ARTICLE:
https://www.wired.com/2017/03/new-justice-league-trailer/?mbid=social_twitter
Thoughts?
I don't particularly agree, but it's interesting.
https://www.wired.com/2017/03/new-justice-league-trailer/?mbid=social_twitter
ALMOST EXACTLY ONE year ago today, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice hit theaters. Fans liked it, kinda; critics didn't. But one refrain was consistent across audiences: God, that was bleak. Some of that felt like the imprimatur of the director, Zack Snyder, a man who embraced the darkness in movies like Watchmen and 300 and who has never met a rain-soaked alley he didn't like. Still, in response to the BvS reactions, Snyder promised that his follow-up, Justice League, wouldn't be quite so dark.
Well, Justice League‘s first trailer landed over the weekend—and while there are laugh lines scattered throughout its two and a half minutes, it seems as though Snyder missed the point. Honestly, Zack: Would it kill you to turn on a light sometimes?
To be clear, this is a DC/Warner Bros. problem that predates Snyder. After the success of Christopher Nolan's Dark Knight trilogy, the studio seems to have assumed that moviegoers wanted all characters to go dark—when what they wanted was a Christopher Nolan movie. Seriousness is nice, but the direction the DC Extended Universe films have gone since Nolan stepped away from the director's chair have bordered on self-serious, somehow becoming cartoonish with barely a primary color in sight.
The strategy makes sense, in a way. Marvel already has the market cornered on bright, happy-go-lucky heroes: The Avengers and their ilk were wearing red and cracking wise from the beginning. In order not to look like cinematic copycats, DC's only option was to focus on the fact that its movies had the brooding, ”real" heroes, the ones with dysfunctional home lives and drinking problems who only come out at night. (Shout out to Suicide Squad!) One need only to look at two big comic-book movie teases of last week—the Justice League trailer and the new Spider-Man: Homecoming poster—to notice how different the optics are between the two. The aesthetics couldn't be more different, but while the DCEU has managed to get some daylight between it and the MCU, the actual daylight is scarce.
Thoughts?
I don't particularly agree, but it's interesting.