Category Archives: DC Comics movies

‘Avengers’ animatics, ‘Man of Steel 2’ fan teaser trailer

man of steel 2 teaser trailer logo

Ah, what might have been.

And what might still be.

Part of the fun of being a movie fan is thinking about what our favorite movies might have looked life if things had gone in a slightly different direction. Not to mention what we wish future movies might look like. So there’s a lot of talk online about a look back at an almost-was and a look ahead at what-might be.

First, some video animatics – animated storyboards, basically – that were apparently produced for “The Avengers” show how some scenes might have come out differently if they’d been filmed as originally considered.

avengers animatic w wasp

Among the big changes: Hawkeye in a more traditional costume and the presence of Janet Van Dyne as the Wasp, one of the founding members of the Avengers in comics who hasn’t made her way into the Marvel movie universe yet.

The drawings in the animatics are credited to Federico D’Alessandro and, if accurate, show not only the Wasp in an early version of the story but a scene in which Tony Stark’s Jarvis is trash-talking the other Avengers behind their backs. Some online commenters have said it’s an early indication confirming rumors Jarvis might turn into artificial intelligence villain Ultron in time for “Avengers 2,” but I think it’s more likely it’s Loki was just yanking Iron Man’s chain.

affleck man of steel 2 teaser trailer

The other fun stuff is a fan-made teaser trailer for “Man of Steel 2.” Using nicely edited clips from other movies and the TV series “Breaking Bad,” the fan trailer not only introduces Bruce Wayne (as played by Ben Affleck) and Superman/Clark Kent (Henry Cavill) to each other but shows us Superman’s Big Bad, Lex Luthor, in the person of “Breaking Bad” actor Brian Cranston.

It’s a pretty fun trailer. Cranston is an obvious choice for Luthor, of course – maybe too obvious – but the fake trailer’s creator should get hired cutting previews.

 

What we can expect from Ben Affleck’s Batman

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Okay, so Warner Bros. announced on Thursday that Ben Affleck, star of “Daredevil” a decade ago and director of Oscar-worthy “Argo,” would play Batman in the “Man of Steel” sequel for director Zach Snyder and opposite Henry Cavil as Superman.

And yes, there was a lot of online freaking out about Affleck being cast.

I’m old enough to remember the doubters – I was one of them – when Michael Keaton was cast to play Bruce Wayne and Batman for Tim Burton’s 1989 “Batman.”

He’s a comic actor, they said about Keaton. His chin isn’t superheroic enough. This isn’t even a step up in casting from the campy 1960s TV series.

But Keaton worked, largely because Burton’s Batman was something we hadn’t seen very often: A serious superhero flick. I’d submit Keaton was the best part about that movie, far outshining Jack Nicholson as the Joker.

So what’s the knock on Affleck?

Um .. he’s made some movies that some people didn’t like?

ben affleck daredevil

Okay, Twitter, take a deep breath. Let’s move on to what happens next, namely, what can we expect from “Superman vs. Batman” or whatever the “Man of Steel” sequel will be called, particularly with Affleck’s casting?

Batman is going to take the lead in the sequel. Depending on how long the movie takes place after “Man of Steel,” Superman still might be a green superhero. That means when the two icons meet, it’s likely Batman will have years of experience on Superman. Sure, Superman has super powers. But we’ve seen before that Batman is more than a match for Superman. Kryptonite shard, anyone?

They’ll clash at first. Besides this comic book trope being a standard development – remember the various Avengers fighting before they teamed up on Loki? – I’m betting Bruce Wayne and Lex Luthor will be in some kind of deal but Batman will be investigating Luthor. Superman might get involved when he sees Batman hanging around (literally) Metropolis and confronts him. Hey, I’m pretty sure this worked for DC animated universe stories.

They’re definitely building to a “Justice League” movie. I expect Batman to be the experienced leader when they make the “JL” movie and it’s likely Affleck will be in the cowl. Warner Bros. wouldn’t announce a new Batman for just one movie.

There’s a Robin in the future. You don’t have an experienced batman without a sidekick. Maybe Joseph Gordon-Levitt?

Snyder and Warner Bros. are casting older but not too old. Sure, Cavill is several years younger, but Affleck is just 41. Robert Downey Jr. was 43 for the first “Iron Man” movie.

ben affleck as george reeves superman

It’ll be interesting to see how much influence Frank Miller’s “Dark Knight” stories have on the movie, although there have been plenty of good stories of the two iconic heroes and their relationship.

‘Man of Steel’ easter eggs

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Director Zack Snyder and producer Christopher Nolan made it clear from the beginning that they didn’t intend to make “Man of Steel” an easter-egg intensive movie experience. Unlike the Marvel cinematic empire, there’s been little effort on the part of Nolan/DC/Warner Bros. to tie their movie universe together, even with little references sprinkled through the movie.

Which is pretty inexplicable to me. It feels like a kind of snobbery about comic book movies from people who have made billions of dollars making comic book movies.

However: There are a few comic book and movie easter eggs in “Man of Steel,” although one of them might be coincidental.

Besides Lois Lane, Perry White, the Kents and the Els, another couple of characters from the comics make an appearance. Among the kids on a school bus that Clark saves in one of the Smallville flashbacks were characters representing Lana Lang and Pete Ross. The Pete character, young Clark’s best friend in the comics, pops up again later in the movie.

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Dr. Emil Hamilton: Played by Robert Schiff, best known as Toby from “The West Wing.” the scientist working with the military in the movie, discovering and dealing with not only the appearance of Zod but Kal-El as well, Hamilton is a character familiar to comic readers and fans of the DC universe animated TV shows as well as “Smallville.” Hamilton, of DC fixture STAR Labs, was a recurring character in the animated “Superman” series as well as “Smallville.” In the former, he was a scientist so worried about super-powered humans that he worked with a group trying to keep tabs on and control the supers. In “Smallville,” he was a confidante of Clark and Chloe Sullivan.

alessandro juliani smallville

Speaking of which: Alessandro Juliani, the actor who played Hamilton in “Smallville” had a small role in “Man of Steel,” playing Officer Sekowsky. This is the one that was probably a coincidence. I can’t imagine Nolan and Snyder going to the “Smallville” well to cast their movie.

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Contrary to rumors, Lex Luthor doesn’t show up in the movie. But hints of Superman’s best known villain do. In the final battle in Metropolis between Zod and Superman, Zod throws Lexcorp gasoline tanker trucks at the Man of Steel and – although my eyes didn’t catch it, but photos appear online – the LexCorp building is glimpsed in Metropolis.

The hardest-to-spot easter egg might be an acknowledgement of Batman in “Man of Steel.” During their battle, Superman and Zod rocket into space. In their fight, they damage a satellite in orbit. The Wayne Enterprises logo is briefly visible on the side.

And we already knew Nolan thought Batman was out of this world.

‘Man of Steel’ spoiler-filled review

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I went into “Man of Steel” with low expectations, which might be the way to approach any superhero movie that isn’t a Marvel production or directed by Joss Whedon.

I was pleasantly surprised. I liked the movie. it’s better than “Superman Returns” from 2006. It’s leaps ahead of “Green Lantern” – although that’s the very definition of damning with faint praise – and I think I liked it maybe even better than Christopher Nolan’s Batman finale.

There’s no point in rehashing the plot. You know that director Zack Snyder and producer Nolan remade the Superman story with a darker, edgier feel.

So here’s some observations. And a big spoiler warning if you haven’t seen “Man of Steel” already.

I’m glad they didn’t go too edgy. Superman isn’t Batman. The movie strikes about the right tone, to me, of making Superman an outsider and Clark feeling like he has to keep a lid on his real self.

Part of that feeling was communicated by Kevin Costner’s Pa Kent. Costner is solid and affecting throughout the flashbacks. I do feel like the screenplay makes a mistake in one scene: After people start gossiping about Clark when the boy saves the other occupants of  a school bus that crashes into a river, Clark and Jonathan Kent have a conversation that they’ve plainly been expecting to have: What would happen when people find out that Clark is “special?” Young Clark asks, in effect, if he should have let the other kids die and his father says, in effect, “I don’t know. Maybe.” I don’t believe Pa Kent would have expressed that thought out loud even if he felt it because of his fear for his son’s secrets being exposed. It’s a false note, but maybe it’s instrumental in Clark’s later decision to come forward when Zod is threatening the Earth. In other words, even bad advice from Jonathan helped Clark make the right decision later.

I thought Henry Cavill and Amy Adams were fine as Clark/Superman and Lois and the supporting cast was good. I feel like the movie suffered, like all opening chapters do, from having to move characters around like chess pieces until they’re in place for the real climax of the movie – or for the sequel.

The climax of the showdown between Superman and Zod has been controversial. The idea that Superman would kill Zod is a hard thing for some people to take.

But my feeling about the climax is that Superman was justified in snapping Zod’s neck. Zod, desperate and bitter that his plan to recreate Krypton on Earth had failed, was lashing out, preparing to fry a family with his heat vision. Superman was grappling with him, trying to direct his gaze away from the family. He even begged him not to kill them. But Zod refuses and Superman kills him.

Short of Superman plucking Zod’s eyes out – and what an image that would have been in a comic book movie – I’m not sure there was another way.

Now considering the untold thousands of people who likely died in the movie thanks in great part to the battles between Superman and Zod in Smallville and Metropolis, Superman’s effort to save a small group of people might seem paltry. But while we have no idea how many people died when buildings were toppled and explosions were set off, we did see that family in harm’s way and saw how high the stakes were at that moment. Superman made a decision, and it was a painful one for him.

Much has been made about the wanton destruction caused by Superman and Zod’s battles and I have to say it all disturbed me too. I agree with critics who say Superman should have tried to take the fight to an area with fewer bystanders.

I can say that I didn’t feel, as acutely as some other critics did, the lack of compassion Superman showed for bystanders. I agree that he seemed to let anger toward Zod color his decisions in battle, undoubtedly causing more destruction and perhaps death than should have occurred. But there was a scene in which Superman catches a soldier falling from a helicopter and even asks if he is okay. I feel like another, similar scene might have addressed the “callous” accusations.

I thought the movie did a pretty good job with telling Superman’s story without a long retelling of his origin and Smallville years. Flashbacks to formative incidents in his life – the onset of extra senses like X-ray vision and a school bus rescue – were handled pretty well.

I still don’t get the scene, in flashback, when young Clark is playing among Martha Kent’s laundry, puts a red towel around his neck and stands, fists on hips, in a classic Superman pose. Did the pose, in Nolan’s world without heroes to emulate, just pop into Clark’s head? I think it’s an effort to trade on that iconic Superman image without a good explanation. It’s a mistake.

I don’t know if “Man of Steel” will be a success or lead to more DC movie adaptations. I’d like to see this world return and I’d be fine if Henry Cavill and Zack Snyder were part of it.

The movie revisionists: Everything you know is wrong

man of steel big

Think you know the story of Superman?

Well, maybe not.

When “Man of Steel” comes out June 14,  director Zack Snyder might have a few surprises even for longtime fans of the man of … er, steel.

Most of us don’t know what to expect from “Man of Steel” yet, but it’s certain that a few elements of the Superman mythos will be tweaked at the very least.

That’s not surprising, because most filmmakers like to bring something new to their versions of familiar stories. That’s why “The Amazing Spider-Man” retold the origin of the webslinger only about a decade after we saw it before and tried to infuse new elements – chiefly a mystery about Peter’s parents – into it.

It’s not just superhero stories that get revamped. When director John Carpenter made “The Thing” in 1982, he made the “walking alien carrot” much less of the traditional monster familiar from 1951’s “The Thing from Another World.” the first adaptation of John Campbell’s story. Carpenter made the alien menace a much more paranoia-inducing shapeshifter.

By the way, spoilers ahead for some current movies if you haven’t seen them.

Some fans of the “Iron Man” comics were irritated when this summer’s “Iron Man 3” made huge changes to the character of the Mandarin, the longtime antagonist of Tony Stark.

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The Mandarin went from an Asian menace armed with magic rings …

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To a figurehead, a stalking horse played by a down-at-the-heels British actor.

Sometimes it’s more than changing characters. Sometimes it’s all about changing the background of sets of characters.

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The classic 1982 “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” was a sequel to an episode of the original series and emphasized the bad blood and shared history of Khan, the genetically superior warrior, and Jim Kirk.

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In this summer’s “Star Trek Into Darkness,” however, there was no history between Kirk and Khan. And I think the movie suffered for that.

With “Man of Steel,” the rumors have been flying about changes Snyder and producer Christopher Nolan might have made.

Does Superman’s Kryptonian birth father, Jor-El, live? Or are the clips of Russell Crowe talking to Henry Cavill just indicative of an amazingly lifelike hologram?

Is Zod (Michael Shannon) sprung from the Phantom Zone or does he arrive in a space ship? Sure looks like a Kryptonian ship in the background to me.

We won’t know the answers for a few days. But we can already guess about fairly interesting cosmetic changes to two longtime characters from the “Superman” stories.

perry white and jimmy olsen

Daily Planet editor Perry White and cub reporter/photographer Jimmy Olsen have been staples of the comics for a half-century.

jenny olsen rebecca buller laurence fishburne

Snyder, interestingly, cast Laurence Fishburne, an African-American actor, to play White, who has traditionally been, well, white. I love Fishburne and I think this is a big win.

But it’s less clear who’s playing Jimmy Olsen in the movie. In fact, it’s becoming more clear that Jimmy Olsen isn’t in the movie. Actress Rebecca Buller seems to be playing Jenny Olsen.

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Traditional Jimmy.

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New Jenny.

I can live with that.

Hoping for the best from ‘Man of Steel’

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Superman is a test that many movie- and TV-makers don’t quite pass.

Created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster and continually published and re-printed since Action Comics No. 1 hit the stands in early 1938 – 75 years ago – Superman and his alter ego, Clark Kent, make up one of the most recognizable characters in all of popular culture.

So it’s not a surprise that DC Comics and Warner Brothers – frustrated in their efforts to create a big-screen presence since “Superman Returns” missed the mark several years ago – are trying again with “Man of Steel,” due in theaters June 14.

I’m still not sold that director Zack Snyder has the character right. But I was a little more convinced after the trailer for “Man of Steel” released a few days ago.

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That’s mostly because the trailer, at least, emphasizes the “outsider” status of the character.

Make no mistake, and I’ve said it here before: Superman is not a brooding character like Batman. He’s not driven by nightmares. He’s not wracked by guilt. If Snyder’s “Man of Steel” is marked by those characteristics, the movie will fail.

But he is, for all his optimism and courage and innate knowledge of right and wrong, an outsider.

The trailer seems to acknowledge this, portraying a Kal-El/Clark/Superman who, as a young man, is uncertain about what he should do with his life and afraid of how he will seem to the world around him.

As he grows up, he appears to wander far away from Smallville, even though he continues to use his powers for good, rescuing men in a fiery accident.

The trailer shows us a Lois Lane (Amy Adams) who has been seeking this man of mystery (Henry Cavill), and it is in Lois’ words that the movie might find the best definition of the character.

“How do you find someone who has spent a lifetime covering his tracks?” Lois asks. “For some, he was a guardian angel. For others, a ghost. He never quite fit in.”

Yes.

Superman is, even while he is the champion of his adopted world, an outsider. He’s the last of his kind – well, for the most part – and the first of a new kind on Earth. He feels an obligation to his new home even as he mourns the home he never knew.

Tellingly, Lois asks Superman – still unnamed to the world at large – about the “S” on his chest, and Superman tells her that the symbol stands for “hope” on his world.

Playfully, Lois notes that on this planet, it’s an “S” and begins to suggest it should stand for Superman before she is interrupted.

The trailer seems to capture the world of Superman. We can hope so, at least.

(I still don’t get the kid in the backyard with a makeshift cape on his shoulders. If that’s young Clark, it doesn’t make sense. Who is he imitating? I’m more convinced now than earlier that the boy isn’t Clark, but is a young boy play-acting as Superman after the character becomes known to the world. If so, it will be a lump-in-your-throat moment.)

Looking forward, with hope, to June 14.

Carmine Infantino RIP

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So sad to note, in the wake of the passing of Roger Ebert, the death at age 87 of classic comic book artist and editor Carmine Infantino.

As an artist from the 1940s on, Infantino left an indelible mark on comic books.

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If he did nothing else but create the Silver Age Flash in 1956 – the re-introduction of classic DC characters who would go on to spawn the modern age of comics – Infantino would be a legend.

He created, after all, that distinctive Barry Allen Flash outfit: Crimson with yellow boots and yellow lightning bolts. It is the uniform that survives, with small variations, to this day and is the Flash that several generations of comic book and animation – and maybe, one day, live-action movie – fans think of when they think of the character.

But Infantino also created or co-created other Silver Age characters like Barbara (Batgirl) Gordon and, for goodness’ sake, Flash’s Rogues Gallery, including Captain Cold and Gorilla Grodd.

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He even helped revamp Batman and Robin to make them relevant for the mid-1960s.

And as one of DC Comics’ top editors in the 1960s, he oversaw a massive overhaul of that comic book house.

For a lot of us who grew up reading comic books in the 1960s – even for those of us who more often sought out the irreverent pleasures of Marvel Comics than the childlike pleasures of DC – Infantino’s images and his many, many covers are what we think of when we think of comics.

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Carmine Infantino, you’ll be missed.