Top is the classic DC Comics trinity by Alex Ross.
Below is the WB DC Extended Universe trinity by datrinti.
Below is the WB DC Extended Universe trinity by datrinti.
It's strange that many believe that Joss Whedon's style is more in line with Marvel. I have memories of both "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and especially "Angel" being very angsty and gritty sometimes. Of course, Whedon got a lot of flak for allowing "Buffy" to be that gritty and not maintaining the show's tone from the first season.
Then again, even Marvel can be rather gritty or angsty . . . like its Captain America films and "The Incredible Hulk".
So the the top is the MCU / Joss Whedon /DC TV version, while bottom is the standard DC Film Universe / Zack Snyder version?
These characters have a pretty long history, and I think it's great that they're willing to recognize that in the newer adaptations. Whether it's casting Dean Cain, Helen Slater, and Lynda Carter in Supergirl, John Wesley Shipp in the Flash, or using bits of old themes in the new movies' music, I get a big kick out of it.I now see what the problem is in regard to pop culture today. Just reading these comments made me finally see the light. I don't know what it is about today's society, but it seems that the public is more willing to embrace the familiar, the conservative and nostalgia in culture - including pop culture - than give anything new or challenging a chance. It seems as if everyone wants Marvel to continue its current rut of following its formula and they want the D.C. Comics movies to regress to the past. And Warner Bros. is planning to give the audiences what they want, just as Marvel has been doing.
Ooo...it's a dark film because Bruce darkly said it's dark!![]()
the first trailer was better. this trailer was all action.
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