Will it be good?
26%
>>84638850
Yes, though I'm wary of Momoa's Aquaman, but fuck it, he's a cool dude IRL maybe he'll replace the Rock as the true Samoan celebrity.
>>84638850
>bleak washed out snyder visual aesthetic
>nearly every line of dialogue in the trailers sounds like it was ripped straight from whedon's notebook
it's going to be garbage.
>>84638850
Why does Wonder Woman look so frail?
The only bad movie they made was suicide squad so it has good chances of being good
It's gonna suck famsu.
>no Martian Manhun-
DROPPED
>>84638850
I have faith.
>>84638976
Because she's a woman
>>84638850
Was hyped until Joss Whedon took over.
Now I'm meeeh.
>>84639227
His 6 year long gambit to make sure Hal Jordan is THE Green Lantern in the DCEU is about to pay off and all it cost was some salty non-comic readers who watched half a JLU episode and think John Stewart IS DA BES EVAH and convinced themselves Martian Manhunter is "cool"
#GreenLanternnotGreenMartian
>>84639331
I wouldn't let that discourage me. Whedon is a lot of things, but one thing he's always had a good grasp of is hope and optimism. If they're using him the way I think they are, it's as a contrast to Snyder's tone. I love Snyder, completely and unashamedly, but I'm also aware that his depictions of hope and optimism can come off as a bit grim and pyrrhic to a lot of people.
In other words, their contrasting tones might just perfectly convey visually what's been going on in the myth arc and metanarrative since Man of Steel:
>Superman arrives in what appears to be a Nolan-esque "Batworld."
>He's like a bull in a China shop.
>The world, realistically, doesn't just take the existence of the Superman in stride
>The world slowly begins revealing that it's not a "real" world, but one where myth and magic were not only once real, but also the norm.
>That slumbering magic awakens thanks to the coming of the Superman, the superhero, the modern day incarnation of that "mythic," magical past.
>The Heroic Age arrives in truth with Superman's return and he brings the sun back with him.
It's a brilliant narrative that pays tribute to all the best things that comics are and can be, arguably what they *should* be.