SlimySnake
Flashless at the Golden Globes
Great article from Variety on a potential sequel to Zach Snyder's Justice League.
Great write. well worth a full read. https://variety.com/2021/film/colum...d-to-make-a-justice-league-sequel-1234935269/
He does bring up a good point about why hollywood makes sequels. For the fans. banking on them to come and spend their money to watch what is essentially the same movie again. So why not? especially now that the reception has been so overwhelmingly positive. Not to mention the quality of the movie should be apparent to any hollywood executive worth a damn. the author of the write brings up directors like spielberg and james cameron who are able to elevate sequels from boring needless movies to something more. Zach has done that here. and if the foreshadowing/premonitions are any indication, we are in for a hell of a ride for the next two movies.
I know not every justice league fan wants them to go that route but thats whats so exciting about zach snyder's justice league. yes, its for fans but its snyder will never compromise on his vision and will do his own thing in a spectacular fashion.
They have already established multiple universes. I say bring it on.
For 45 years, Hollywood has churned out sequels to more or less any movie that makes a big enough splash at the box office. The rationale has always been simple: The fans want it. Starting in the mid-’70s, with “Jaws” and “Rocky” and “Star Wars,” fan service became the model, the engine, the economic blueprint of the movie business. Yet it was a double-edged sword.
In the age of comic-book cinema we now occupy (or maybe I should say: that now occupies us), only one thing can make a fantasy blockbuster come fully and thrillingly alive.
“Zack Snyder’s Justice League” has that thing. What is it? You could call it vision, and you wouldn’t be wrong. But it’s also something I would call voice. That’s not a quality we associate with comic-book movies, but the rare great ones have it. And in “Justice League,” Zack Snyder’s voice comes through in ways at once large and small. It’s there in the doomy Wagnerian grandeur, and in the puckish way the movie hones on a seed coming off a hot-dog bun in the bullet-time sequence that introduces the Flash’s superpowers. It’s there in the way the backstories don’t just set up the characters but intertwine their fates, and in the way that Snyder, leaving Joss Whedon’s genial jokiness on the cutting-room floor, replaces it with a sincerity so present it doesn’t have to speak its name. It’s there in the majestic symphonic rigor of the battle scenes, and in how the villains, the glittering-with-malice Steppenwolf and the dripping-with-molten-corruption Darkseid, comprise a threat at once relentless and remorseless.
In “Justice League,” Zack Snyder sits astride the pop moviemaking machine. He’s not just telling a story that’s greater than the sum of its parts. He’s speaking through that story, crafting a parable of camaraderie and faith. It should be said that my reaction to the film — loving every minute of it, to the point that I’m itching to see it again — isn’t universal. Some critics thumbed their noses; not every fan is onboard. Yet from what I’ve seen, the reaction to Snyder’s “Justice League” has gone beyond the “Well, it’s much better than the 2017 version” feeling that even the naysayers acknowledged. There’s a collective excitement about the movie. And for those of us who have fallen for it, part of the excitement is seeing a comic-book film that’s unabashedly conventional (it doesn’t have a character like, say, Heath Ledger’s Joker) yet one that serves up those conventions with such bravura that in some ineffable way, it feels like a personal movie. It’s not an art film, for God’s sake, but it’s a studio blockbuster made by someone who imprints his personality on every scene and means every scene.
Now that that’s happened, to leave Snyder by the wayside seems not merely unjust; it strikes me as foolhardy. The Warner Bros. executives will, of course, look at the numbers — at how well the film performs on HBO Max. I suspect the news there will be good. But this can’t be a decision based simply on numbers. The mobilization of fans behind #ReleaseTheSnyderCut was kind of awesome; they were comic-book-movie geeks who moved a mountain. And now that we’ve seen the results, their passion to do it again may be even greater. Whatever plan Warner Bros. now has in place, the reality is that plans can change. Minds can change. After “Zack Snyder’s Justice League,” on what planet would an executive have to be on not to want Snyder to make a “Justice League” sequel? Only on a planet where even the potential artistry of mainstream moviemaking must always take a back seat to corporate control.
Great write. well worth a full read. https://variety.com/2021/film/colum...d-to-make-a-justice-league-sequel-1234935269/
He does bring up a good point about why hollywood makes sequels. For the fans. banking on them to come and spend their money to watch what is essentially the same movie again. So why not? especially now that the reception has been so overwhelmingly positive. Not to mention the quality of the movie should be apparent to any hollywood executive worth a damn. the author of the write brings up directors like spielberg and james cameron who are able to elevate sequels from boring needless movies to something more. Zach has done that here. and if the foreshadowing/premonitions are any indication, we are in for a hell of a ride for the next two movies.
I know not every justice league fan wants them to go that route but thats whats so exciting about zach snyder's justice league. yes, its for fans but its snyder will never compromise on his vision and will do his own thing in a spectacular fashion.
They have already established multiple universes. I say bring it on.