Zack Snyder's Justice League
I've always been fascinated by the long and winding road that movies take from idea to release. If I were ever given the opportunity to take a trip to alternate realities, I wouldn't be riding on a mega-zeppelin or visiting the Colossus of Rhodes, I'd head down to the nearest video retailer and buy Roger Corman's Alien, Steven Spielberg's Return of the Jedi, and Darren Aronofsky's Robocop. Zack Snyder's original cut of Justice League would have also been high on that list, but by some combination of circumstances (that I still can't quite believe actually happened), it's now a thing that exists.
We've seen alternate cuts of movies released before. So-called director's cuts or unrated cuts are often little more than a cheap marketing ploy to shift a few extra blu-rays by reinstating a few extra minutes of dialogue scenes. This is not that. It's also not the theatrical cut with an extra two hours of material. Instead, in almost every way possible, it's a new experience. The two versions of this film feel less like two different edits, and more like two completely different takes on the same basic story idea. Many scenes from the theatrical cut aren't here at all, and even familiar scenes play out completely differently in all but a couple of cases. Most surprisingly, this extends to the most expensive sequences, which now feature hundreds of new effects shots.
The audio-visual presentation is starkly different too. While the theatrical cut was cropped to 16:9, Snyder always intended for the film to be framed at 4:3. That's how it's presented here, and as far as I'm aware it's the first time a movie with a budget on this scope has ever been intended for Academy ratio. It works fine for the most part, though the frame can feel a bit constrained at times. The colour grading is also very different, rejecting Joss Whedon's saturated palette in favour of the darker, muted tones of Dawn of Justice. The music is all new, score by Tom Holkenborg (aka. Junkie XL) as Snyder originally intended. Even the audio mix feels different, prioritising the music instead of burying it under noise as the theatrical cut did.
So which version is better? That's a very difficult question to answer. I've seen the theatrical cut several times, so throughout the Snyder cut I found my mind padding out scenes with the (now absent) familiar dialogue, creating a composite experience. The tone is very different. The theatrical cut had a lot of Joss Whedon's signature humour, giving it the self-deprecating feel of a Marvel movie. The Snyder cut has none of that, and is instead a more somber and much more sincere take on the story. While the theatrical cut did a good job of introducing the new heroes and bringing them together, the Snyder cut gives much more fleshed out arcs to Aquaman, The Flash, and especially Cyborg, making this feel more like a composite origin story for all of them. This pays off with an almost completely different version of the climax that is far more emotionally resonant and satisfying.
Problems? Justice League was originally intended as a two-parter, but was condensed to one partway through production. The theatrical cut is a self-contained story derived from what would have been Part 1. When I heard that the Snyder cut was going to be four hours, I assumed that it would cover both parts, but surprisingly it's still just Part 1. Both versions start and end at roughly the same places, but the Snyder cut spends a fair bit of time setting up the villain who would have headlined Part 2, including another couple of extended visions of the apocalytic Bad End version of the future. Though interesting to see, these now fall into the same category as the vision from Dawn of Justice, teasing a sequel that will never happen.
Does it justify a four-hour runtime? Honestly, I'm not sure. I was planning to watch it over two evenings, but I was so engaged that I just watched the whole thing at once. It doesn't feel like a long four hours, if that makes sense, but this is coming from someone who likes the three-hour cut of Dawn of Justice, so your mileage may vary. While presented as a single movie, it does have six chapter title cards, so there are plenty of places you could pause it for a break.
As I mentioned before, I find it difficult to separate my experience of this new version from the one I'm more familiar with, even though they're two very different films. I'd give the theatrical cut 8/10, and for now I'll give the Snyder cut the same.
Currently, the only places you can watch it in the UK are Sky Cinema or Now TV Cinema, both premium upgrades from their respective services. I used the 7-day free trial of the latter to watch it.