There is no controversy. Multiple versions are good. Seeing a director's vision is good. If you only want to see a studio's version you are into censorship, and you are a horrible person. End of debate.
Well, no. It isn't censorship to be uninterested in seeing a director's cut. That's blatantly ridiculous.
People rallying against a new cut of a movie being released is censorship by mob rule. Like cancel culture in general.Well, no. It isn't censorship to be uninterested in seeing a director's cut. That's blatantly ridiculous.
People rallying against a new cut of a movie being released is censorship by mob rule. Like cancel culture in general.
People rallying against a new cut of a movie being released is censorship by mob rule. Like cancel culture in general.
For me, where they lost me isn't where Jonathan Kent felt unsure, or conflicted. He's still human after all. It was where he chose to impart a lesson to his son which could charitably be described as "selfish exceptionalism." That's not in-character for the man who raised Superman; it sounds more like the guy who raised Lex Luthor. Indeed they even double down with this attitude in BvS with the whole "you don't owe this world anything" speech.I had no problem with Pa Kent being honestly unsure what to do about it all. It felt real and emotional. And I really don't care if Superman is selfless because of his childhood/parents or because he's just naturally selfless, as some people are.
I do think they botched the underpass scene, though. It was weird to have the grand dramatic death scene revolve around saving a dog that wasn't even trapped but just refused to leave the car and even weirder to have Clark go underground trying to live up to his father's caution as a result of him just allowing his dad to die by following his dad's advice. The movie would make more sense if Clark had ignored his father in that scene and the result of that had somehow ended in Johnathan's death. Or just don't kill Johnathan but have the incident actually expose Clark to some extent thereby seemingly proving Johnathan right.
Again, nothing to do with the quality of either version of the film. Just the arrogance and entitlement of some fans.
I'd wager that the Snyder Superman wouldn't have taken much tweaking to make him both acceptable to die-hards and still deliver what MOS was striving for.
Its bad enough to get a shitty version of JL, do we really need a terrible version of Suicide Squad as well? I actually kind of like Suicide Squad. Its a terrible adaptation of the source material, and Joker/"Harley" suck, but its fun enough as a "so bad its good" action movie, and that is all down to the style that was added after Ayer was off the edit. Suicide Squad without the color and music might actually rival Batman v Superman (and probably JL Snyder cut) as the worst DC film ever, based on the little I've read about Ayer's version.
I'm not against alternate cuts as a rule. I own both versions of Superman 2, and I really want to get the Blu Ray of the supergirl film for the "directors cut" bonus DVD and the blu ray of the 3 hour Superman Extended/TV cut because I like to see other versions of some films. But the last thing I want to see is more of Ayer's (or Snyder's) DC worl. Their DCEU stuff ultimately failed (regardless of some monetary success) for a reason, the grimdark shit didn't sell well enough, and people got sick of it. Batman v Superman's director's cut is easily worse then the theatrical, and I doubt the JL Snyder cut or potential Suicide Squad director's cut will be any different.
See Also: "Bruce Wayne is a murdering psychopath." This for me sums up Bruce's character; where the mere fact that he threatened someone with a gun out of sheer desperation was enough for him to decide to retire for good. No matter how dire things got, he'd rather do nothing that betray his mission and take the easy path.
It's safe to say then that you wouldn't be interested in Paul Feig's 3 and a half hour version of Ghostbusters 2016.
At the risk of repeating an argument that's been brought up repeatedly over the years: Nobody is forcing anybody to watch a movie they don't want to see. People who want to see the Snyder Cut (including myself) can do so, people who don't want to see it can just ignore it. What's so hard about this to understand?
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