Monday, April 26, 2021

Oscars 2021: Break It Down, Questlove!

(L-r) Frances McDormand and Chloe Zhao, co-producers of the Best Picture-winning Nomadland

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences held their most radical Oscar ceremony in ages. Not only did the show go on (despite telecasting more than a month later than its usual annual timeslot, and without a host for the second year in a row), but it did so from different parts of the globe and not just the Kodak Theater and Union Station in Los Angeles. 

You see, most of the guests and presenters were present at the latter locations, while a few of the other actors and crew members nominated for their respective films were filmed simultaneously in their native countries. Produced by Stacey Sher, Steven Soderbergh, and Jessie Collins, the 93rd annual ceremony was filmed in a letterbox format, which made the event play more like a film than a traditional televised event we've grown accustomed to. 

Previous award-winning actress Regina King kicked things off with one of the evening's trademarks by sharing brief backstories of what made the respective nominees fall in love with film, starting with the original and adapted screenplays. The former went to Promising Young Woman scribe Emerald Fennell (who was reportedly seven months pregnant during the making of her film, which she also directed), while the latter surprisingly went to The Father writers Florian Zeller (who adapted his original stage play) and Christopher Hampton. 

Speaking of The Father, in one of the biggest upsets of the evening, Best Actor frontrunner Chadwick Boseman (in a posthumous recognition for his role in George C. Wolfe's Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, which did win for its costume design and makeup & hairstyling earlier in the evening) was beat out by past winner Anthony Hopkins, who, at age 83, is now officially the oldest recipient of the award. (The legendary actor released this humble video on his Instagram page this morning, paying tribute to Boseman as well.

Evening composer Questlove

The same can be said for Frances McDormand beating out Best Actress hopeful Viola Davis (recognized also for her work in Ma Rainey). In all fairness, the former Fargo and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri veteran didn't seem as thrilled with this win as she did when her film Nomadland (which she co-produced) won Best Picture, an honor that wasn't that surprising, but well-earned nonetheless. 

Those apparently-rushed moments notwithstanding (and considering the Best Picture category was announced before the lead acting categories, in an unexpected turn of events), the ceremony was altogether a very universal, inclusive, and humbling experience. Keeping COVID guidelines and social distancing as in tact as possible, the evening atmosphere and presentation had more in common with the Golden Globes or the Screen Actors Guild awards than the traditional Oscars, which have previously taken place at the famed Kodak Theater on Hollywood Boulevard. And there were many great moments and speeches that the Academy can now hold in its legacy. 

Here is a breakdown of some of them: 

Daniel Kaluuya winning best supporting actor for his role as the late Black Panther Party Chairman Fred Hampton, in Shaka King's Judas and the Black Messiah, a film that also won Best Original Song (by artists H.E.R., D'Mile, and Tiara Thomas). "It's so hard to make a film like this," said Kaluuya, "and they [Warner Brothers] made it possible." Added H.E.R., "I am so honored to be part of such an important story."
 
Yuh-Jung Youn winning best supporting actress for her role in Lee Isaac Chung's Minari

Denmark's Another Round winning best international feature film, which director Thomas Vinterberg dedicated to his late daughter. 
 
(L-r) Winners Yuh-Jung Youn (Best Supporting Actress, for Minari), Daniel Kaluuya (Best Supporting Actor, for Judas and the Black Messiah), and Frances McDormand (Best Actress, for Nomadland) backstage at the Oscars


Tyler Perry receiving the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award
 
Last year's Best Director-winner Bong Joon-Ho (Parasite) presenting the award to Nomadland helmer Chloe Zhao, who is now officially the second woman to win the award (after Katheryn Bigalow in 2010), and the first Asian filmmaker to do so. She was arguably the best dressed for the evening, complete with sneakers! 

74-year-old Best Supporting Actress nominee Glenn Close doing "Da Butt" (the E.U. R&B track made famous in Spike Lee's 1988 film School Daze) in front of the unsuspecting audience--as well as presenter Lil Rel Howery, who circulated a special segment called "Questlove's Oscars Trivia". (The Roots' band member was the evening's composer.) 

Presenter Harrison Ford reciting "harsh" notes from the initial screenings of 1982's Blade Runner (one of the legendary actor's most famous roles) while presenting best film editing, which went to Sound of Metal. The film (which yours truly ranks as his favorite film of 2020) also deservedly won for its immersive and groundbreaking sound design, as well as for film editing

Nominee Glenn Close (here with presenter Lil Rel Howery) may have stolen the show.

Sneak previews of Steven Spielberg's anticipated adaptation of West Side Story (due this Christmas), as well as Lin-Manuel Miranda's In the Heights (out this June).

*** 
Finally, I leave you with the following two quotes from the evening: 

"My wish tonight is that we can follow the example of jazz musicians, that wherever we are, whatever we have, we turn it into something beautiful."

~Chloe Zhao, accepting the Best Director Award for Nomadland

Sunday, April 18, 2021

RETROSPECT: Looney Tunes: Still In Action!

Thanks to HBO Max, subscribers now have access to a plethora of classic Looney Tunes cartoons from the Warner Bros animation library. And with the anticipated Space Jam: A New Legacy (the long-awaited, Lebron James-led sequel to 1996's hit live-action/animated basketball comedy starring Michael Jordan) coming out this summer, let's recap on some of the most unforgettable shorts starring Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig and company, which should be required viewing for any die-hard animation geek (and with discretion, mind you).

WRITER'S NOTE: Times being what they are now, this library is a good excuse to remember the cartoons that made us laugh growing up, as well as a legacy of humor, creativity, and generation-bridging. Again, none of this is without any outdated insensitivities or unawareness of cartoon violence, lest we forget. 

The following selected twenty shorts represent a portion of what should be some of the greatest Looney Tunes cartoons ever made:

You Ought to Be in Pictures (1940) 
One of the first instances of live-action and animation merging together, as Porky Pig (pursuaded by an early, and zany, iteration of Daffy Duck) leaves his cel animation post to pursue a career in motion pictures, much to the doubt of real-life producer Leon Schleisinger (who makes a live-action appearance). Filmed in superb black-&-white. 

The Wacky Wabbit (1942)
One of my earliest memories of Bugs Bunny, thanks to a VHS tape my grade school teachers gave me as a child. This Bob Clampett short, in which an earlier incarnation of Elmer Fudd digs for gold in the Old West, finds the "swewy wabbit" throwing hysterical hijinks at every turn. A hallmark of outrageous comedy.

A Tale of Two Kitties (1942)
Another Clampett classic, featuring a debut appearance by Tweety Bird, who faces off against feline caricatures of comedians Bud Abbott & Lou Costello. "TURN OUT THOSE LIGHTS!" 

The Case of the Missing Hair (1942)
In one of director Chuck Jones' earliest screen efforts, Bugs matches wits with a snooty magician, quick-witted and wise-cracking as the smart-alack rabbit is. Notice the use of bright color and character exaggerations. This was also one of the first instances where Bugs echoed Groucho Marx with the unforgettable trademark, "Of course you know this means war." 

Porky Pig's Feat (1943) 
Daffy & Porky are stuck in a hotel, unable to pay a hefty bill to a pompous manager. Wacky characterizations (especially down an endless flight of stairs and between two skyscrapers), plus a brilliant fourth wall gag, hold this zany comedy together. 

Falling Hare (1943) 
Bugs meets his match against a WWII gremlin, in a rare case of being on the receiving end of the joke. And this was only four decades before Warner Bros made the classic Eighties movie directed by Looney Tunes fan Joe Dante.

Baseball Bugs (1946) 
In this Friz Freleng-directed short, it's one baseball team against the one and only Bugs Bunny, whose quick wits and quips knock it out of the park, both literally and uproariously. 

Hair-Raising Hare (1946) 
Bugs tries to outwit a Frankenstein-esque monster in a haunted house. More importantly, this short features what may be the single greatest fourth wall gag in history! No contest.

High Diving Hare (1949)
One of Yosemite Sam's most hysterical showcases involves a high-diving match between the screw-loose gunslinger and Bugs Bunny. Belly laughs, through and through, even though this would not be made today.

Long-Haired Rabbit (1949) 
Bugs poses as famed 20th-century conductor Leopold Stokowski while orchestrating an egotistical tenor through an incredibly-long aria, which literally brings the house down. You'll laugh your guts out.

Rabbit of Seville (1950) 
Elmer Fudd's latest pursuit of the "swewy wabbit" becomes an unexpected, tables-turning operatic stage performance of "The Barber of Seville". A visual and aural riot. 

Canned Feud (1951) 
In this Friz Freleng-directed short, Sylvester the cat squares off against a smart-alack mouse for a can opener.

Putty Tat Trouble (1951) 
Friz Freleng directed another winner with this fast-paced short, in which Tweety Bird is chased by two competing felines (one of them being Sylvester) during the winter. The result is slapstick gold.  

Rabbit Fire (1951) 
One installment in a trilogy of "Hunting" hijinks between Elmer Fudd, Bugs and Daffy (1952's Rabbit Seasoning is also comedy gold) is a brilliant showcase for Mel Blanc's versatile voice talents. Just listen to him as Bugs and Daffy imitate each other! "Shh. Be ve-wy, ve-wy quiet. We're hunting Elmers." This is another short that could never be made today. 

Feed the Kitty (1952) 
Marc Anthony the bulldog becomes enamored with a little kitten, and constantly tries to hide it from his strict owner. One of Chuck Jones' best and most beloved shorts.

Duck Amuck (1953) 
Perhaps the ultimate meta cartoon, in which an unnamed animator constantly changes the scenery of Daffy Duck's latest short, need we say more. 

Duck Dodgers in the 24-1/2-th Century (1953)
One of the best pairings of Daffy Duck (as the unforgettable galactic superhero) & Porky Pig (as his dimwitted, straight-man sidekick), and one of Marvin the Martian's finest hours. 

Devil May-Hair (1954)
The wild and crazy debut of the wild and crazy Tazmanian Devil. Enough said.

One Froggy Evening (1955)
The debut of Michigan J. Frog (long before he became the short-term mascot for the WB network) is a classic piece of visual and aural comedy. This may be the default showcase for classic ragtime tunes.

What's Opera, Doc? (1957) 
Considered by many animation critics and historians as the single greatest cartoon in the history of Looney Tunes, Elmer Fudd and Bugs interpret the hunter's typical shtick by way of a full-blown opera. Incredible attention to detail not only in the art direction, but also in the absurd, caricatured and brilliant character animation.  

*** 
Other standout Looney Tunes (or related) animation (from the late-Eighties, early-Nineties, and recent years) that are worth noting:

Cameo appearances in 1988's Who Framed Roger Rabbit, which was also one of the last cinematic vocal contributions from the late Mel Blanc. (Don't worry, that's not all, folks.) 

The prologue and epilogue shorts in 1990's Gremlins 2: The New Batch, in celebration of Bugs' 50th anniversary. 

The animated Chuck Jones short at the beginning of 1993's Mrs. Doubtfire

The 1994 short Chariots of Fur, starring the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote. 

The 1996 short Superior Duck, an homage, of sorts, to Duck Amuck, in terms of fourth wall humor and interactions between Daffy and the mysterious narrator (in this case, the late Thurl Ravenscroft). 

The 1999 "Mi-Looney-um" Subway commercial.

Bugs Bunny as the "Warner Bros Family Entertainment" mascot. 

Marvin the Martian's blink-and-you'll-miss-it "cameo" in 2013's Gravity

The recent Warner Brothers Animation logo, featuring Daffy Duck in his early wacky form. 

RETROSPECT: Blue Skies of Animation (Expect Scattered Clouds)


WRITER'S NOTE: The following was originally posted on my Instagram page @be.kerian on February 9, 2021. I realized, too little and too late, that the length of the piece was longer than a typical Instagram post. Therefore, I decided to post it back here on "Film Freeq," as intended. 

*** 
The animation world received a bit of sad news on February 9, 2021. The Twentieth Century Fox-owned division, Blue Sky Studios, would officially be closing its doors this coming April, according to news from the Walt Disney Company. And while not the center of the medium, Blue Sky was still vital in revolutionizing the way animated films were produced at the turn of the century. 

Since its inception in 1987, a small independent computer graphics team began work on various commercials, as well as feature films like 1982's TRON. It wasn't until 1998 (during a time when Fox had attempted, but failed, to revitalize its own animation department) that Blue Sky first caught the industry's attention with their Oscar-winning short, Bunny. The success of this evocative story, about an elderly rabbit and a pesky moth, gave the creative team the confidence to carry out the daunting task of developing their first CGI feature film, Ice Age

Released in the spring of 2002, Ice Age follows a trio of unlikely heroes (including a curmudgeon mammoth, a slick-talking sloth, and a vengeful saber-toothed tiger) on a quest to return a human baby to its tribe during a winter blitz. Trailing the success of Pixar and DreamWorks, it's easy to draw comparisons to some of these respective films while viewing this prehistoric comedy. For instance, mammoth Manny and sloth Sid's first encounter recalls Shrek and Donkey's first meeting in DreamWorks' satirical fairy tale, while the human baby recalls Boo from Monsters, Inc. (Both films were released the previous year.) 


Those elements notwithstanding, what set Ice Age apart from its competition (aside from its hysterical slapstick) was how it respectfully treated its subject matter and its setting. And there are some quite serious/heavy moments in this film, such as the implied death of a parent as well as some intense moments of peril. Plus, it generally didn't concern itself with obvious pop-culture references, in spite of having many clever visual gags and an amusing use of Rusted Roots' "Send Me On My Way".

The characters, while not fully developed, are distinct and colorful. But it's the jittery saber-toothed squirrel named Scrat (who eventually became the studio's mascot) who steals the show, as his various attempts to bury an acorn set off a chain of events that set our trio on their journey. And it was this reverence and sincerity that made it a hit (not to mention a favorite in my family's household)--and was mostly missing from the countless sequels that followed in this franchise, as visually eye-popping and -impressive as they were. (They did get weirder and weirder as they went along, in all fairness.) 

Like other companies, Blue Sky has had their share of forgettable features (i.e., 2005's Robots, 2013's Epic), despite their photo-realistic merits. They have also delivered some exceptional and visceral gems, like 2015's The Peanuts Movie (an adaptation that would make Charlie Brown creator Charles Schultz proud), 2017's Ferdinand (which recalled the Golden Age of animation from the Thirties and Fourties), and 2019's Spies in Disguise (which took the ridiculous premise of a spy-turned-pigeon and injected it with creative and clever hysteria and action). In addition, Blue Sky should be credited for proving that CGI is perhaps the best medium for adapting the works of Dr. Seuss (i.e., 2008's Horton Hears a Who!). 

(L-r) Robots, Horton Hears a Who, Ice Age, Rio, Epic, and The Peanuts Movie

It'll be a pity to not see anymore feature films from this studio, although an Ice Age spinoff series is in the works for Disney+. For now, expect some scattered clouds but nostalgic memories. 

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

REVIEW: The Snyder Cut Is Released or, "Zack Snyder's Justice League" and About Time

ABOUT TIME 
Whether slow or fast, time sure has a unique effect on everything. Given the changes in media, artistically and socially, not to mention exponential trends over the last two decades in box-office hits playing in countless movie theaters around the world (and, of course, certainly streaming services within the last half-decade), time is the one thing that tests the endurance of stories and characters, and how they’re interpreted. Plus, if you’ve seen enough movies like I have (not to brag), you’ll easily know the difference between art and commerce. In layman’s terms, “studio interference” vs. “artistic integrity.” 

In the case of the DC Extended Universe (the WarnerMedia-owned label responsible for introducing the postmodern world to Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and so many other superheroes), it started in 2013 with a gritty origin story of the “faster-than-a-speeding-bullet” Man of Steel (MoS), helmed by director Zack Snyder (who previously brought the striking-yet-violent graphic novels 300 and Watchmen to the screen). A counter to the more colorful and popcorn-munching adventures of Marvel’s Avengers team, Snyder’s grimdark revamp polarized many viewers with its more grounded and uber-serious tone, and very little joy. His direct followup in 2016, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (BvS), continued this trend and became a critical failure, beginning a poor streak for a cinematic franchise that introduced and/or reimagined various DC heroes and villains in a similar fashion (Suicide Squad, anyone?). 

Things did start looking up for DC with the release of Patty Jenkins’ surprisingly-great Wonder Woman in 2017. Prior to that film’s release, Snyder and his team reportedly took the critical and fan reactions to BvS in stride, and, from there, aimed for a more optimistic and hopeful (but still grounded) story with the highly-anticipated team up of Batman and Wonder Woman with the Flash, Aquaman, and Cyborg, in Justice League (JL). The crew spent several months filming in 2016 and were in the early stages of the movie’s post-production, until an unexpected tragedy in Snyder’s family caused the filmmaker to step away (one of his children had committed suicide). 

In the meantime, WB brought in Marvel and TV veteran Joss Whedon to direct additional scenes for JL, based on his success with the first two Avengers movies (2012’s The Avengers and 2015’s Avengers: Age of Ultron). Long story short, WB’s promise that the “finished film” (which was released on November 17th, 2017) would keep in step with Snyder’s original vision was quickly blown out of proportion, with sharp criticisms towards the “theatrical” version’s cheesy visual effects (least of all, Henry Cavill’s digitally-erased mustache, a holdover from his role in 2018’s Mission: Impossible--Fallout), its cardboard and bland design of the villainous Steppenwolf, and for reducing its titular heroes to campy, quippy, and/or exploited. Wonder Woman, for one, was little more than an objectified mother figure, contrary to her more heroic and sincere character in her solo feature debut. Cyborg, Aquaman and the Flash, on the other hand, lost a lot of their respective backstories (and we mean a lot). 

Needless to say, countless fans and the generally public figured something was off, and was most certainly not in line with what Snyder had intended. What immediately followed was an unprecedented marketing campaign demanding that WB release the director’s true cut of the film, ranging from Time Square billboards to a plane flying over San Diego ComiCon, to fundraisers and awareness for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (a cause very dear to the Snyder family). Hence, the now-iconic hashtag, #ReleasetheSnyderCut. 


Then, on May 20, 2020, during a “watch party” for MoS on the social media platform Vero (a similar event for the “Ultimate Edition” of BvS was held one month prior), Snyder made it official: after nearly two-and-a-half years of demand and fundraising, his long-awaited cut of JL was happening, and would be released on the newly-formed HBO Max streaming service. And to think this announcement came almost two months after Screen Junkies posted an “Honest Trailer” YouTube video as an April Fool’s Day joke. Go figure. 

DOUBLE TAKE AND BEYOND or, “SHALL WE?”
To paraphrase Ace Ventura, history has certainly shown us that even the most respected and intuitive film critics and movie-goers can be wrong from time to time. (And that can go both ways, whether a film was initially poorly-received or overly well-received.) This analogy applies particularly to now-revered movies that got a bad wrap (or were simply misunderstood) when they were first released. Walt Disney’s Fantasia. Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner. And now, Zack Snyder may be emerging as the filmmaker of his generation to fit that same bill. 

Perhaps no director since Kubrick has had, to an extent, such a reexamination of his body of work in recent years--at least from a devoted fanbase. This can be traced back to November of 2017, when the so-called “theatrical cut” of JL was both critically and commercially savaged. (This criticism even led yours truly to take another look at BvS.) I’ve been following the DCEU since 2016, when the highly-divisive BvS made a huge impact in the industry. And make no mistake, it is a polarizing film. Even so, it was the first time, as a “critic” and movie-goer, that I began to understand the importance of artistic integrity, for better or worse. 

Snyder had released “director’s cuts” for four of his films before, including Dawn of the Dead (2004), Watchmen (2009), Sucker Punch (2011), and BvS. In years past, various director’s have done the same; the “director’s cut” is usually released a few months after the “theatrical” version, which can, in some cases, improve the overall experience (or just try a viewer’s patience), transforming a film into a more-realized story with plot holes filled in and character arcs deepened. 


Zack Snyder behind the scenes of Justice League,
with Ray Fisher (top) and Ezra Miller (bottom)

Rare is the case where removal of “studio input” improves the overall film. Take Blade Runner, for example. When it was first released in 1982, Warner Bros insisted that a voiceover narration from star Harrison Ford would explain the plot of a detective searching for android criminals in a futuristic Los Angeles more clearly (a note that, along with a forced “happy ending,” Ford and director Ridley Scott both hated). For a “director’s cut,” released ten years later, Scott removed the voice over and kept a more ambiguous and challenging ending, and the film was thoroughly reexamined and better received. This overall reception would reach its apex fifteen years later, with a 2007 “Final Cut,” approved by Scott as the definitive edition

Or how about the original Superman franchise from the late-Seventies and early-Eighties. Believe it or not, director Richard Donner (the man behind the 1978 landmark film) shot the first and second installments back-to-back. But a clash between Donner and the film’s producers behind the scenes led to only 75 percent of the second movie being filmed, and Donner was eventually fired and replaced with director Richard Lester. The 1981 sequel, Superman II, while critically and commercially successful, differed in tone to what Donner had established. Then, in the early 2000s, nearly two decades later, a dedicated fanbase began demanding a director’s cut of Superman II, based on footage seen as special features on laserdiscs and VHS tapes. And in 2006, Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut was released. 

On March 18th, 2021, Zack Snyder’s Justice League was released as a four-hour, feature-length epic, expanding (and restoring dignity to) various character arcs and keeping in step with the world and tone established in MoS and BvS. (Sounds like George Lucas’s “Special Editions” of Star Wars from the late-Nineties, right? Well, not exactly.) Given the current state of global affairs, what with racism, violence, and a pandemic, this film’s themes couldn’t be more timely or empowering. 

A LEAGUE OF ITS OWN 
After watching the long-awaited Snyder Cut on HBO Max during its premiere week, I forced myself to go back and watch the 2017 JL (or, "Joss-tice League," as some have dubbed it) to compare the two, and to fully recollect and observe what made this superhero epic go from a highly-anticipated blockbuster to just another mediocre and forgettable comic-book movie at first. Even though most of the 2017 movie had new footage (and highly-altered and/or re-edited material), the fact that it still bears Snyder’s name as the “director” is salt in an open wound. Those who’ve been following the former music video and commercial auteur’s career will know he’s not one for conventionalism. To be fair, Snyder’s films have problems; violence and sexuality among others. But a lack of sincerity isn’t one of them. 

Things that are off right away in Whedon’s version include Danny Elfman’s replacing score (more of a retro hodgepodge of past character themes), an opening video stream with Cavill’s now-infamous CGI upper lip, and high lighting and color tones throughout (ditto some obvious blue screen imagery, recalling past failed comic-book adaptations like Spider-Man 3 [2007] and Superman IV: The Quest for Peace [1987]). I can’t help but recall another film that had a similar, downright butchered, overhaul--at least in its North American distribution in the mid-Eighties: Hayao Miyazaki’s animated masterpiece from 1984, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, re-edited as a 90-minute version under the title Warriors of the Wind

Steppenwolf: 2017 vs. 2021

Getting back to "Joss-tice League," it seems they wanted to play off the success of Wonder Woman, let alone the Marvel Cinematic Universe, which is apparent from this version’s opening “video blog,” rooftop fight, and credits set against a farmer’s market in slow-motion, followed by a homeless man holding an “I Tried” sign. The same goes for new scenes at the Daily Planet with Lois Lane and Martha Kent, Bruce Wayne and Diana Prince discussing Steppenwolf’s backstory involving the Mother Boxes, Barry’s “brunch” monologue and reluctant characterization, a subplot involving a Russian family, a mid-credits scene where the Flash and Superman race each other, and an orange color scheme replacing Snyder’s blue backdrop during the film’s climactic battle. 

It’s funny, because I actually believed some of these elements were Synder’s ideas. The White Stripes’ “Icky Thump” and Gary Clark, Jr.’s rendition of “Come Together” (both of which ended up in the 2017 cut) were featured in the early trailers before Snyder’s departure, after all. And while only a few brief lines work to some degree (i.e., Aquaman’s “He’s not alright,” Flash’s “Pet Cemetery”), they collectively count for cheap laughs. Perhaps it’s fitting that Diana’s “I work with children” sigh applies here. 

Synder has reportedly never seen the “theatrical cut,” but he estimates that only 25 percent of his footage ended up in that movie, based on what close friends have told him. From my recent viewing and analysis, he’s not far off. Because that 2017 version was a real stinker, maybe even more than Suicide Squad

In his recent book, “Release the Snyder Cut: The Crazy True Story Behind the Fight That Saved Zack Snyder’s Justice League,” author Sean O’Connell talks about Warner Bros and DC following in Marvel’s footsteps, and how one Snyder/DC fan considered that approach to be “unwise”. Another fan, however, used a more applicable (if candid) metaphor. Said fan, Justin M. Lesniewski, described it this way: 

There’s nothing wrong with McDonald’s . . . It’s a certain type of product. It’s mass produced to sell to as many people as possible, and high-quality culinary art is not a primary value for the company. You know what you’re getting, and it can be enjoyable every once in a while. However, a steady diet of it will kill you. 

Adds O’Connell, “Extending the metaphor, Lesniewski posits that food is fuel for the body, but art is fuel for the soul. And Zack Snyder, in Lesniewski’s opinion, makes art.” 

Fan Jack Ferrelly agrees, “All forms of media must evolve to stay relevant and to do better, whether that involves modernizing mythology or holding a mirror to society and politics.” Remember that scene in Unbreakable, where Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson meet for the first time, in the art gallery? I rest my case. 

Ben Affleck in Zack Snyder's Justice League

Fan Dallin Hancock believes that Snyder’s films “transcend the medium of entertainment to depict these dark, cruel, and violent worlds, and [Snyder] insist[s] that even in such worlds, goodness and beauty and sacrificial love can still exist and are even more powerful than the darkness itself.” 

Many other fans, along with the aforementioned fans quoted in O’Connell’s book, claimed that Snyder’s films made them appreciate cinema as an art form, including transcending genres and character types. Perhaps no fan put such film theory into perspective quit like one Michael Schinke: 

I can account for my life as a serious movie fan as being clearly bisected into pre- and post-Batman v Superman periods. Before BvS, I was content to let movies simply pass before me as a way to occupy time, and I didn’t engage in any conversations deeper than expressions like, ‘That was cool.’ But when the intellectual s--t hit the critical fan following BvS’s release, along with the re-agitation of the vitriol against Man of Steel, I felt like I had to evaluate my film consciousness in an extreme way to understand why the supposedly obvious problems didn’t seem to irk me as they did others. I found myself reading about film theory, researching cinematography and editing, gobbling up articles about storytelling and character arc and story craft. . . . I will never not be grateful for the opportunity those movies helped me make

Reading this, I couldn’t help but recall (and be grateful for) how I looked at films differently as a college student in my Intro to Film class in 2007, and since 2009 and beyond, when I really started to take discernment and examination of film seriously. The same applies to the purpose of my blog, Film Freeq; ditto writing with a purpose (and for the right reasons) as opposed to writing for the sake of it.

“WE LIVE IN A SOCIETY . . .” 
Cinematic universes are commonplace nowadays, generally with stories centered around characters whose origins trace back to comic books of the early- to mid-20th Century. The most well-known and financially successful company has, no doubt, been Marvel, whose ongoing cinematic “phases” have introduced postmodern audiences to the likes of Iron Man and Captain America, as well as more obscure entities like the Guardians of the Galaxy and Doctor Strange. 

Even for all of its massive success, popcorn thrills, and engrossing storytelling, the MCU, as a whole, seems to have followed a specific formula that tends to be more passive than challenging. Granted, they have branched out with rare genre-bending entries (both under and outside of the Disney label) like Deadpool, Logan, and Black Panther. Even the last two Avengers movies (2018’s Infinity War and 2019’s Endgame) undeniably kept the cinema-going experience alive in spades. But risk seems to be scarce here. And that’s where the DCEU comes in. 

Jared Leto in Zack Snyder's Justice League

I have written in the past about what makes DC challenging. At the same time, while Marvel characters represent more modern sensibilities, DC characters, by comparison, have a more mythological, almost ancient, vibe to them. One of Zack Snyder’s common traits, in fact, is mythological subtext, which can be seen in the Spartan soldiers in 300 (2007), for example. On the heels of Christopher Nolan’s successful Batman trilogy at the turn of the 2010s, Snyder and company (with Nolan’s support) applied that same aesthetic to the Superman mythos. And the result seemed to come out of nowhere, equally enthralling and dividing viewers. While many praised Man of Steel’s visual and gritty aesthetic, others were caught off guard by it. Even more so with the subsequent BvS, which introduced an older Bruce Wayne into the world that Superman was now a part of, as if starting from scratch. The response was polarizing, enabling WB to rethink their cinematic universe strategy. 

In recent years, the response is still divided, but the passing of time, again, has provided a better understanding of what Snyder and company were attempting to do. If anything, BvS was not a passive blockbuster entertainment, but rather a work of art that was challenging, for better and for worse. Much can be learned from it both sides. And Snyder’s influence has remained present throughout the DCEU, especially in standalone features with Wonder Woman and Aquaman, respectively. 

Whether you think his films are brilliant or sluggish, you can’t deny that Zack Snyder challenges our perceptions of what a superhero/comic book movie can be. Seeing the world as it is and not sugarcoating it, but still hoping for what it can be, almost like Field of Dreams. MoS had the elder Jonathan Kent foreshadowing his adopted son Clark’s abilities and how they would impact peoples’ perceptions on earth. “[My father] was convinced that I had to wait," declared Clark, "That the world was not ready. What do you think?” Likewise, were audiences ready for these kinds of stories? Maybe yes, maybe no. 

In many ways, MoS and especially BvS were ahead of their time, as was 2017’s Wonder Woman (both cinematically and aesthetically). BvS had an interesting, if strange, way of mirroring audiences’ and critics’ perceptions of Snyder as a filmmaker (“He is not our enemy”). It also has grey lines between fantasy and reality, as well as characters falling victim to the lies of the world. The same goes for what the world can do to “inspirations,” to “heroes,” to mythological figures who are deeper than they seem, and how these figures remember who they really are when all is said and done. If anything, they’re interpretations. But they’re not the only ones. 

Zack Snyder's Justice League

“THEY SAID THE AGE OF HEROES WOULD NEVER COME AGAIN”  
Watching the appropriately-named Zack Snyder’s Justice League (I’ve seen it three times as of this writing), I marveled (so to speak) at the never-before-seen footage of its titular characters and their respective arcs, including citizens of Aquaman/Arthur Curry’s underwater kingdom of Atlantis; Wonder Woman/Diana Prince’s fearless island of Themyscira; and a deeper backstory of the defenders of Earth,” the “Mother Boxes,” and a much more intimidating Steppenwolf along with the big bad Darkseid. There’s even a completely revamped take on Jared Leto’s previously-criticized interpretation of the Joker (from 2016’s Suicide Squad) in one of the film’s central moments (four minutes of new footage, shot in 2020, expanding the “Knightmare” sequence from BvS). The film really takes its time and adds weight and ethereal emotion, and gives each character their moment(s) to shine, individually and collectively. Whereas Whedon’s version was conventional and studio-driven, Synder’s version is much more genuine. (And yes, the whole mustache fiasco is out, while black suit Superman is in) It really shows. It’s also fulfilling, in many ways, to see what was promised in initial teaser trailers released in 2016 and 2017, respectively. Talk about a long time coming. 

There’s also more action and scope, in a full 4:3 IMAX frame rate (a rarity for now-standard widescreen televisions and movie screens). At least two versions of this cut are now available on HBO Max, including the full color version, and an edition in black-and-white titled “Justice Is Grey” (which I’ll mention in a bit). As far as plans for theatrical screenings? Some exclusive engagements are being considered, but I do really hope a few local theaters in my area will hold exclusive showings. They deserve to, especially for the IMAX experience. 

More importantly, Zack Snyder’s Justice League is consistent with the world established since MoS and, again, turns what was once a mediocre and forgettable movie into a great one, complete with Snyder’s trademark slow-motion shots and Junkie XL’s incredible score (the guitar riffs during the team’s first battle knocked my socks off). Although, the movie did gain an R-rating for its violence (various characters get graphically dismembered during key battle sequences) and some unnecessary language choices (at least three f-words pop up during the four-hour runtime, including one from Batman himself.) Also be prepared for some massive cliffhangers, some bits that could’ve been shortened or left on the cutting room floor (a la Francis Ford Coppola’s “Redux” version of Apocalypse Now), and a few challenging themes that test these characters and where they could potentially go from here. (Snyder reportedly had two more films in mind after this one.) Even so, the scope and attention-to-detail is massively impressive, and the more-fully-realized characters are a great showcase for onscreen representation. 

It’s worth noting that the aforementioned “Justice Is Grey” edition looks great, joining the likes of other B&W versions of recent blockbusters like Mad Max: Fury Road and Logan. As seen on Snyder’s Vero account, this is his preferred version of the film, 1) because that’s the way he’s been marketing it, and 2) because that’s the version he reportedly lived with for as long as he was off the original film’s post-production, and as long as the #ReleasetheSnyderCut movement has been a thing. It amazes me how much footage they were able to get in 2016. The B&W photography gives the film a memorial look, with real attention to characters (including a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it cameo from Snyder himself, during an opening scene in a coffee shop). 

Ray Fisher in Zack Snyder's Justice League

SECOND CHANCES
Now that the Snyder Cut is out (and Snyder’s forthcoming Netflix film, the zombie heist thriller Army of the Dead, out next month), fans and DC/Snyder devotees have transitioned to a new phase: for Snyder to complete the five-film arc he had initially envisioned. Hence, a new hashtag, #RestoretheSnyderVerse. 

Only time will tell. Then again, whoever thought we’d actually get the Snyder Cut for real? It was the fans, their support, and their tenacity that made all of this possible to begin with. Actor Ray Fisher, perhaps, said it best during a livestream panel at the 2020 “Justice Con”: 

There’s no way any of this would have happened without the support of the fans, without the support of the individuals involved. There’s just no way. I mean, this is history. It’s monumental. There’s nothing that’s ever been done like this before. So for me, it’s like . . . this is something I’ve said over the years. If this is the only experience I’m blessed to have in this business, I’m fine with that. This is going down in cinematic history, for a lot of different reasons. 

Like I said, time has a unique effect on everything. It sure does on the Flash.