Juan J. Espinoza, Contributing Writer
The DC Cinematic Universe is too small for Zack Snyder.
Even from its start one can sense that something is off in the way Zack Snyder and his editor David Brenner have laid out the narrative for Batman v. Superman, to the point of almost not having a proper dramatic build-up to its finale. The climatic battle between the two titular characters seems almost badly edited as if it’s obvious that the general audiences would not care much, because after all, Batman and Superman don’t need a big show-off presentation, being the trans-generational icons they are.
And this I can understand, even from a pure audience point of view, because how many times have we seen this two characters portrayed in the screen in the last 30 years? The filmmakers did a good job at introducing Batman into this universe, no more origin story exhaustively explained ad nauseum, but with a few glimpses of what really happened to this character (via a superbly filmed main credits sequence) and with the fresh memory of the events from Man on Steel, this film goes right to the action within the first minutes of its duration. The thing is, there’s no time to breathe for any of these characters, so the actions they partake in seem almost as if the impulse to act is not coming from them, but from a superior force: time.
And I’m not talking about the time in the chronological sense of what the story needs, but the time frame that Warner has chosen to try and catch up with Marvel in the construction of its cinematic universe. That’s the real threat in Batman v. Superman, because none of these icons (separately or by themselves) can, successfully, stop the war for the box office. And that’s a shame because I think all the choices the filmmakers did, especially regarding the casting and the story, were spot-on.
I like the films that Disney has made out of the Marvel properties, but what I haven’t enjoyed that much from them is the boring homogeneity which all those films had. The Marvel films I really liked were those that derailed a little of the formulaic, e.g. Iron Man Three, which is a Marvel film within the so called MCU, but is also a Shane Black film.
I thought DC was gonna follow this course of action, getting a very idiosyncratic filmmaker to work on a property, so he can turn in a film that resembles that comic universe, but at the same time be a work you could enjoy and read (and incorporate) into his body of work. And for the most part Batman v. Superman is a Zack Snyder movie. Sadly, it is a film that most surely was botched so it could get more showings in the day. In fact when you watch the movie, you feel as if the urgency to lay the ground for the Justice League film was more important than anything else. Add to this the hasty pacing and the result is as if these two and a half hours were basically the summary of a series of films that precede it…
”Previously on the DC Universe…"