Superman, Batman and Swamp Thing to anchor DC's revamped movie and TV
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[February 01, 2023]
By Dawn Chmielewski and Lisa Richwine
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Stories about Batman and his assassin son, a new
Superman tale and Swamp Thing are set to hit the big screen as part of
an ambitious 10-year plan to reinvigorate DC Studios under new owner
Warner Bros Discovery.
Despite a rich stable of characters from Batman to Wonder Woman, the DC
film and television studio has failed to match the success of Walt
Disney Co's Marvel hit factory.
"The history of DC is pretty messed up," said director James Gunn, who
directed three "Guardians of the Galaxy" movies for Marvel and was
tapped last year to revamp DC Studios. "We're going to promise that
everything from our first project forward is going to be unified."
Gunn and DC Studios co-chairman Peter Safran on Monday unveiled a Marvel
Cinematic Universe-inspired plan to tell a single story that unfolds
over eight to 10 years, through 10 upcoming film and TV projects.
The first phase, "Gods and Monsters," uses some of the DC Universe's
best-known super heroes to introduce audiences to a new generation of
characters. Gunn said he worked with a team of five writers to sketch
out one connected story.
At the same time, the studio will release stories that fall outside this
central DC Universe narrative, dubbed DC Elseworlds, as with the comic
books. One example is "Joker: Folie a Deux," the sequel to the 2019
Oscar-nominated drama.
Warner Bros Discovery CEO David Zaslav is hoping to reap the financial
rewards of a reinvigorated DC franchise. The media company's shares have
fallen 43% in the past year as the company aims to deliver $3 billion in
savings from combining Warner Media and Discovery Communications.
"The stakes are enormous," said Safran, who has produced two "Aquaman"
films and two "Shazam" movies. "It's a brand that was in somewhat chaos,
and it's an opportunity to build an extraordinary stand-alone studio."
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Director James Gunn poses at the
premiere for the film "The Suicide Squad" in Los Angeles,
California, U.S., August 2, 2021. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
DC Studios will offer a spin on the
familiar Superman story with "Superman: Legacy," a story written by
Gunn that examines how the character reconciles his Kryptonian
heritage with his human upbringing. It is slated for release on July
11, 2025.
Writer Ta-Nehisi Coates also is working on a script for "Superman"
in which a Black actor portrays the Man of Steel, as a DC Elseworlds
project.
Also in 2025, DC Studios will release "Batman - Part II," a sequel
starring Robert Pattison, a darker, more adult tale that is not part
of Gunn's newly envisioned "DC Universe."
Another Batman movie, "The Brave and the Bold," will introduce the
hero's assassin son as his crime-fighting sidekick, Robin.
"Lanterns," an eight-hour detective series, is scheduled to stream
on HBO Max. Other TV projects include "Waller," with Viola Davis
reprising her "Suicide Squad" role as Amanda Waller, and "Paradise
Lost," the origin story of Themyscira, the island where Wonder Woman
was born.
A television series, "Creature Commandos," in which Waller forms a
black ops team out of monstrous prisoners, is in production.
While Marvel has become the highest-grossing film franchise in
history, DC Studios has had mixed results. A dark "Joker" film
became an Oscar nominee and billion-dollar hit, but "Black Adam" and
"Justice League" struggled to generate superhero-sized returns.
Four DC film projects that were completed before Gunn and Safran
took over the studio will be released to theaters this year, "Shazam!
Fury of the Gods," "The Flash," "Blue Beetle" and "Aquaman and the
Lost Kingdom."
Zaslav cut some costs by scrapping a third "Wonder Woman" film and a
"Batgirl" movie that was headed to streaming. The movie division
also has cut jobs in marketing and distribution.
(Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski and Lisa Richwine in Los Angeles;
Editing by Kenneth Li and Jamie Freed)
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