

In all likelihood, The Flash will not be the official final chapter in the crossover event the director began its actual end will probably be December’s Aquaman and The Lost Kingdom, which James Gunn, the Marvel defector recently hired to reboot the entire DC game plan, insists will function as a transition into a new take on this world and its beloved characters.
#TIM BURTON CHARACTERS COLLAGE MOVIE#
They’ve spent the better part of a decade marching, trolling, and persistently hashtagging for the revival of what they've come to call the SnyderVerse, the movie franchise of steroidal gods and monsters launched by Zack Snyder. Here, to the chagrin of the DC Extended Universe-faithful, is a chance to finally wipe clean the troubled mess the studio’s made for its flagship heroes, the most popular titans of DC comics lore.ĭid we say mess? Them’s fighting words for the fervent fans. For the suits at Warner Bros., it looks more like an opportunity. The Flash has erased the status quo and created an entirely new one in its place.įor Barry, that’s a calamity. It's why Wayne now looks like a seventysomething Michael Keaton instead of a fiftysomething Ben Affleck. The Flash, has effectively rewritten the past, the present, and the future. You see, by going back in time and changing things, Barry Allen (Ezra Miller), a.k.a. Batman, attempts to explain the complicated sci-fi hooey that's swallowed him and the film whole. It’s around the midway mark of the long-awaited, long-delayed new DC superhero movie The Flash that Bruce Wayne, a.k.a.
