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Published 15:59 15 Mar 2021 GMT
Updated 09:10 16 Mar 2021 GMT
In fact, two of the worst parts of Whedon's cut - that weird, out-of-nowhere Parademon attack on Batman at the very beginning, and the trapped Russian family in the end - are both missing from Snyder's version, while most of the smaller highlights (nearly all of them involving The Flash) remain.
Which isn't to say that, outside of Snyder's addiction to excess, that is cut is without flaw; the opening Superman death screams scene actually goes on for so long that it becomes funny, there are not one but TWO songs by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds used over slow-motion scenes of intended poignancy, and his version of Cyborg is such a misery-guts fun-drain that you can almost feel him zap the energy from the movie itself. He is basically the superhero equivalent of a teenager who keeps screaming "I never ASKED to be BORN!"
But, like we said, about two-and-a-half-hours in, 30 full minutes after Whedon's cut would have been over, something in Justice League clicks. Maybe it is the fact that the ending seems to be in sight, or that one of the movie's bigger questions is finally answered, or we discover that Nazis are somehow related to the plot all along (yep, seriously), but the momentum starts to build. And while we can't say for sure that it wasn't some form of Stockholm Syndrome setting in, it does actually start to get kinda fun.
The movie is so insanely bloated that we can't even get into the subplots featuring huge stars like Amy Adams, Diane Lane, J.K. Simmons, Amber Heard, Jeremy Irons, Connie Nielsen, Joe Morton, Willem Dafoe, Billy Crudup, Harry Lennix and a few more we won't mention but you're probably already very aware of. They're all here, they've all got entire scenes to themselves, doing important plot and character work, but in terms of a four-hour movie, they feel like tiny cameos.
The movie itself is broken down into chapters, which would've been the obvious breaks for when Warners were originally intending on releasing the project as a four-episode mini-series and it is that weird mentality that will help you get to the end credits. We've no issue sitting and watching episode after episode of a show, but give us a four-hour movie run-time and everybody loses their minds.
And then... that ending. Oh boy. We'll cover the ending entirely in another article on here (if not three or four, because there is A LOT to unpack), but you should anticipate #ReleaseTheSnyderSequel to start trending about 15 seconds after people see how this one ends. And, most annoyingly, we'd probably have to agree. The next movie that Snyder sets up looks like it would have been absolutely brilliant, and completely different to everything we've seen in this or any other superhero movie before.
Alas, it is terribly unlikely that Warner Brothers will return to the shared cinematic universe, but we can't say they didn't go out with a bang. Zack Snyder's Justice League is like a gaudy, opulent, aggressively over-the-top Las Vegas hotel, one that looks fit to collapse under the weight of its own hubris. It is loud, it is bright and just as you begin to feel like you're becoming accustomed to its sensory overload, then you know it is time to go.
Zack Snyder's Justice League is available to watch via NOW and Sky Cinema from Thursday, 18 March.
All clips via HBO Max
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