
Where to begin?
How about I'll give BvS praise for at least its opening sequence, which was well done. The movie begins with a funeral (and what follows for the next 150 minutes is basically only slightly less depressing) intertwined with the well known scene of Bruce falling down the hole and encountering dozens of bats and the scene where Bruce's parents are killed (The Waling Dead's Lauren Cohan and Jeffrey Dean Morgan - also, starting this Sunday, from The Walking Dead - but perhaps crucially from Snyder's own Watchman. I cannot find other explanation for quite well known, charismatic actor to show up in one scene just to get shot in uncredited appearance - even if it's Morgan who has the habit of playing doomed characters - other than Snyder calling him up for a favor. Especially that Patrick Wilson and Carla Gugino, also from Watchmen, are also in the movie, or should I say their voices are - he plays the President and she voices the Kryptonian ship. I mean Jesus Christ...Snyder cannot even use fucking cameos right.).

The scene is at least, in terms of audiovisual side, well done - Hans Zimmer/Junkie XL's soundtrack is particularly gorgeous in the moment, Batfleck's pompous lines actually fit here, one of the few moments when the films impossible duologue (no one speaks like this in real life) does, and the visuals, particularly the barrel of a gun wrapped in Bruce's mother pearl necklace are very strong.
But it's all downhill from there and unlike Bruce, there is no swarm of bats to lift us from this pit of Zack Snyder's lack of talent (and clearly adult supervision) fueled madness.

As you no doubt realize all those subplots sound kinda stupid but even when something sounds stupid there is always a chance with the right writers, it can be salvaged. But that movie is just schizophrenic. It's like for every plot there is a flimsy reasoning and a backup flimsy reasoning just in case the first one fails. The central conflict between Superman and Batman is so hastily written you genuinely wonder how could anyone write a script this weak. The idea that Batman would like to stop Superman because he has infinite power and perhaps no one should have a power like that is good but it's not developed at all in this movie. Batman sees the destruction of one of his buildings and wants revenge - fine. But he doesn't stop to ask himself just how many people Superman saved from the aliens? None of the motivations of the main characters regarding this conflict make any sense because none of them would make sense if they stopped and actually used their brains.

What doesn't help the narrative is that there is a bunch of other things. Good things, but things that only add to the movie feeling chaotic - Holly Hunter injects the film with charisma as the senator eager to hold Superman responsible for his actions. Laurence Fishbourne, Diane Lane (the film, just like Man of Steel, again tries to hide what an attractive woman she is, shoving her into 'mother' role which is ageist, gross and unnecessary) and Jeremy Irons all do what they can with this material which given that the material is atrocious, is not much. Amy Adams is given nothing worth of her talents to do and when she shouted "It's his mother's name" I thought she may have to crawl through a forest to gain another Academy Award nomination in the future to make people forget that embarrassment she just participated in. Kevin Costner shows up in a pointless and dumb scene and Michael Shannon is used in a thankless, wordless cameo where he is drinking Jesse Eisenberg's blood or something. Someone save us from Zack Snyder, please.

Then we have Cavill who looks like he is constantly smelling a fart and wondering who is responsible for it. Cavill was fine in Man of Steel where he managed to be likable and coasted on his looks but let me stress that - BvS is much worse than Man of Steel. The man has the charisma of a potato, he is very good looking (in a pretty boy, boring kind of a way) but so what? Snyder desperately tries to capitalize on that by having him jump into a bathtub with Lois Lane and then cook while being shirtless but what Snyder doesn't understand about women is the same thing he doesn't understand about movie fans - we need more than just something to stare at. We need substance, which there was a bit of in previous film and there is none here. Cavill doesn't have an ounce of charisma and very little talent and the writing for his character doesn't help at all. Throughout majority of the film because of poor casting and script I felt like I was watching Cavill and Affleck (but that is all on the script and not his fault) playing co-splay in Wrestlemania or something. Affleck rarely feels like iconic Batman and Cavill never feels like iconic Superman. It's just two guys in costumes joylessly beating each other up.

Some things just happen here - at one point Lois Lane finds herself carrying a Kryptonian spear and decides to throw it into water for absolutely no reason at all. Then for absolutely no reason at all she tries to retrieve it (how could she know that gigantic monster was Kryptonian? She couldn't.). Things in this movie just happen and it is so in your face pointless and shamelessly not justified at all even if you try not to ask yourself why it's all happening, you still notice the glaring holes in the story.

There are worse things in here, though - Doomsday appearing is absolutely pointless, the whole finale act probably outdid Return of the King for the longest strain of boring endings in the cinematic history and the final shot of the film is just insulting to the viewer. It's like for 15 minutes you know what's going to happen and they stick the dumbest shot possible and you go "yep, it happened", and all those dream sequences were just superfluous to the plot - a more skilled team of writers wouldn't need those. But by far the worst thing in this entire movie is the first cameo by Flash who comes back from the future or something to warn Bruce about...something. That scene is so cringe worthy, pointless, so poorly done and impossibly idiotic it belongs in Batman & Robin. It really, really does. And I kinda have a feeling I actually insulted Batman & Robin right now.

The film truly works only when Gal Gadot's Wonder Woman is on the screen - she has only few minutes of screen time, but it makes a big impact. From her very first appearance at Lex Luthor's party to her badass entrance mid-battle Gadot steals the film from the more well known characters and actors. Even the scene where Bruce merely sees the picture of her on the computer is so much better than everything else here.

I really hope we will finally see good DC movie, other than Nolan flicks. I prefer DC to Marvel - for me Marvel is always overstuffed and more focused on setting up the future movies than focusing on the one they are actually making at the moment. It isn't nearly as dark and complex as DC is, especially its villains. So with so many incredible villains in Batman comic books why not use one but go for generic Doomsday for Superman? Why make this movie first instead of doing Batman standalone flick? Why give Zack Snyder who time and time again proved he is a lousy director the job? I really hope Suicide Squad is good. Sticking Batman in a bad movie is bad. But sticking The Joker and Harley Quinn in one that awful would be a disaster.

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice
(2016, 151 min)
Plot: Fearing that the actions of Superman are left unchecked, Batman takes on the Man of Steel, while the world wrestles with what kind of a hero it really needs.
Director: Zack Snyder
Writers: Chris Terrio, David S. Goyer
Stars: Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams
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