Zack Snyder says Justice League will be R-rated
Zack Snyder said that the new Justice League movie will have a runtime of four hours and might also release theatrically, in addition to premiering on HBO Max.
By: PTI | Los Angeles |
Zack Snyder s Justice League will stream on HBO Max. (Photo: HBO Max/Twitter)
Filmmaker Zack Snyder has teased that his version of 2018 superhero movie Justice League might be R-rated due to excessive “profanity and violence”.
Warner Bros had recently announced that the original version of the movie, dubbed Snyder-cut by the DC Comics fans and filmed by the filmmaker prior to his departure, will debut on HBO Max in 2021.
Updated:
December 15, 2020 13:06 IST
The filmmaker also teased a scene where Ben Affleck’s Batman will be using an expletive
Share Article
AAA
The filmmaker also teased a scene where Ben Affleck’s Batman will be using an expletive
Filmmaker Zack Snyder has teased that his version of 2018 superhero movie “Justice League” might be R-rated due to excessive “profanity and violence.” Warner Bros had recently announced that the original version of the movie, dubbed Snyder-cut by the DC Comics fans and filmed by the filmmaker prior to his departure, will debut on HBO Max in 2021. Talking to
Entertainment Weekly, the filmmaker said that the new movie will have a runtime of four hours and might also release theatrically, in addition to premiering on HBO Max.
Zack Snyder Shares Major Update on Justice League: Piece of Information Nobody Knows
FOLLOW US ON: Los Angeles: Filmmaker Zack Snyder has teased that his version of 2018 superhero movie “Justice League” might be R-rated due to excessive “profanity and violence”. Warner Bros had recently announced that the original version of the movie, dubbed Snyder-cut by the DC Comics fans and filmed by the filmmaker prior to his departure, will debut on HBO Max in 2021. Talking to Entertainment Weekly, the filmmaker said that the new movie will have a runtime of four hours and might also release theatrically, in addition to premiering on HBO Max. “Here’s one piece of information nobody knows: The movie is insane and so epic and is probably rated R that’s one thing I think will happen, that it will be an R-rated version, for sure. We haven’t heard from the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), but that’s my gut,” Snyder said.
Jake Coyle December 15, 2020 - 12:19 PM
If youâre going to make a movie about wish fulfilment, 1980s America is about as good as you can do for a setting outside the Arabian Desert.
âWonder Woman 1984,â Patty Jenkinsâ time-travelling sequel to 2017âs record-setting âWonder Woman,â shuttles Gal Gadotâs warrior to the era of Regan economics, parachute pants and âRio.â All have their cameos in âWonder Woman 1984,â a superhero parable of greed and fanny packs with pointed references to today.
Two movies in, itâs clear that Jenkins and DC Comics have a thankfully different concept for Wonder Woman as a film franchise. Like its predecessor, âWonder Woman 1984â is spirited, purposeful and blessedly lacking in grandiosity. And both films place Wonder Woman not under the burdensome heft of world building or even universe saving â or at least Gadot comes across as too resplendently
The Algorithm Series: Digital Rights Management (DRM)
Anytime I write about digital rights management (DRM), I m reminded that the opinions around codec or format wars are simple skirmishes compared to the strong feelings the term DRM evokes. On the one hand, there s the fact that many consumers despise DRM. And not just consumers who are bent on piracy. During my international travels, I can t tell you the number of complaints I ve overheard from parents who download several movies for their children to watch during a long-haul flight, only to have geofencing (restrictions around geographies), 24-hour time constraints, or some other form of rights management impede their ability to pacify their children.