As part of the
new merger of Warner Bros. and Discovery, it was announced that DC Entertainment was getting its own dedicated
studio within the organization; similar to Marvel Studios. Becoming DC’s Kevin Feige was announced to be
James Gunn, who will handle
the creative end of things, and Peter
Safran, who will handle the business side.
This is something
they desperately, DESPERATELY needed. The current DC film universe,
known as the DCEU,
was a mitigated mess. You had the original Snyderverse that
was heralded by Zack Snyder;
which saw the DC Universe presented through his pretty dark-toned filmmaking
lens. Man of Steel
and Batman
v Superman were the prime examples of this, while Wonder Woman was
allowed to drift off a bit with a touch more lightheartedness under director Patty Jenkins. Those first two, while financially
successful, were polarizing with audiences. You have your fans, and you have
those who weren’t pleased with the depictions of Superman in particular. The studio
took the opportunity to rejigger Justice League by
putting Joss
Whedon on it to try and duplicate the success of Avengers; however,
the tonality of his footage clashed with what was left of Snyder’s shoot
resulting in an underwhelming final product. Aquaman, Shazam!, and Birds of Prey, while
set in the Snyderverse continuity, were allowed to be brighter and funnier,
although only two of them were successful (Birds’ lackluster performance
could also be attributed to coming out right as the
pandemic hit). Wonder
Woman 1984, unfortunately, had a little too much fun with itself
to the point that its story was a mess and a complete miss with fans. The Suicide Squad,
while better-received than Suicide Squad (yes,
those are two different movies), didn’t get much of a chance to prove itself as
the pandemic forced it onto HBO Max rather
than a pure theatrical run. To try and earn back some good will, WB brought
Snyder back to finish his
version of Justice League, and,
well, that opened a whole other can of worms I’ll deal with in a later entry.
And that doesn’t even include the Multiverse
projects that have no connection to the DCEU at all, like Joker, The Batman and the scrapped Batgirl.
So, yeah, DC’s
films were pretty directionless. WB had little faith in Snyder’s vision
achieving what they wanted—to compete with the MCU—and kept hemming and hawing
on keeping their own voice or trying to duplicate the fun and comedy of their
competition. Additionally, DC wasn’t willing to put in the work of achieve what
the MCU did. The MCU started slow: they introduced Iron Man, Hulk, Captain
America, Thor, Hawkeye and Black Widow across several movies before they ever
came together as The Avengers. Their stories were already told, their origins
already given (mostly), so that moment together had a lot more impact.
Now, let’s look at the DCEU: they introduce their Superman, then introduce
Batman fighting Superman with a cameo from Wonder Woman and Superman dies,
and then BOOM! Justice League. Whose premise was partly based on the world
mourning Superman’s passing—something else that was unearned via the narrative
of the three films.
And what’s funny
is DC already had the blueprints to make this kind of thing work. I
don’t mean following Marvel film for film. I mean looking inward at their own
output. Specifically: the DC Animated Universe.
That’s the name for the 14 years of shows spanning from Batman: The Animated Series
through Justice
League Unlimited. Batman was its own standalone thing when it
started. When it ended, they shifted gears to Superman, which was
a tonally different show with a completely different feel meant to fit their
interpretation of the character. Batman was eventually brought back for a brief
time in a revamped form that matched the look of Superman but kept the
feel of Batman. And the two characters interacted with each other. After
a brief stopover in the future with Batman Beyond, we
got Justice League.
That series managed to introduce the rest of the team in itself
while still including Batman and Superman and making it feel like an
organic extension of the two shows while not feeling like either
specifically. It had its own tone and methodology. See, DC already did what
they tried to do in the films, except their animated division did it better.
I’m optimistic
that Gunn was the right person to bring on board to get DC’s act together. He
turned Guardians of
the Galaxy into a viable property familiar to non-comic fans. He
resuscitated the D.O.A. Suicide Squad franchise, going so far as to get
it its own spin-off show with a second season on the way. Above all
else, Gunn is a comic fan. He knows these characters. He’s read and
followed their adventures. He respects the source material (your mileage may
vary on that statement, but regardless of whatever changes he might make that
literally EVERY OTHER MOVIE does, he does respect it). Further, it goes into
another favorite mantra of mine: creative people should be in charge of
creative industries, not suits.
Hopefully, upper
management gets out of the way and lets these guys do their thing. Their
meddling is what caused their films to flounder in the first place (and led to
the failure of many, many, MANY other films across time).