THR: Warner Bros. Mulls Releasing Fewer Films as 'Batman v. Superman' Stalls

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inky

Member
I've brought this up before, but how come no one gets mad at Iron Man or Cap killing bad guys?
Maybe because Batman's no-kill rule isn't as sacred to me as it is to others, but I don't see the difference.

Several reasons, but pretty much why no one cares when Indiana Jones murders people. It boils down to tone, heroism, and because they are not famous for having that stupid rule in the first place, whether it is "sacred" or not.
 

Neoxon

Junior Member
Maybe you're kidding around, but this mindset is silly.

Murder is the killing of innocents. The men Bats killed got what they deserved when they made the choice to SET SOMEONE ON FIRE.

This isn't TAS anymore, Batman isn't facing bank robbers and corrupt politicians. He's dealing with sex slave traders and actual killers. Those types don't deserve the mercy of his no-kill rule.

As for Supes, was he supposed to pick Metropolis in the middle of the fight and move it somewhere else? He can anyone blame him for those killed in the destruction of that fight?
You're sounding a looooot like Punisher right about now.
 

Poona

Member
I just hope this means they cancel Aquaman, and cancel Cyborg.

Serious? No way. I'm really looking forward to seeing Aquaman. He looks great, and I want to see what James Wan does with him.

Marvel has made films with lesser known characters.

Also I really like the look they have going for him. I wish he looked the same in the comics, etc with the long hair and facial hair.
 

Blader

Member
I'm no law student, of course. I really didn't mean for that to come out as fact but that's my personal stance, and one I take seriously.

You don't need to be a law student to know that murdering someone is illegal. :lol

There's a reason why characters like Dexter, The Punisher, etc. are labeled as morally gray anti-heroes, and not law-abiding hero-heroes.

We'll have to agree to disagree on this then. I think Batman, as well Superman in the Africa scene, made the right call.

You might think Batman is morally justified to kill criminals (or, certain kinds of criminals). But murder is a legal definition, not a moral one.
 

Arnie7

Banned
Is there a reason why Superman couldn't cover Zods eyes?

Captain_Hindsight_766605.jpg
 
Remember when in the animated series Superman covered Darkseid eyes when he was gonna fire those lasers and that's how he beat him.

Remember he animated series? That was cool
 

tomtom94

Member
Serious? No way. I'm really looking forward to seeing Aquaman. He looks great, and I want to see what James Wan does with him.

Marvel has made films with lesser known characters.

Also I really like the look they have going for him. I wish he looked the same in the comics, etc with the long hair and facial hair.
I want to be excited, but I'm worried that Wan is there as a safe pair of hands rather than a director with a unique vision (or worse, a hired hand to continue Snyder's work).
 

Kin5290

Member
Several reasons, but pretty much why no one cares when Indiana Jones murders people. It boils down to tone, heroism, and because they are not famous for having that stupid rule in the first place, whether it is "sacred" or not.
Cap is a soldier, Iron Man is an arms manufacturer, and both of them are sanctioned by multiple world governments to fight terrorists/HYDRA.

It's an odd creative choice anyways. The scene in TDK where Batman takes down Joker's henchmen and the SWAT team simultaneously to keep everyone alive was well received, so Snyder decides ... Let's not do that?

Also, Batman is not the Punisher. If he kills, then that act is the exception that proves the rule. Never mind that the Punisher is outright insane.
 
You don't need to be a law student to know that murdering someone is illegal. :lol

There's a reason why characters like Dexter, The Punisher, etc. are labeled as morally gray anti-heroes, and not law-abiding hero-heroes.

I actually call them anti-villains because there certainly isn't anything heroic (imo) about what they do.

I am gonna guess that Boondock Saints must be one of J_Viper's favorite movies and he probably liked the sequel.

The thing that bothered me in BvS about Batman is the Batmobile sequence. Batman is being the villain, he is trying to rob a convoy and is completely wasting guys who were most likely hired to protect it. These wouldn't be "bad" guys, just mercenaries hired by Lex to protect a cargo shipment, they probably wouldn't even know it was smuggled goods, just something important the boss didn't want to fall into wrong hands. Then along comes Batman trying to steal it, so they try to stop him. Really left a bad taste in my mouth and I can see why people might call him Murderman.
 

inky

Member
Cap is a soldier, Iron Man is an arms manufacturer, and both of them are sanctioned by multiple world governments to fight terrorists/HYDRA.

I know Cap is a soldier, I've made that argument myself (not that it wasn't evident in the first place). Iron Man kills people before he was sanctioned by anyone, if he ever really was.

He went on a revenge spree against the people who held him captive immediately after completing his suit. Killing people is heroic in the right context, there's not much more to it than that.
 
I know Cap is a soldier, I've made that argument myself (not that it wasn't evident in the first place). Iron Man kills people before he was sanctioned by anyone, if he ever really was.

He went on a revenge spree against the people who held him captive immediately after completing his suit. Killing people is heroic, there's not much more to it than that.

Bats has the support of Gotham police, albeit unofficially.
 
Not really. Directors basically have the final creative say on all things related to the movie. The suckiness of the film, the dour tone, and the decision to cram The Dark Knight Returns and The Death of Superman into a single movie are all probably his. Generally speaking, script writers are only involved in the early stages of a movie production and rank barely over production assistants in terms of hierarchy.

Now, granted, the inclusion of Wonder Woman and the Justice League teasing are probably studio mandated. Still, as director Snyder could have executed said teases in a less horrible way.

Of course, it's the studio's fault that Batman v Superman is only the second film in the cinematic universe.
I see. Fair enough. Well I guess that's that. There's nothing else to be said on the matter.
 

Kin5290

Member
I know Cap is a soldier, I've made that argument myself (not that it wasn't evident in the first place). Iron Man kills people before he was sanctioned by anyone, if he ever really was.

He went on a revenge spree against the people who held him captive immediately after completing his suit. Killing people is heroic, there's not much more to it than that.
It's been a while since I've seen Iron Man, but I'd argue that Tony's kills while in his box of scraps suit are all in self defense. His exploding the tank and killing those militants who were holding the villagers hostage is extrajudicial (as is his leaving the surviving leader guy to the mercies of the villagers), however.
 

inky

Member
Bats has the support of Gotham police, albeit unofficially.

Well, yes. There are a host of creative reason why he chooses not to kill, including working more closely to improve his community, not turning it into a warzone like the Punisher.

I think it only really bothers people who are more close to the character, but it can also feel out of place when you consider the reasons it is there in the first place.
 

inky

Member
It's been a while since I've seen Iron Man, but I'd argue that Tony's kills while in his box of scraps suit are all in self defense. His exploding the tank and killing those militants who were holding the villagers hostage is extrajudicial (as is his leaving the surviving leader guy to the mercies of the villagers), however.

Sure,that is why I quickly added in the "context" line, although not quick enough for your quote. I'm not talking about killing indiscriminately of course, or just for revenge.
 
At the end when Superman tries to do the Iron Man in Gulmira shtick

vlcsnap-15519203.png


"I am many things Kal-El, but here, I am god"

Dope show

I love their version of Darkseid. Not as idiosyncratic as Kirbys creation, but a unique presence that makes him more than just a big bad for Superman to punch
 
http://i.imgur.com/ktDLiUO.png
http://i.imgur.com/4c8b8Fg.png

All I'm saying is his hands switch position in like 3 seconds and he doesn't break Zod's neck for another 15 seconds after that. He could have covered his eyes, it's not like they would have melted off right?

Earlier in the film Faora tried covering his eyes and it didn't work out well. It's a contrived scenario, regardless.

Alternatively, this might have happened.

bFKldO2.gif
 

guek

Banned
Well, yes, that is why I quickly added in the "context" line, although not quick enough for your quote. I'm not talking about killing indiscriminately of course.

There's also something very different about killing terrorists in a war zone compared to criminals in the inner city.
 

Dorpheus

Neo Member
This is great news to me. Reshoots mean that they're doing their best to make it a good movie. Everyone wins.

I've brought this up before, but how come no one gets mad at Iron Man or Cap killing bad guys?
Maybe because Batman's no-kill rule isn't as sacred to me as it is to others, but I don't see the difference.

I have a question. Why does every character need to be open to killing? "No kill" is really not that common, and it can create some uniquely compelling stories.
 
Wasn't Zod attacking Superman?

Was there, at any point, any attempt by Zod to attack Metropolis in an attempt to lure Superman into a fight?

Zod kicks an oil rig at Superman and instead of stopping it, Superman flies between the thing and lets it explode into a building behind him. There are people all around them the entire time, but they're just scenery and don't play into the fight at all until Supes has to snap Zod's neck. There is never any attempt by Supes to mitigate the damage and loss of life around him. Zod never once looks like he wants to attack Metropolis once he's engaged with Superman.

My favorite part of that entire battle was when the flew into outer space, Supes knocked Zod into the satellite which he promptly throws back at him, then they fall back to Earth with the remnants of the satellite... back into Metropolis -_-

Planetary physics... how do they work?
and then the same shit happened in bvs
LOL, I totally forgot about that, yes it did! >_<
 
My favorite part of that entire battle was when the flew into outer space, Supes knocked Zod into the satellite which he promptly throws back at him, then they fall back to Earth with the remnants of the satellite... back into Metropolis -_-

Planetary physics... how do they work?

and then the same shit happened in bvs
 

J_Viper

Member
This is fucking joke right?

Like, this is a parody of MoS defense responses, right?

Nope. I'm cereal.

Wasn't Zod attacking Superman?

Was there, at any point, any attempt by Zod to attack Metropolis in an attempt to lure Superman into a fight?

Zod kicks an oil rig at Superman and instead of stopping it, Superman flies between the thing and lets it explode into a building behind him. There are people all around them the entire time, but they're just scenery and don't play into the fight at all until Supes has to snap Zod's neck. There is never any attempt by Supes to mitigate the damage and loss of life around him. Zod never once looks like he wants to attack Metropolis once he's engaged with Superman.
It's been a while since I've watched MoS, but wasn't the sacrifice of Metropolis needed to power Zod's world engine device? If that's the case then I can see why Supes would fight him there.

As far the second point, which is a fair point concerning the oil-rig type scenarios, I'd chalk that down to Snyder's interpretation of an inexperienced, flawed Superman. I don't expect him to be able to balance the fight with Zod and save everyone in the city.

Lol then why didn't Batman never kill the Joker after Jason Todd or Barbara?

Perhaps he only started killing after Robin's death? I'm guessing we'll have to wait for the solo Batman film to answer those questions.

So you are actually serious? You believe in actual reality it shouldn't count as murder if a citizen KILLS someone who wasn't "innocent".

People should be able to take the law into their own hands and be legally able to kill those they believe are criminals?

That's a bit broad, but if we're talking rapists, killers, sex traffickers, child molesters, anyone involved in child pornography, and other similarly vile acts then yes, I personally believe they should die.

You're sounding a looooot like Punisher right about now.

Well I do love Bernthal

You don't need to be a law student to know that murdering someone is illegal. :lol

There's a reason why characters like Dexter, The Punisher, etc. are labeled as morally gray anti-heroes, and not law-abiding hero-heroes.



You might think Batman is morally justified to kill criminals (or, certain kinds of criminals). But murder is a legal definition, not a moral one.

Then perhaps I find the morally gray anti-hero Batman to be a very interesting take on the character and one that I would have loved to see more of.

I just believe directors should be able to have different interpretations of these characters.

I am gonna guess that Boondock Saints must be one of J_Viper's favorite movies and he probably liked the sequel.
.

Haven't seen either, but I have been meaning to check them out. I'm a big Dafoe fan.
 
I wonder if Zack Snyder is the personification of "Hollywood executives don't hire Black/Asian/Hispanic/Female directors because they tend to prefer people who remind them of their younger selves". It's sort of perplexing that he keeps failing into success and consistently getting bigger projects, even though his two biggest hits were somewhat controversial adaptations of existing material.

Even if he truly is a misunderstood genius, it's pretty clear that audiences aren't getting any closer to understanding him, and that has to factor in on such large business decisions. The amount of leeway he gets really seems out of character for the industry.
 
Well, yes. There are a host of creative reason why he chooses not to kill, including working more closely to improve his community, not turning it into a warzone like the Punisher.

I think it only really bothers people who are more close to the character, but it can also feel out of place when you consider the reasons it is there in the first place.

There has been a lot of ink spilled on the idea that this Batman doesn't care about killing and is the same as the punisher now, but I'd say that's not strictly true. It's more like that he no longer considers it completely forbidden. We see several times in the film that he has criminals at his mercy and he renders them unconscious or lets the police grab them - the whole Bat Brand As A Mark Of Death subplot is kind of poorly explained but apparently only one person had died in prison because of it based on news reports at the start.

I've been harping on about it for weeks now it feels but we've had Burtman killing people since 89 and Nolan Bats killing people while pretending like he wasn't for 3 films. If I was a comic reader maybe I'd be more pissed but from the filmverse it only feels one step removed from what was already happening - dropping the pretense.
 
Should it be done? YES! LOTR 4,5,6? YERS! Its like. GTA 3, Vice and SA were perfect. Let em go.
No.
The Last of Us, Uncharted 1-3 were fine. NOPE MAKE MORE!

Who cares? If it turns out bad you just act like it never happened.

But you forgot the rest of what I had said.


Also, it's not a "complete" tale. It's just three well done movies.

Well, Uncharted 1-3 were not a complete story although UC4 seems to be the end of the franchise. But, LOTR is a good example doing a new story with a new big conflict post-Sauron sort of defeats the entire purpose of the trilogy. TDK trilogy is a complete story and TDKR perfectly ends the tale of Nolan's Batman. Bruce Wayne is able to overcome the tragedy of what happened to his parents and put down the cowl to start a new life of his own with someone else. He manages to do this after giving Gotham the hope it deserves for a better tomorrow while ensuring that Batman continues to exist to help rebuild this new Gotham.

To bring Bale Batman into the mix is to disregard the entire last movie and his entire character arc. Could it be done? Sure, logic has never stopped a sequel from being made. Should it be done? No, especially when they can simply create a brand new Batman not tied down by Nolan's established universe.
 
There has been a lot of ink spilled on the idea that this Batman doesn't care about killing and is the same as the punisher now, but I'd say that's not strictly true. It's more like that he no longer considers it completely forbidden. We see several times in the film that he has criminals at his mercy and he renders them unconscious or lets the police grab them - the whole Bat Brand As A Mark Of Death subplot is kind of poorly explained but apparently only one person had died in prison because of it based on news reports at the start.

I've been harping on about it for weeks now it feels but we've had Burtman killing people since 89 and Nolan Bats killing people while pretending like he wasn't for 3 films. If I was a comic reader maybe I'd be more pissed but from the filmverse it only feels one step removed from what was already happening - dropping the pretense.

Pretty much, which is why I've noted it my least bothersome aspect of the film.

My only real question is: Why is the Joker still alive? Something that's aptly taken care of in previous incarnations. That's a story for another film.
 

Alienous

Member
It goes beyond not having an aversion to killing. BvS Batman kills for convenience sake - he blows people up seemingly because it's the easiest thing to do.

It makes him punching people silly - he should be fighting Knightmare sequence style in the rest of the film. I guess you could see it as him just enjoying feeling bones crack under his knuckles, though.

It is a film Batman idiosyncrasy, but when you have a Batman that looks so comic book accurate it is especially jarring to see him also be the most murderous Batman. It also devalues a character wrinkle that could have been explored.
 

Blader

Member
Then perhaps I find the morally gray anti-hero Batman to be a very interesting take on the character and one that I would have loved to see more of.

I just believe directors should be able to have different interpretations of these characters.

Okay. I'm not arguing against any of that. I'm just telling you that murder is not a label that only applies to killing innocent people. :lol
 
Pretty much, which is why I've noted it my least bothersome aspect of the film.

My only real question is: Why is the Joker still alive? Something that's aptly taken care of in previous incarnations. That's a story for another film.

He may not be alive, I'm unsure of ss chronology. But if Batman had flamethrower guy in cuffs, he wouldn't have killed him anyway. I don't think it's that much of a stretch tbh.
 
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