The Borneo Post

Batman v Superman: A definite superhero malaise

- By Ann Hornaday

BEFORE Warner Bros. gets too carried away with the recordbrea­king box office take of ‘ Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice’ over the weekend, the studio might want to take a breath. The grim, galumphing behemoth has earned an admittedly impressive US$ 424 million since Thursday, US$ 254 million of it in overseas markets. But many observers estimate that ‘ Batman v Superman’, which had a combined production and marketing budget of about US$ 400 million, will need to earn at least US$ 1 billion in order to break even, after theatres take their cut. Over the weekend, ‘ Batman v Superman’ earned an okay-not-great B Cinema Score based on audience polls — the gentleman’s C of the movie world. (The muchrevile­d ‘ Green Lantern’ and the quickly forgotten ‘ Catwoman’ earned similar marks.)

Even if word of mouth on the movie isn’t quite as damning as its poor reviews, chances are that business will drop off precipitou­sly this week, making it hard to go too far past that magic US$ 1 billion number.

For those keeping score at home, ‘ Batman v Superman’ was announced with great fanfare by its director, Zack Snyder, at ComicCon a few years ago, bringing DC Comics fans to near-fainting levels of anticipati­on. But what Snyder didn’t predict — and apparently wasn’t nimble enough to respond to — was how much the superhero gestalt would change while he was fitting Ben Affleck into a brand new Batsuit and encouragin­g Jesse Eisenberg take his manically giddy Lex Luthor even broader. ‘ Batman v Superman’ was nominally Warner Bros.’ chance to get into the comic-book franchise game, which Disney has parlayed so brilliantl­y with its Marvel-based ‘ Avengers’ series. Boasting some adroit, ingenious filmmakers (Joss Whedon, Anthony and Joe Russo) and some truly inspired casting ( Robert Downey Jr., Mark Ruffalo, Chris Hemsworth), the ‘ Avengers’ movies have defined the gold standard of spinning individual properties into intra-universe gold.

Warner was so successful with the Chris Nolan- era ‘ Batman’ movies that setting up the Caped Crusader for similar crosspolli­nation was a vertically integrated no-brainer. But even before ‘ Batman v Superman’ had started, they’d boxed themselves into a corner even he couldn’t fly out of. Nolan and his star, Christian Bale, were widely credited with lending soul and gravitas to the brooding, broken Bruce Wayne, who presided over a billion- dollar company by day and turned grim-faced vigilante by night. By the time of the final instalment of the Nolan trilogy, though, the self- seriousnes­s was starting to wear thin. ‘ The Dark Knight Rises’ earned a morethan-respectabl­e US$ 1 billion at the box office, but less of that came from American viewers than with its predecesso­r. Two years later, the big comic-bookbased hit wasn’t a downbeat meditation on grief and the burdens of unchecked power, but ‘ Guardians of the Galaxy’, a gleefully irreverent riff on superhero tropes.

This year’s version of the ‘ Guardians’ zag is ‘ Deadpool’, a similarly cheeky, if far more cynical, exercise in self-referentia­l japery. When ‘ Batman v Superman’ lurched into theatres with its unsmiling stars, paranoid vibe, weak-tea colour scheme and by the-number action scenes, audiences could be forgiven for experienci­ng cultural whiplash: Weren’t we just laughing at Ryan Reynolds profanely taking the mickey out of all of this stuff?

In counting on Snyder to usher in a new era of shared-universe glory, Warner Bros. might have made a fatal error: At a time when everything is “execution dependent” — a term that was once reserved for quirky one- off comedies and sophistica­ted dramas with no built-in audiences — the person behind the camera needs to have unerring instincts for fan service plus an impeccable sense of story, aesthetics, tone and performanc­e. J. J. Abrams skilfully threaded that very needle with ‘ Star Wars: The Force Awakens’, nicely teeing up that threadbare franchise for the brilliant director Rian Johnson to send it into genuinely novel and reinvigora­ting territory. In the right hands, Affleck and Henry Cavill could still make convincing caped confreres, and Eisenberg might even be able to dial his performanc­e back to a recognisab­ly human level of malevolenc­e.

The question raised by the success of such movies as ‘ Guardians of the Galaxy’ and ‘ Deadpool’ is whether they prove what many of us have been saying for years, which is the typical, monotonous­ly glum genre that Hollywood has worked over like the bones of so much carrion is, finally, exhausted beyond resuscitat­ion — at least in America. Although foreign markets are still eager to accept comic book spectacles into their spanking new theatres, here at home, an unmistakab­le malaise has set in when it comes to tightlippe­d men in tights, marshallin­g their Y- chromosoma­l angst to once more do what a man’s gotta do.

It should come as no surprise that the person best equipped to save superheroe­s for Hollywood is none other than Wonder Woman. — WP-Bloomberg

 ?? — Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures ?? Ben Affleck, left, as Batman and Henry Cavill as Superman in ‘ BatmanvSup­erman: Dawn ofJustice’.
— Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures Ben Affleck, left, as Batman and Henry Cavill as Superman in ‘ BatmanvSup­erman: Dawn ofJustice’.
 ??  ?? Actress Gal Gadot poses during a photocall to promote the movie ‘ BatmanvSup­erman: DawnOf Justice’ in Mexico City, Mexico, recently. — Reuters photo
Actress Gal Gadot poses during a photocall to promote the movie ‘ BatmanvSup­erman: DawnOf Justice’ in Mexico City, Mexico, recently. — Reuters photo

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