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Zack Snyder explains the end of that mysterious Justice League

Zack Snyder explains the end of that mysterious Justice League

The director's conclusion to #SnyderCut, it sets two movies and may never be made.

               
Zach Snyder explains the end of that mysterious Justice League




Zack Snyder plans to make more DC movies after the Justice League. However, after leaving the project under stress and pain, he calmly believed that he might never venture further into Snyder Firth.

He still has plans and now he can reveal what they are.

Snyder told Vanity Fair: "When I first made this movie, it was part of a five-part trilogy. His new version of Justice League debuted on HBO Max today. It's actually the middle part of the expected arc of the story, before Iron Man and Batman vs. Superman. "There are two more Justice League episodes to be filmed.

Snyder knew he was unlikely to tell these stories-but, as he pointed out: "I didn't expect that I would talk about the (restored) Justice League here, so never say forever.

He even hired legendary DC comics artist Jim Lee to help draw out the narrative that he hopes will one day be included in a book. Snyder said: "Jim Lee made some pictures of the whole thing for me, and the entire Pantheon was painted until the new Batman after Batman's death.

He hurriedly added: "Well, this is a spoiler

Batman Does What?

Yes: In Snyder's future unmade films, Ben Affleck's Batman will die. Before we get there, let's break down two deliberately puzzling sequences that appear in the middle and end of #SnyderCut.

If you want to keep this surprise, please read further.

The ending of #SnyderCut-Bruce Wayne's strange dream, as a prelude to Snyder's next two films-is the most recent work shot last fall.

Initially, the filmmakers said that Warner Bros. resisted this increase. "They don't want me to suggest more movies. They want me to solve it as much as possible," he said. "I thought,'Look, this is not a genre. Ending this story is not a comic book type, whether we have done [another] story or not.

Bruce Wayne had a similar doomsday dream in "Batman vs. Superman." In that one, a windbreaker hooded crusader wandered through the hell landscape surrounded by an insect-like parade, who formed an army of cosmic tyrants called darkness.

This devastating future shows what will happen if Darkseid’s forces win the conquest of the earth. They came here to look for something called the anti-life equation in DC legends-a mysterious "formula" hidden somewhere in our world, which empowers the dark to seize any sentient existence power, thereby eliminating the power of free will And allow him to rule the universe.

In "Batman v Superman", this "dream" happened when Bruce Wayne got an interview from Azra Miller's Flash, and he was using his ultra-high speed capabilities to issue a warning from the future: " Bruce, listen to me now! It's Louise! Louise Lane," he said. "She is the key.

Then he disappeared in Snyder's Justice League, and we get more hints about what this actually means.


What is the disturbing scene in the middle of the movie?

In simplified words, Flash is more than quick execution: his power breaks the laws of physics, bends time and space, and thus opens windows to the past and the future.

"As I approach the speed of light, crazy things happen in time," Miller's character said in #SnyderCut. Remember that line. It will become important in the future. The premonition that troubles Wayne seems to be a side effect of the interference caused by the flash.

In #SnyderCut, his abilities make Ray Fisher’s Cyborg experience a similar nightmare scene. Casual observers and die-hard Snyder fans may wonder what to do with it: a dead wonder woman with coins in her eyes, lying in the burning funeral furnace: Darkseid cruelly uses his own The three-pointed star stabbed the sailor of Jason Momoa’s Aquaman and at the same time launched a tortuous red "Omega beam" from his eyes to destroy the nearby Atlanteans, a force familiar to long-term DC readers.

Then, we saw Henry Cavill’s Superman, grieving on a charred corpse, and Darkseid approached him, putting a huge hand on his shoulder, almost comforting. The next shot swooped at low altitude over some outdoor rubble, including the corpse of a member of the Green Lantern Corps, who looked a lot like an alien character called Kilowog. (The late Michael Clark Duncan played him in the 2011 Ryan Reynolds movie, which is not part of the storyline.

In the background, Superman floats on a broken stone arch with the words "Justice League" engraved on it. His eyes are glowing red embers, similar to Darkseid's-which shows that he is being controlled by the villain through the anti-life equation. He holds Batman's cowhide like the head of a slain enemy

All of this is a prelude to the broader dream sequence at the end of #SnyderCut, but even after two scenes that require explanation.

End of decoding #SnyderCut

In fact, it should be the ending, plural, because there are quite a few people.

At the end of the movie, Harry Lennix appears as an alien observer. He is called the Martian Hunter. He descends from the sky and meets with the newly awakened Bruce Wayne. He congratulated Batman for uniting the heroes of the earth. Snyder said that initially, the Martian Hunter should be a different role.

Snyder said: "We shot a version of this scene with a green lantern, but the studio really fought with me and said, "We really don't want you to be a green lantern." "So I reached an agreement with them, and they Let me do this [instead].

Okay, but which green lantern does Snyder want to use? "This will be John Stewart," Snyder said. John Stewart (H) was the character who took over the Green Lantern in the 1970s and became the first black superhero in DC history. Reynolds's "Green Lantern" is another character named Hal Jordan.

Snyder expressed regret that the studio prevented him from bringing Stewart to the screen for the first time. "They thought,'We have John Stewart's plan, and we want to make our own announcement. So I said okay, I'll give it to you. Therefore, [Mars Stalker] is a compromise," he said.

Lennix previously appeared in "Batman vs. Superman and Iron Man" as the US military commander General Swanwick. In #SnyderCut, this military figure is revealed as a disguise for this powerful figure from a neighboring country. Snyder said: "The whole thing is that Swanwick has always been a Martian hunter. If the filmmaker is allowed to enter the Green Lantern for this comedy, Swanwick revealed that it will probably appear in his future Justice League story. One. 

There is a short scene before this reveals what feels like another Kodak: Jesse Eisenberg’s Lex Luther escapes from a mad asylum and comes into contact with Joe Manganello’s masked assassin death stroke, Who is the ongoing war against Batman. Eisenberg gave him a key message that Batman is Bruce Wayne's changing self.

As Manganello explained to Vanity Fair in detail, this scene was originally planned as a post-loan sequence, using "Death Stroke" as the key villain in Affleck's planned independent film. But even before the Justice League finished filming, when Affleck withdrew from the project, the Batman movie collapsed.

Now, it only serves to establish the final dream sequence, which shows that Death Stroke and Batman have formed an alliance in the apocalypse.

Bruce Wayne’s last dream, explained

Just before his close contact with the Martian Manhunter, this was Batman’s premonition experience:

Aquaman heroine Mera (Amber Hurd), Cyborg, Flash (worn in the same costume, he wore the appearance of his time travel Batman v Superman) and Death Stroke (now with the White Mohawk) through the futuristic The Fallen World and another unexpected ally: Jared Leto's Joker. Affleck's Batman is still alive at this point. Cyborg warned that if their existence was discovered, an undefined "he" would come to them.

But who is "him"-Darkseid or Superman? "Let the bastard come," Mera said, clamping the bottom of her trident to the concrete. "I will pierce his heart because of what he did to Arthur"-aka Sailor.

It was then that Leto's clowns began to talk about how Fuyu distorted and weakened Batman. He mentioned not only the death of Batman's parents, but also Wayne's "adopted son". That was Robin, and he mentioned the death of the Joker in "Batman vs. Superman."

Snyder said: "The coolest thing about this scene is that the Joker talks directly to Batman about Batman." This is the Joker analyzing Batman, who he is and what he is. This is what I feel like the DC Universe fans deserve. In other words, Jared Leto the Joker and Ben Affleck Batman, they never really come together.

The Joker asked Batman: "How many dead eyes can you see before you die?

When Batman threatened to advance towards him, the Joker added: "You need me... that you undo the world, you created her to die.

                                                                 

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