^ Pretty sure you were born old.
May you find yourself strapped to a chair, forced to watch the 1997
Justice League pilot, the 1990
Captain America movie and the aforementioned 1978
New Fantastic Four cartoon in a loop for a solid month. Mind rot..sweet revenge!
All I meant was that it was popular back in the day, so not all kids felt the same way that you did.
...and I'm pointing out to you that those who defend the
Super Friends tend to paint a rosy picture as though all kids enjoyed it, when that was not the case at all.
I'm one of the few people who liked the theaterical version of JL, and I'd say Whedon knew perfectly well what he was doing. At that point the man had directed 3 movies, and 42 episodes of TV, so it's ridiculous to try to say he didn't know what he was doing.
What part of "one size does not fit all" are you missing? Whedon's past work did not automatically qualify him to work on JL. that is patently illogical, as no one has ever been a fit for all concepts in a genre. Again, if the director is not fit for the specific tone, characters/demands and overall material, he will prove to be a bad fit with equally bad results. To argue otherwise is the equivalent of a false assumption that reads,
"Well, Nicholas Meyer directed great sci-fi films like Time After Time and Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan, so those kind of credits made him qualified to direct Return of the Jedi!" No, it did not. Meyer is a far different kind of filmmaker than Marquand (or Lucas, for that matter) with an approach and sensibility that lives on the polar opposite side of what
Star Wars needed at that time to achieve its kind of goal. Take Francis Coppola: he directed two among the greatest mafia/dramas--Hell,
films--in history with
The Godfather and
The Godfather Part II, but his talent and mafia films of such Brobdingnagian stature did not mean he would have been a fit for / get anywhere near as successful a result as Scorsese with
Goodfellas or
Casino by any stretch of the imagination. Talent never works that way, and it did not with Whedon on
Justice League. Filmmakers do not always speak the unique language necessary for every film they might work on.
OK, yes Whedon does have a different style from Snyder, but I don't really see why that had to mean he couldn't direct JL, especially since at that point WB was trying to move away from Snyder's style
WB was as mistaken as some moviegoers who clearly wanted to copy+paste the MCU, when that series was not a universal model for all superhero movies, and its internal tone and characterization is not what works for DC at all. It would have been as misguided to take the DCEU in that direction as it would have been to adapt
The Walking Dead, only using
Return of the Living Dead's bouncy, comedic approach to a very different, very serious kind of survival horror story. Similarly, ROTLD (well, the first one) was a
solid breakout within a genre because it "lived in its own skin" and was not trying to be another Romero film. TWD is the success that it is because it too "lived in its own skin", not trying to be like any other production within its genre (even if there was the occasional wink). Snyder's approach to the DCEU worked for that reason--the characters, environments, source and tone required something completely different, not merely being a MCU film in DC trappings.
It's also worth keeping in mind that there's a pretty good chance that a lot of the changes in tone and style that he brought into JL probably comes from the people at WB more than just Whedon all by himself.
This reads as passing the buck; a filmmaker of Whedon's level is not brought in to just nod in agreement with others, or have his strings pulled. Filmmakers do make mistakes or are a bad fit for certain productions.
I was pretty happy with the theatrical version, and have no real desire to the see Snyder's version. If I eventually sign up for HBOMax, I might watch it just to see how different it is, but it's not something I'm really anticipating.
Oh well--that's your choice and view. Meanwhile, its not a stretch to say there are a large number of fans extremely excited to see JL as they understood it had intended to be produced, instead of the obvious mistake-ridden production that played in theatres.