One note before I get quotey - We didn't skip over Dick because he's dead (at least, according to Snyder - https://movieweb.com/batman-v-superman- … -confirms/ ). Maybe Reeves' movie will explore that a bit, or maybe it won't be in continuity. All Reeves has said is that it isn't Year One.
I guess it is what it is. It feels chaotic and troubled to people because we honestly have no idea what's going on behind the scenes or what the product is supposed to look like. Whereas Marvel tells us what their plan is ten years in advance and rarely changes a release date, the DC movies seem to depend on how they develop. It's probably the right way to go about it, but it means that movies feel like they're dangling out in limbo much more than they actually are.
Oh, I get that it's a process. The only thing that surprised me was the whole "first draft" thing. I get that movies are written and re-written, but a first draft is a first draft. There was at least one first draft because it was written by Affleck. Then, I swear, Reeves went to work re-writing that. I get that Reeves might have started completely over from scratch and this is a new "first draft" but that just surprised me.
I've noticed that most articles have stopped mentioning why Zack Snyder left Justice League. A lot of articles simply say that Snyder left the movie. A lot say that the studio replaced Snyder. Most articles make it sound like Snyder was fired because the studio didn't like him. It's become pretty rare to see an article acknowledge that Snyder left because of a seriously horrible tragedy within his family. This is just dishonest reporting, and it's a symptom of a much larger problem with big media outlets.
Well, the common theory is that Snyder was fired, and they (either the studio or a combination of the studio and Snyder) used the tragedy to cover to avoid the "bad press" of Snyder being fired because they didn't like his vision. It's a bit irresponsible, but I think most comic book movie sites are just cutting to the chase. Because there were rumors that Snyder was in trouble before the tragedy, and it makes sense that both parties would be happy to walk away from each other. And Snyder's activity on social media shows a bit that he's not super pleased with them, meaning there was a lot of stuff going on in the background to indicate that the split was more than it was.
I don't dislike the Warner/DC movies. I just think that there are people at Warner who see something like Rotten Tomatoes and panic, feeling like they need to change something, when they really just need to let the plan play out the way it was intended.
WB/DC made a lot of mistakes along the way. The first was to try and go head to head with Marvel at a bad time. Man of Steel came out a month after Iron Man 3. At that time, Marvel was just about to hit their stride - Phase 2 was just beginning after the mixed bag that was Phase One (I maintain that, outside of the first Iron Man and the fun of Avengers, Phase One is easily the worst, critically and commercially).
If DC had taken things slowly, like Marvel did, they could've been forgiven. With the exception of Iron Man, people generally love Marvel sequels better than the originals. Setting up the world is the hard part - playing in the world is easy.
And I'm not even talking about solo films. I'm just talking about making mistakes. The first Marvel film is generally considered one of the best MCU films, but the 2nd film was the Incredible Hulk, a movie where the main character was recast and the movie has been all-but-forgotten. People hate Iron Man 2. Thor has bleached eyebrows in the first movie. The First Avenger is "a trailer for the Avengers"
The problem was that, in between Man of Steel and BvS, Marvel started hitting home runs. Captain America: the Winter Soldier was a critical and financial success. People went crazy for it, and it's definitely considered one of the best MCU films. They hit another home run with Guardians of the Galaxy, a quirky and fun movie that surprised everyone. Then came Age of Ultron, a movie that people generally dislike, but it was the *second* Avengers movie.
And instead of taking their time and building their universe, DC tried to catch up. They could've released another solo film - maybe hire Affleck to do his Batman solo film before jumping into a shared universe. Maybe the Affleck Batman movie ends with the battle in Metropolis, leaving a huge tease to Batman facing off against Superman. Maybe you go Wonder Woman first. Or maybe you do a Man of Steel 2.
The problem is that you jumped right into a movie that was divisive. And I don't even mean based on reactions - I mean literally divisive - you have Batman against Superman. And like with any battle, people are going to pick sides.
It was compared, quite unfairly, to Civil War. Because there was a lot more nuance, from the audience, in Civil War. Love him or hate him, we'd cheered for Tony Stark. Boring or not, we'd cheered for Steve Rogers. And forgettable or not, we understood all the side characters on the Tony vs. Steve fight.
With jumping right into BvS, you're forcing fans to choose between them. And while most fans know Downey as Iron Man and Evans as Captain America, Batman and Superman are timeless. You're not only having Cavill vs. Affleck, you're having Bale and Keaton vs. Christopher Reeve. These characters mean something different to everyone. And to get two good guys to fight, they had to make the other look a little sinister, screwing with the way we see the characters.
Batman has to be legitimately dangerous for Superman to treat him like any other criminal. So Batman has to casually kill and brand people. Superman has to be a legitimate threat to humanity for Batman to want to eliminate him. So Superman is cold and alien whenever he's in public. You have the World's Greatest Detective and *two* great Daily Planet reporters, and neither does enough investigation to see that both guys are, generally, pretty good.
I mentioned the Affleck solo film that ends in Metropolis. Maybe it shows how tired Batman is. Maybe it's one last hurrah for him - he's either sufficiently cleaned up Gotham or he's about to give up. And Metropolis shows him that he has one more fight. But Man of Steel could've been Superman's set up. Maybe Superman faces off against someone like Parasite, and that fight takes him to Gotham. A B-story could be Clark or Lois looking into this mysterious Batman. He started off a noble and virtuous vigilante, but now something is happening to him. Whenever Clark gets close enough, he's forced back. The investigation doesn't end - Superman is still suspicious.
If you do stuff like this, you spend an entire movie inside the character's mind - and you can understand his viewpoint.
The other issue with BvS is that it felt so much like a catch-up. It's the second movie in the franchise, and here's a Batman solo movie blended into a Man of Steel sequel. And Wonder Woman is in it! And Flash! Aquaman! Cyborg! Doomsday!
It felt like an attempt to do Marvel Phase One in one movie. Thor and Hulk and Captain America solo films were lazy so we'll just throw in bits and pieces of Wonder Woman/Aquaman/Cyborg/Flash and pretend that they were solo films that you saw and forgot about. It's five films in one, and that's why it felt so overloaded to some.
If you take your time and make some of these movies, I think you give the audience a chance to warm up to your vision. Like I said, make your Batfleck movie. Make Man of Steel 2. Make Wonder Woman. If you want to grow the universe with each movie, do that. There's ways to bring Aquaman or Atlantis or Atlanteans in your Wonder Woman movie like you had with the Flash cameo in Suicide Squad. Cyborg could easily be in a Man of Steel sequel. Batfleck could connect to Suicide Squad.
And if you want to move from Batman to Superman, don't make them immediately fight. Have them team up but not entirely trust each other. Or have them cross paths but not meet. Let us meet the characters before we're forced to root against them. Take things slowly.
It's why Marvel can make 20 films in 10 years and it felt fresh, and why DC can only make a handful in half the time and feel bloated.