best it's someone's optimistic assessment of how long getting a few shots will take.
I think where a lot of the confusion with Man of Steel is that it did make a decent amount of money, but it was not the huge record breaking hit that WB wanted, and the reaction to it was fairly mixed. So it's not a huge beloved recording breaking hit, and I think for a lot of people that makes it a flop.But "the movie flopped" and "the studio mismanaged the franchise" seem like contradictory arguments for why there were no subsequent Superman solo movies. Failing to follow up on a hit would be mismanagement. Choosing not to follow up on a flop seems like a sensible decision. So I don't think you can have it both ways.
Personally I think their biggest mistake was hiring Zack Snyder in the first place, but the numbers tell a story that the film, despite its mixed reception, was successful enough to launch a franchise. That is incompatible with the usual definition of the word "flop."
It was a success
With the amount of time it takes to film scenes, a day and a half is barely going to be a few minutes of actual footage that will make it to the screen, so it's not really even enough to effect much of the movie.
I think where a lot of the confusion with Man of Steel is that it did make a decent amount of money, but it was not the huge record breaking hit that WB wanted, and the reaction to it was fairly mixed. So it's not a huge beloved recording breaking hit, and I think for a lot of people that makes it a flop.
Flop.That just means those people don't understand (or don't want to admit) what a flop is.
It was a success, but (as you said) it was mismanaged. Instead of making a true sequel, WB dove straight into Justice League, with BvS mostly serving as a build-up to that. Now, I love BvS, the longer version. But because WB wanted to build on the success of The Avengers, they missed several steps. Including making us care more deeply about the characters, meaning we needed more solo movies BEFORE the team movie.
This is also why Wonder Woman, Shazam! and Aquaman were, and remain, the best of the DCEU movies. And I say this as a huge Superman partisan, who would have loved to embrace that character's entries in the series in the same way.And then you notice "Oh, people are actually more for the action-cinema-bombast" - which is, dear @StarTrek1701, why "Aquaman, Wonder Woman, Shazam, fucking hell Harley freakin Quinn got solo movies with sequels", these movies are the action-cinema-bombast, giving the fans a good time, other than MoS or both BvS-versions, that were more for the fans of the idea 'gods among men'.
Other than Batman, you really can't do these characters "grounded in reality".CaptainCalvinCat said:the DCEU stays grounded in reality.
Needs an "and monsters" in there somewhere.Mudd said:Aside from the bombastic ring of "Gods among men" perhaps appealing to some fans, it's a perfectly terrible theme to base a series of popular films on.
When it first came out my friend said it was his favorite, as in it held the #1 spot.Wonder Woman is one of my favorite superhero movies. Directed by Patty Jenkins, screenplay by Allan Heinberg.
Plausible within the "reality" of a given narrative, sure. I was responding to the idea that the character can be "grounded in reality," and that he was somehow unique among superheroes as fitting within that framework.Plausibility and realism are different things. Batman is not remotely possible, in the real world. He, like Sherlock Holmes, Starfleet and even Superman are made plausible to different degrees within the contexts of the stories that are told about him.
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