This week sees the release of “The Flash,” another multiverse film in the wake of the “Spider-Verse” movies and Oscar winner “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” but with this one exploring the history of DC.
The movie sees Ezra Miller playing different versions of Barry Allen along with meeting various actors playing different versions of characters, including Michael Keaton and Ben Affleck as different versions of Batman.
SPOILERS AHEAD FOR “THE FLASH”
There are also brief cameos involving a bunch of characters from across DC, both in film and on television as part of the film’s climax. Speaking with Vanity Fair, director Andy Muschietti confirms his first assembly cut of the film ran around four hours and was packed with more cameos than what we ended up with.
Asked if the supersized version will ever be seen publicly, Muschietti says: “Maybe. I’m definitely more happy with this [theatrical] version than the four-hour version.” The final film clocks in at around 155 minutes.
Muschietti adds that at various points “The Flash” spanned from anywhere from three to five hours in the postproduction process. The result was an editing process resulting in the removal of around an hour-and-a-half from the final cut.
This includes a lot of cameos and homages left out. Muschietti says: “There’s a lot of things that are in the movie that are on the edit room floor, but this is really the best version of the movie” before calling the cut cameos “interesting… some are more interesting than others.”
The big sequence, dubbed the Chronobowl scene, sees Miller’s Flash experiencing a cascade of realities. Producer Barbara Muschietti says: “The universes start colliding, and we had a lot more characters that we all know that we had to let go because there just wasn’t the time.”
Andy Muschietti adds: “That ‘hall of fame’ of great characters and actors…there’s so many, the list was endless. We had to choose. We had to pick.” Among the confirmed cuts – 1970s Wonder Woman star Lynda Carter, Marlon Brando as Jor-El, Burgess Meredith as The Penguin and Cesar Romero as The Joker.
Asked if there will be a follow-up to “The Flash,” Andy Muschietti says: “The multiverse allows all of these different worlds to coexist and interact. And so, hopefully yes. We don’t know yet. That’s the truth.”
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiRGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhcmtob3Jpem9ucy5jb20vdGhlLWZsYXNoLWRpcmVjdG9yLWNvbmZpcm1zLWN1dC1jYW1lb3Mv0gEA?oc=5
2023-06-17 13:55:03Z
2109032427
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar