Originally Posted by lawrenceRaider:
Never sat through it once. Same with Titanic.
Titanic was a joint venture between Sony and Paramount Pictures, with Paramount owning the music publishing rights.
Every freaking week for nearly 3 years, I had the CEO of Paramount calling me at 8am Monday and Friday mornings, wanting to know how much revenue had been collected from the various publishing sources because it was one of the biggest soundtracks of all time and they wanted to gloat.
It was so incredibly irritating that I never once saw the movie and haven't to this day.
Every time I even hear a reference to Titantic, I throw up in my mouth just a little bit. [Reply]
Originally Posted by lawrenceRaider:
Never sat through it once. Same with Titanic.
Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud: Titanic was a joint venture between Sony and Paramount Pictures, with Paramount owning the music publishing rights.
Every freaking week for nearly 3 years, I had the CEO of Paramount calling me at 8am Monday and Friday mornings, wanting to know how much revenue had been collected from the various publishing sources because it was one of the biggest soundtracks of all time and they wanted to gloat.
It was so incredibly irritating that I never once saw the movie and haven't to this day.
Every time I even hear a reference to Titantic, I throw up in my mouth just a little bit.
Originally Posted by The Franchise:
So I’ve seen reports that this movie is 4 hours.
Good lord.
It was originally announced as a 4 hour, 4 episode series but that changed in the past few months to a 4 hour long movie.
Considering it took me about 5 nights to get through Batman v Superman The Director's Cut, it might take two weeks to get through this four hour movie. [Reply]
Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud:
It was originally announced as a 4 hour, 4 episode series but that changed in the past few months to a 4 hour long movie.
Considering it took me about 5 nights to get through Batman v Superman The Director's Cut, it might take two weeks to get through this four hour movie.
Nuts. WB so desperate for new subscribers they gave Snyder Carte Blanche [Reply]
From my understanding, Snyder shot 5 hours of footage and had a rough cut of approximately 3.5 hours before leaving the project.
Whedon shot 88 pages (essentially 88 minutes) and used some existing footage to create his version of the film, which Warner Brothers execs thought "sucked" and that it was a "piece of shit" before it was released.
Snyder isn't being paid a dime for this version and what will be released is his vision and his vision only but yeah, 4 hours is a huge ask.
Originally Posted by DaneMcCloud:
From my understanding, Snyder shot 5 hours of footage and had a rough cut of approximately 3.5 hours before leaving the project.
Whedon shot 88 pages (essentially 88 minutes) and used some existing footage to create his version of the film, which Warner Brothers execs thought "sucked" and that it was a "piece of shit" before it was released.
Snyder isn't being paid a dime for this version and what will be released is his vision and his vision only but yeah, 4 hours is a huge ask.
I hope there's an Intermission point.
What I don’t understand is if Snyder already had a cut prior to leaving, then why was Whedon hired? Did The execs not like his cut? Did they hire Whedon to ‘Avenger it up’? Like punching up the one liners and making it more funny? [Reply]
Originally Posted by Deberg_1990:
What I don’t understand is if Snyder already had a cut prior to leaving, then why was Whedon hired? Did The execs not like his cut? Did they hire Whedon to ‘Avenger it up’? Like punching up the one liners and making it more funny?
He had an edit with no VFX, no score, no foley, no sound design and no ADR.
It was essentially a skeleton of a movie.
Warner Brothers allowed Whedon anything he wanted to complete the film, which is why the Snyder version should be very, very different from the film released in 2017. [Reply]
J.J. Abrams is producing the feature, which, according to sources, is being set up as a Black Superman story.
Acclaimed essayist and novelist Ta-Nehisi Coates has been hired to pen the script for a feature reboot of Superman that will be produced by J.J. Abrams.
“To be invited into the DC Extended Universe by Warner Bros., DC Films and Bad Robot is an honor,” said Coates in a statement to Shadow and Act, a website dedicated to the African diaspora in the arts. “I look forward to meaningfully adding to the legacy of America's most iconic mythic hero."
“There is a new, powerful and moving Superman story yet to be told. We couldn’t be more thrilled to be working with the brilliant Mr. Coates to help bring that story to the big screen, and we’re beyond thankful to the team at Warner Bros. for the opportunity,” said J.J. Abrams in the statement to S&A.
According to sources, the project is being set up as a Black Superman story. This is something that the studio has been trying to wrap its head around for months, if not a year or two. Michael B. Jordan tried to develop a Black Superman project when he first arrived at the studio with his deal in 2019, but that did not go very far at the time, according to sources. It is possible that the studio could return to him to star down the line.
Coates is a superstar author whose books include We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy, The Beautiful Struggle, The Water Dancer and Between the World and Me, the latter of which was adapted by HBO. In the comic book space, he has worked on Captain America and Black Panther, with Disney’s Bob Iger crediting his influential run on the latter in the decision to greenlight the groundbreaking film starring Chadwick Boseman.
Superman first flew onto the big screen with filmmaker Richard Donner’s 1978 film Superman: The Motion Picture, which starred Christopher Reeve. The actor appeared in three subsequent films, with Brandon Routh donning the cape for 2006's Superman Returns and Henry Cavill stepping into the role for 2013's Man of Steel, 2016's Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and 2017's Justice League.
This is the first DC feature known to be in development under Abrams' expansive WarnerMedia deal, but he has several DC series in the works for streaming service HBO Max, including Justice League Dark and Constantine. [Reply]