Dan wrote:Wouldn't say it's point for point exactly like AOU. AOU, while didn't duplicate the box office numbers of the first film, was nonetheless the second highest grossing of the all the MCU films (both domestic and world-wide), and was still a well praised film (75% Rotten Tomatoes score, Graded A by CinemaScore).
Well, was comparing "Audiences were unhappily surprised to find out it spent 70% of the movie's time trying to drearily psychoanalyze the characters, instead of sending them into battle, and squeezed in some last minute battle scenes that seemed pointless and didn't fit with the overall tone", and "Didn't really seem to have its own purpose in existing, except to set up characters for the next linked-universe films rather than doing anything meaningful with the one they had".
As such, we just came out of AoU waiting for Civil War and the Black Panther movie, and most fans were looking to BvS just to "audition" the Wonder Woman and Justice League movies, which also seemed to get little more than a cameo advertisement.
Ben wrote:but WB has never really known what DC is or how to handle it. DC arguably have the best and more iconic characters, but they haven't used them in the right way since the late 1980s...!
More specifically, they're still crippled by their Cartoon Network issues, and can't 100% commit themselves to DC without worrying that we'll all consider it a 70's-kitsch relic, associate anything Justice League related with Superfriends, and start giggling over Wonder Twins, Wendy & Marvin and Apache Chief jokes.
So they either have to
A) hammer us with dark gritty Deconstructionist views that will
shock us into re-examining our beloved icons in a new way for a complex world (ie. make Batman depressing, Superman a jerk, and turn everything into post-9/11 metaphors), or
B) kiss up to their neurotic imaginary "kitsch" audience and play every other DC cartoon on CN for backhanded-snigger value, like Teen Titans Go. (Yeah, yeah, I know, you
liked Batman: Brave & Bold...Want a movie of it?)
To love others, one must first love one's self, and Warner has too many self-inflicted neurotic inferiority complexes to love itself
or DC with any degree of marketable confidence the way Disney/Marvel can.