The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly)

DC Films ‘Reset’ Adds More Confusion for Warners’ Slate

After doing away with AT&T-era strategy and shelving the new mandate is for an unclear ‘10-year plan’

- Batgirl, BY AARON COUCH Kim Masters and Borys Kit contribute­d to this report.

We’ve done a reset.” That’s how Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav described DC on Aug. 4, days after he made the call to shelve the $90 million HBO Max film Batgirl. The mogul said there’d now be a team that would create a “10-year” plan for DC, although who’s on that team is unclear. And Zaslav took digs at former WarnerMedi­a CEO Jason Kilar’s strategy of developing straight-to-streaming films. Zaslav added: “DC is something we can make better.”

The remarks were not well received inside

DC, according to multiple insiders who used the same word to describe members of the film division: “pissed.” And DC Films president Walter Hamada nearly exited after learning of the shelving of Batgirl before being convinced to stay on at least until the Oct. 21 release of Dwayne Johnson’s Black

Adam. (That film had a June test screening, including a new postcredit­s scene introducin­g a new element to Johnson’s place in the DC Universe.)

Before Warners’ sale to Discovery, Hamada was gearing up to release three or four films a year.

His plans were said to have included a Crisis on Infinite Earths event, a take on the seminal DC Comics story that was adapted for TV on The CW. Rumors circulated about introducin­g the Secret Six, a villain team that have been Suicide Squad antagonist­s. More concretely, Warners had films based on Supergirl, Green Lantern Corps and Static Shock in the next few years, plus a J.J. Abrams-produced Black Superman film from writer Ta-Nehisi Coates. Developmen­t has slowed, with none of those features attaching directors.

Some key collaborat­ors have received assurances their projects are safe. The Suicide Squad filmmaker James Gunn has multiple projects in developmen­t at DC, including season two of Peacemaker, which is moving forward. Insiders say Blue Beetle is also on track for its August 2023 release date. Zaslav turned heads when, among DC’s upcoming films, he highlighte­d on an earnings call not only Black Adam and Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom but also The Flash, starring the embattled actor Ezra Miller. “We’ve seen them. We think they are terrific, and we think we can make them even better,” Zaslav said of those films. The optics were not good, coming days after axing Batgirl, which would have been the first DC Extended Universe film to star a Latina, Leslie Grace. Work has kept up on The Flash, which has been testing well. Miller participat­ed in regularly scheduled additional photograph­y over the summer, apparently without incident, before being charged with burglary — their third arrest this year — on Aug. 7 in Vermont. Still, neither DC nor Zaslav has indicated the film will move from its June 2023 release date, though insiders say the studio is evaluating all options.

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