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Warner Brothers/DC Comics Will Never Be Marvel Studios. And Here’s Why

This past weekend, the news was finally made official that Justice League would be the movie to follow up Batman vs. Superman, and that it would be directed by Man of Steel/Batman vs. Superman director Zack Snyder. This drove fans online into overdrive; Some people are very pleased this news was finally official, while a great many others out there are groaning that Warner Brothers is approaching this all wrong, that they need to do things the Marvel Studios way or it’s just not right. In other words, Wonder Woman needs a solo film first, followed by the Flash and possibly a Green Lantern reboot, and then they all team up in a Justice League movie. After all, that’s how Marvel did it to tremendous success with The Avengers. But Warner Brothers and DC aren’t Marvel Studios, and they won’t ever be. And I’m gonna break it down for ya just why.

First off, Marvel Studios is just that: a studio dedicated to making only Marvel films. Warner Brothers has no equivalent. There is no “DC Studios.” DC is merely a company they own, which happens to have several valuable IPs. Yes, they would be smart to exploit their DC properties, but there is no rule saying they have to exploit them in the exact same way Marvel Studios does. And according to everything we’ve seen about how they’re approaching Batman vs. Superman and now Justice League, it doesn’t look like they’re going to start now.

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Here’s the other thing; DC only has six, maybe seven viable superhero properties with enough name recognition to translate to the big screen. I know this will make DC fanboys out there insane, but it’s the truth. And I say this as someone who is a bigger DC fan than a Marvel fan. Sure, DC has dozens (if not hundreds) of viable superhero characters, many who are household names, but that’s not the same as viable franchises. Over the past seventy five years of DC comics history, there have only been five solo characters that have been in nearly continuous publication: Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, the Flash, and Green Lantern (with Flash and GL taking an extended break between 1951 and 1957 or so, before being reinvented into the versions we now know.) These characters are so popular and world-renowned, especially Superman and Batman, that even their spin-off characters and sidekicks, villains and supporting cast are household names, many in fact who have their own ongoing comic book series.

But Warner Brothers isn’t going to look at it that way. They’ll see characters like Supergirl, Nightwing, Robin, Batgirl, Superboy, Harley Quinn, etc. as great additions to some future Batman or Superman sequel, but they aren’t going to spin them off into their own movies like the way the comics have spun off the characters into their own titles. So for future solo films, cross off the other heroes of Gotham and Metropolis from getting their own movies; Warners is simply not going to risk sullying their big two brands with movies that might not work. They don’t want another Catwoman on their hands.

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As for the other members of DC’s “Big Five” heroes, Green Lantern has already had his shot at a movie, and we all know how that turned out. The Flash is currently scheduled to get a TV series on the CW network; if the show is a hit, forget a big screen solo outing, and if it flops, same thing. This, of course, leaves Wonder Woman, who will probably get her own movie eventually because it’s getting embarrassing for Warner Brothers to continue making excuses why they haven’t been able to get the most famous female hero off the ground. It’s the one thing they can have over Marvel Studios, a famous female superhero who isn’t just famous as being a member of a team.

But now you’re saying, “Well, what about Hawkman? The Atom? Martian Manhunter?? Aquaman???” Well, yes, all those characters are DC mainstays for sure, but have had very rough goes at keeping ongoing titles (with Aquaman arguably having the best luck.) Because of that, Warners will look at these characters as second stringers at best. Will they show up in a Justice League movie or potential JL sequel? Without a doubt. But Warners isn’t going to risk $150 million on potential franchise starters on these guys, especially after Green Lantern tanked. Green Arrow might have been the one hero who might have had a good shot, but with a successful television series, you can forget that happening anytime soon. Why ruin a good thing?

BRIGHTEST-DAY-RISE

If fans want to know how Warner Brothers is going to be rolling out the DC Universe on screen, then they should really look to Warner Brother’s straight-to-DVD DC comics animated features for a preview of how they are going to handle these characters in live-action and on the big screen. Since the DC heroes animated films series began in 2007 with The Death of Superman movie, there have been twenty of these made; seven feature Batman, four feature Superman, two feature Batman and Superman together, five feature the Justice League… and only two feature Green Lantern, and one features Wonder Woman. And Green Lantern only got a second animated movie as a tie-in to the live-action movie; Warners had decided that both the Wonder Woman and Green Lantern movies didn’t move enough units to justify sequels, and have killed all attempts from producer Bruce Timm to make movies based on other properties like Batgirl, Teen Titans, and others. The suits always come back with “we can’t make the numbers work” with anything not Superman, Batman, those two together, or the Justice League (which, of course, has those two guys front and center.)

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If Warners sees relatively low budget animated movies not featuring Batman, Superman and the Justice League as too much of a risk, what makes anyone think they’ll take a different approach with their live action counterparts when way, way more money is at stake? In short, it doesn’t look like they’re going to. Expect WB to treat the DC Superhero universe as one movie property, just like Harry Potter was one movie series. Man of Steel was merely “DCU Movie #1” with Batman vs. Superman and Justice League being the Parts 2 and 3 of this one franchise. We’ll then get a rotating DCU movie each summer – in between Justice League movies, there will be solo entries for Batman and Superman (and as I said, Warners will likely be shamed into giving Wonder Woman at least one movie). But for the most part, that’ll be it. Notice that the Wall Street Journal article that broke this news mentioned other DC Comics properties currently gaining traction: Fables, 100 Bullets, Sandman. Only two other superhero properties were mentioned, Metal Men and Shazam!, and based on the nature of those properties, they are probably aiming for animated or family type movies for those two.

Do I wish there was a “DC Studios” within Warner Bros.? Heck, yes, I do. But that’s just not the reality, and until then, the bean-counters are going to have the final word on which superheroes make it onto the big screen in their own films. The best we as fans can do is hope that Zack Snyder and David S. Goyer do their best with the various DCU characters within this series. Let’s all keep our collective fingers crossed.

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Comments

  1. jayhartRIC says:

    They’re doing a Suicide Squad movie.  WB is definitely committed to doing DC properties.

  2. Darth Rant says:

    LOL! Love the illustration at the top of the article. Two superheroes trying to look as badass as possible, and one porn star dressed up like Wonder Woman.

  3. Lars says:

    As a fellow writer with my own perspective, I’m always surprised that anyone that has no source on a speculation article gets recognition as an authority.

     
    The fact is most everyone already knows DC hasn’t and won’t take the Marvel route. We can all continue to bitch, but I’m of the school never bitch unless you offer a solution. Having said that, I’m also sick of the 10 things DC NEEDS to do in the next film articles too.

     
    As for the content of this article, aside from stating the obvious print readers of DC and Marvel don’t care what order you present characters, just get them right, leverage canon and represent the universe with respect. And of course try to keep to continuity which ultimately means shared universe etc… if studios don’t do that, example Spider-Man 3, FF, Green Lantern – well expect your film and toys to go nowhere.

     
    There may always be an exception (Deadpool?). But I think my theory will hold most true when Fox doesn’t connect the Deadpool related films to the existing X-men franchise.

     
    And yes, as much as I’d like a Deadpool on screen, I’m in the camp that Marvel needs its properties back from Fox. And that ain’t gonna happen either.

     
    Comic books on film has reached it’s greatest height at present and eventually this bubble will burst. If the good things readers want are not going to happen now, then it ain’t gonna happen in your lifetime. Just read the books and try not to let your skin erupt in flames over the BS we get on film.

  4. Lars says:

    As a fellow writer with my own perspective, I’m always surprised that anyone that has no source on a speculation article gets recognition as an authority.  
    The fact is most everyone already knows DC hasn’t and won’t take the Marvel route. We can all continue to bitch, but I’m of the school never bitch unless you offer a solution. Having said that, I’m also sick of the 10 things DC NEEDS to do in the next film articles too.  
    As for the content of this article, aside from stating the obvious print readers of DC and Marvel don’t care what order you present characters, just get them right, leverage canon and represent the universe with respect.  And of course try to keep to continuity which ultimately means shared universe etc… if studios don’t do that, example Spider-Man 3, FF, Green Lantern – well expect your film and toys to go nowhere.  
    There may always be an exception (Deadpool?). But I think my theory will hold most true when Fox doesn’t connect the Deadpool related films to the existing X-men franchise.  
    And yes, as much as I’d like a Deadpool on screen, I’m in the camp that Marvel needs its properties back from Fox. And that ain’t gonna happen either.  
    Comic books on film has reached it’s greatest height at present and eventually this bubble will burst.  If the good things readers want are not going to happen now, then it ain’t gonna happen in your lifetime.  Just read the books and try not to let your skin erupt in flames over the BS we get on film. 

  5. UchihAvenger says:

    Nice article. I’ve been saying the same thing in regards to how both companies are structured. The way Marvel Studios is structured is ideal for creating a cohesive, consistent cinematic universe. It’s a relatively small studio, so there’s more of a concentrated effort considering it’s pretty much Kevin Feige and people working directly underneath him.

    WB on the other hand is not primarily in the business of doing DC movies, and with the way the company is, there’s no way they can organize a cinematic universe due to all the complications they’d encounter from a revolving door of bureaucrats. Sony’s current Spiderman movies are an example of how too many cook spoil the broth.

  6. batman v superman is going to be test. im hoping they stay accurate to the characters and everything else in the dc universe. if marvel had stayed true it would of done alot better than it has (even tho its some how done fucking amazing)

  7. Zach says:

    Marvel sucks………HARD….WB invented the large scale superhero blockbuster. 3 out of every Marvel film made is god awful. That’s a fact. Their beating WB on volume, that’s true. DC wins oscars, Marvel wins MTv awards lmfao….. Tons of people that know not a thing of comics have become “marvel movie fans” and they therefore believe that gives them free reign to talk about how Marvel Studios is soooo on point.  Their still amateurs, by a mile. DC’s making films at a slower pace, but why Marvel fans use this fact as; as, as an “anything” I’m not sure. WB is making films, Marvel can keep making their “next episode.”

  8. Prathmesh Tiwari says:

    D.C. > Marvel

    • Gary Wilcox says:

      Based on what?  If you state the popularity of Superman or Batman then you should see the point of the article.  

  9. Gary Wilcox says:

    To be fair, Guardians of the Galaxy is coming only after the Iron Mans, Thors, Captain Americas and the Avengers.  Guardians of the Galaxy is also a part of this whole Cinematic Universe storyline.  At this stage of the game, Marvel Studios could have probably rolled out their most unheard of character and presented that to the welcoming audience.  
    I believe the writer is correct in his assessment.  Besides Superman, Batman, Green Lantern, and I guess Wonder Woman, not enough people in the world care about DC characters.  Think of the logos.  How many people around the globe wear t-shirts than have anything other than a Superman or Batman logo?  The problem that DC has always had is the over the top identity of the characters…
    Superman – most powerful.  Wonder Woman – Princess Warior.  Green Lantern – Wields the most powerful force in the universe.Aquaman – King of Atlantis

    All royalty or the most powerful of something.  What’s left to care about with the lesser powers?  
    The only way to introduce lesser known characters on the screen and make money is to prep the playing field with these bigger names.  In this way, the upcoming Batman V Superman may do the trick by introducing more or less cameos of future characters.   Of course, after the most powerful beings in the universe deal with what has to be the baddest of the bad, who cares about the lesser powered dealing with shoplifters? I
    GUardians of the Galaxy would not be set to make hundreds of millions if it was not following the setup.  And this is why Guardians of the Galaxy is anticipated.     

  10. Gary Wilcox says:

    I don’t think so.  Unless the writer works for Marvel how can it be bias?
    DC recognition may be something you and plenty of others have, but this is hardly international recognition.   

    As a former Comic Book reader in my youth I believe he is spot on.  As a Batman reader, my lean was always towards Marvel because G.I. Joe was my ultimate favorite.  I look back now and realize that my interests seemed to cater to non-super powered characters.  With that being stated, DC boasted a lot of god-like heroes.  Just look at the JLA. Most are god-like with their powers and/or royalty.   I mean these are over the top characters that drown out anybody else. With the rest of the members able to fly and exhibit super crazy strengths, what was the point of Batman?  To fight any janitors that the super strengthened enemies may have had?  For that matter,  the only reason Superman or Green Lantern worked within a team was that they had to create ridiculous enemies just so that these uber heros could have someone to fight.  Something about the JLA just didn’t quite work.  
    As far as popularity, if you look at the crowd around the world, the logo you see on t-shirts are Superman and Batman.  There aren’t a whole lot of Green Lantern or Aquaman or Flash t-shirts running around in Asia or Europe.  For that matter, were it not for the The Big Bang Theory, nerds wouldn’t have popularized the wearing of these t-shirts even in North America.  The recognition of the “big two” is so huge that it drowns out the others.  
    And those “Marvel fans” you wrote of were movie fans not comic fans.  Any reader of comics knows the difference between DC and Marvel titles.  

  11. Gary Wilcox says:

    The difference between getting Iron Man to work and a Green Lantern to work is that one is relatable and far less from omnipotent.  

    Superman?  Omnipotent, but historically accepted as the original.  Green Lantern? Universally omnipotent.  Wonder Woman?  Omnipotent-like Amazonian.  Aquaman?  Omnipotent-like Atlantian. 

    So what we have is…a Kryptonian, an Amazonian, an Atlantian, a guardian of the galaxy with the ultimate ring of power, a Martian, etc.  This is why Iron stood a better chance.  Aside from Thor, the rest of the Avengers are human beings.