[better] — Batman.v.superman.dawn.of.justice.2016.extended...
Whether you love it or hate it, the is the only way to truly experience the story Zack Snyder intended to tell—a story of gods, monsters, and the fragile men caught between them.
The Extended cut breathes. The infamous "Knightmare" sequence (the post-apocalyptic vision with Parademons) is extended and contextualized. The Warehouse Rescue—arguably the greatest live-action Batman fight ever filmed—is given an extra 45 seconds of brutality. The sound design by Hans Zimmer and Junkie XL (remixed for the longer cut) allows for prolonged silences and swelling crescendos that the theatrical mix rushed through. Batman.v.Superman.Dawn.of.Justice.2016.EXTENDED...
Here's a deep feature about the 2016 film "Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice - Extended Edition": Whether you love it or hate it, the
Luthor isn't just a "mad scientist" but a nihilistic puppeteer who believes that if "God is all-powerful, He cannot be all-good." Institutional Failure: Batman.v.Superman.Dawn.of.Justice.2016.EXTENDED...
Superman’s struggle isn't with his enemies, but with the impossibility of doing good in a world where every action has an equal and opposite political reaction. The Political Machinery: Lex Luthor’s Nihilism The extended cut clarifies Lex Luthor’s intricate plot
Superman’s death is the reconciliation of the two worldviews. He sacrifices himself—a god choosing mortality—to save humanity from Doomsday (a monster born of the same hubris that created the nuclear bomb). In doing so, he validates Batman’s cynicism (that power corrupts) while proving Batman wrong about Superman's character (that he is selfish).
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