

Warner BrosĮspecially compared to the crowd-pleasing Marvel Cinematic Universe, there is something about Snyder’s DC films, Batman v Superman especially, that feels hostile to the viewer. After the Snyder Cut, it’s a better movie in hindsight. (Affleck enters BvS clinging atop a cage of sex-trafficked women and appears over someone’s shoulder like a horror movie demon.)īatman v Superman: Dawn of Justice opened five years ago. Despite an $800-plus million box office gross, Dawn of Justice earned a tongue-lashing by critics and audiences who didn’t vibe with Snyder’s dark take on both Superman (Henry Cavill enters the movie slamming a terrorist into a wall) and Batman. The movie does both things well but still manages to fail. Two, deliver on a long-awaited showdown that’s been argued everywhere from school playgrounds to Comic-Con. One, introduce a new Batman (Ben Affleck) to the cinematic universe. As Snyder’s sequel to his first DC superhero movie, Man of Steel from 2013, the movie had two jobs. Superman finally makes sense as the dark and stormy night before the kinder, warmer daybreak that would have been Zack Snyder’s Justice League.īatman v Superman: Dawn of Justice was released five years ago on March 25, 2016. A more “complete” film than the 2017 hack job by Joss Whedon, the Snyder Cut goes a long way in making the weirdest stuff of Batman v Superman easier to grasp - like Ezra Miller’s confusing cameo as Flash.īut beyond that, with Snyder’s entire saga laid out, Batman vs. In the aftermath of Zack Snyder’s Justice League (aka the Snyder Cut), the full scope of Snyder’s DC Extended Universe is starting to become clear. It made Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice a better movie, too. the.The Snyder Cut did more than restore Zack Snyder’s vision for Justice League. ➥➥➥ DOWNLOAD Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice 2016
