‘Zack Snyder’s Justice League’ Is The Worst Of DC, Warner Brothers’ Superhero Flicks So Far

Courtesy: DC/Warner Brothers

Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it.  Everybody knows that old adage.  Warner Brothers and DC’s recent presentation (and home release) of Zack Snyder’s Justice League is proof positive of that old adage.  Released through HBO Max after years of protest by Snyder’s minions, the movie was released this summer on DVD and Blu-ray.  Given, the original 2017 cut (which used only part of Snyder’s work before his departure from the project) was hardly memorable, it is far better by comparison than the Snyder cut.  This four-hour presentation is even worse than the movie’s original 2017 cut, and that is saying something, too.  There is little if anything to like about this take of Justice League.  The most prominent problem with the Snyder Cut is its story.  This will be discussed shortly.  The story ties into another prominent problem, the pacing.  Rounding out the movie’s problems is its general presentation.  This item will also be discussed later.  Each item is important in its own way to the whole of Zack Snyder’s Justice League.  All things considered, they make the movie the least memorable of DC and Warner Brothers’ DC titles to date.

Warner Brothers and DC’s presentation of Zack Snyder’s Justice League is proof positive that people really should be careful what they wish for.  That is because while its 2017 predecessor is not necessarily the greatest of the companies’ offerings, it is also not their worst.  That dishonor belongs to the recently premiered (and home released) “Snyder Cut” of Justice League.  The movie suffers from so many problems, not the least of which being its story.  The story, which runs four hours, two minutes in length, is marred right from the get go.  The first two hours are spent building up the background for each member of the Justice League.  The story plods along as a result of this, leading to an issue in the pacing, which will be discussed a little later.  It is not even until almost two hours into the movie that audiences finally get the movie’s first fight scene between the Justice League’s members and Steppenwolf.  This critic is a lifelong DC fan, but this approach to the movie’s first half is completely counterproductive.  By comparison, Marvel Studios did create a number of movies for each member of the Avengers.  There is not denying that.  At the same time though, those movies do all of the buildup for the key characters, thus allowing more time for more important elements in the big final presentation that was the Infinity Saga.  This is the model that DC should have used from day one for its Justice League buildup.  DC and Warner Brothers sort of tried that with Wonder Woman and Man of Steel (which was terrible to say the least in itself) but what with so many batman movies out there, it was next to impossible to figure out how to build up his back story and make it work for this story.  The companies also tried a setup for Green Lantern in 2011, but that movie flopped, with even star Ryan Reynolds decrying the movie in hindsight.  It likely explains why the Green Lantern Corps was mentioned only in passing in this movie.  Add in everything from the story’s epilogue and things get even more problematic.  The whole just adds too much to the whole.  Perhaps the only true positive (or really positives) is Steppenwolf’s acknowledgement of the multi-verse at one point in the story and the Joker’s mention of alternate timelines in the movie’s epilogue.  Considering all the talk of the Flashpoint crossover and the Crisis on Infinite Earths in the DCEU’s television world, it all actually ties together at least a little better.  Though, the use of what is apparently a Lazarus Pit in Superman’s ship and everything else that went into the story of his resurrection offsets all of that, too.  Simply put, the whole of the movie’s story is forgettable.  It simply tries too hard and falls flat.

As noted already, the pacing tied in to the story makes for even more problems for this presentation.  Because of all of the brooding and buildup in the movie’s first half, things really do plod along at nearly a snail’s pace.  Again, if that buildup had been relegated to the standalone movies for the JL’s members, then the story could have just gotten right to the point and moved along at a much more pleasant pace.  What’s more, the epilogue involving Bruce Wayne’s dream (what proves to set up an alternate reality story line) and everything involving Cyborg’s story slows things down even more, as does the completely random meeting of Deathstroke/Slade Wilson and Lex Luthor.  It’s like Snyder just threw that in like so much more and thought it would work.  Sadly it just slows things down once again after the movie could have ended following Steppenwolf’s defeat (not to give away too much).  Simply put, the movie moves too slow too often and just the right speed at too few spots.  The result is that the pacing proves just as problematic as the movie’s story.

As if the negative impact of the story and its pacing are not enough, the general presentation is also problematic.  Audiences who are familiar with Zack Snyder’s work will easily catch the over the top slow motion effects, and the blood and gore.  He follows the same stylistic approach throughout this movie, with more than enough bloodshed (and even Superman holding a skeleton at one point) to appease the most bloodthirsty viewers.  Such approach really is disappointing, as is the unnecessary use of so much foul language and dark, gritty look throughout the story.  People go to movies to escape the grim reality of reality, not to be exposed to even more grim, brooding presentations.  Snyder needs to realize and just accept this.  When and if he ever does, it will hopefully change his ways.  Otherwise, audiences are just going to get the same kind of presentation from Snyder from one movie to the next.  Hopefully, keeping this in mind, DC and Warner Brothers will employ Snyder less as time goes on.  Between this realization and that of the negative impact of the movie’s story and pacing, all three elements leave the movie a nearly complete failure.  The introduction of the Martian Manhunter (a.k.a. J’on Jonzz) is about the only positive, as it and Darkseid’s determination to get the Mother Boxes sets up more Justice League movies; movies that hopefully will not be written or even helmed by Zack Snyder.

Warner Brothers and DC’s recently released presentation that is Zack Snyder’s Justice League is a problematic new presentation from the companies.  There is little if anything to like about this movie.  Really the only positive that it has is that it sets up another Justice League movie that hopefully will not be helmed or written by Zack Snyder.  There was also the acknowledgement of the multiverse and alternate timelines, which aligns it (to a point) with DC’s television offerings.  What with the new Flash movie coming, it would seem that said presentation will take those mentions into account.  That is because the Flashpoint storyline did in fact involve Darkseid and Steppenwolf following its events in the comics.  Other than that, the movie fails with its story and pacing, as well as its general presentation.  All things considered, Zack Snyder’s Justice League proves to be the worst of DC and Warner Brothers’ superhero offerings to date. 

Zack Snyder’s Justice League is available now on DVD and Blu-ray.  More information on this and other DC titles from Warner Brothers is available at https://www.facebook.com/DECU2013.  

To keep up with the latest entertainment reviews and news, go online to https://www.facebook.com/philspicks and “Like” it.  Fans can always keep up with the latest entertainment reviews and news in the Phil’s Picks blog at https://philspicks.wordpress.com.  

Watertower Music To Release Zach Snyder’s ‘Justice League’ Soundtrack Alongside Movie’s Debut

Courtesy: Watertower Music

Fans of director Zach Snyder’s Justice League will get a special experience next week.

Those fans will get not only the movie, but its soundtrack the same day through Watertower Music, a division of Warner Records and Warner Brothers. The soundtrack was composed by Tom Holenborg (a.k.a. Junkie XL).

The movie’s soundtrack features two new songs previously unreleased in Warner Brothers’ original cut of the movie. They are ‘Middle Mass‘ and ‘The Crew at Warpower

Holkenborg, calling the soundtrack his “Mount Everest of Scores” spoke highly of the experience of working on the movie’s music.

“Scoring Zack Snyder’s Justice League has been a project like no other in my career,” said Holkenborg. “It’s a four-and-a- half-hour movie. I wrote so much music! The score is, at times, fully electronic, and at other times fully orchestral. It included many global elements, rock and even trap. And it was all written during Covid, so it was an incredibly hands on, isolated and intense experience; and I think that comes out in the score. This project demanded so much on so many levels, and all of us involved owed it to the fans and Zack to give it everything we had.”

The extensive track listing for the movie’s soundtrack is noted below.

Song to the Siren  Performed by Rose Betts

A Hunter Gathers 

Migratory 

Things Fall Apart

Wonder Woman Defending / And What Rough Beast

World Ending Fire 

Middle Mass 

Long Division 

No Paradise, No Fall 

The Center Will Not Hold, Twenty Centuries of Stony Sleep 

As Above, So Below 

No Dog, No Master 

Take This Kingdom by Force 

A Splinter from the Thorn That Pricked You 

Cyborg Becoming / Human All Too Human 

The Path Chooses You 

Aquaman Returning / Carry Your Own Water  

The Provenance of Something Gathered 

We Do This Together 

The Will to Power 

Smoke Become Fire 

I Teach You, the Overman 

A Glimmer at the Door of the Living 

How We Achieve Ourselves 

The Sun Forever Rising 

Underworld 

Superman Rising, Pt. 1 / A Book of Hours 

Beyond Good and Evil 

Monument Builder 

Monument Destroyer 

Urgrund 

So Begins the End 

The House of Belonging 

Earthling 

Flight Is Our Nature 

Indivisible 

And the Lion-Earth Did Roar, Pt. 1 

And the Lion-Earth Did Roar, Pt. 2 

Superman Rising, Pt. 2 / Immovable  

At the Speed of Force 

My Broken Boy 

That Terrible Strength 

An Eternal Reoccurrence of Change 

We Slay Ourselves 

Your Own House Turned to Ashes 

All of You Undisturbed Cities 

The Art of Preserving Fire 

The Crew at Warpower 

The Foundation Theme (from Zack Snyder’s Justice League) 

Batman, a Duty to Fight / To See 

Batman, an Invocation to Heal / To Be Seen  

Wonder Woman, a Call to Stand / A World Awakened  

Flash, The Space to Win / Our Legacy Is Now  

Hallelujah     Performed by Allison Crowe


More information on this and other titles from Watertown Music is available along with all of the label’s latest news at:

Websitehttps://www.watertower-music.com

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/WaterTowerMusic

To keep up with the latest entertainment news and reviews, go online to https://www.facebook.com/philspicks and “Like” it. Fans can always keep up with the latest entertainment news and reviews in the Phil’s Picks blog at https://philspicks.wordpress.com.


Bad Blood’s Self-Titled Debut LP Is “Bad” In The Best Way

Courtesy: O’Donnell Media Group

Rock super group Bad Blood released its self-titled debut record last month, and in the short time since its release the album has gotten quite the attention.  Aquaman himself, Jason Mamoa has thrown his support behind the band and its album, tweeting, “My dear friend @kennnydaleborill and his band @badbloodofficial just released their album.  That tweet was delivered when the album was released July 26.  Roughly a month later, the album continues to impress with its musical arrangements and lyrical themes of overcoming adversity.  ‘Light ‘Em Up’ is just one of the songs that serves to illustrate and support the noted statements.  It will be addressed shortly.  ‘We Will Prevail,’ which comes much later in the half-hour record’s run, also displays the strength of those arrangements and themes.  It will be addressed a little later.  Much the same can be said of ‘Anything Is Possible.’  All three songs show in their own way, the appeal of the album’s musical arrangements and positive lyrical themes.  When they are considered alongside the likes of ‘Rise Up (Bring It On),’ ‘Own The Night’ and ‘I Am The Hero’ and the rest of the record’s entries, the whole of Bad Blood proves that the record in whole is anything but bad.

Bad Blood’s self-titled debut album is easily one of this year’s most surprisingly enjoyable offerings within the rock realm and one of the year’s best new independent albums, too.  From start to finish, this 10-song, half-hour debut from the rock super group proves that while the band’s (and album’s) name is Bad Blood, the album in whole is anything but bad.  That is proven early on in the form of the album’s second song, ‘Light ‘Em Up.’  The song’s arrangement is a high-energy composition that is driven largely by its guitars and time keeping.  It will appeal highly to fans of bands, such as Eve To Adam, Buckcherry and Saliva.  The hooks and riffs couple with the solid time keeping to make it a song that will easily become a fan favorite both on record and in a live setting, especially with the slight changes in tempo and feel in the song’s bridge.  That high-energy arrangement is just one part of what makes ‘Light ‘Em Up’ such a favorite among listeners.  As noted earlier, this record is full, lyrically, of positive, upbeat lyrical themes.  This song is no exception to that rule.  It plays its own key part to the whole of the song.

Front man Chad Cherry sings in the song’s lead verse, “…hell bent and holdin’ the line/Clock’s tickin’/Heart’s kickin’/It’s a race against time/Better buckle up, it’s a hell of a ride/Straight from the cradle/Send ‘em to the grave/Rain down the fury in 10,000 waves/Better buckle up, it’s a hell of a ride.”  He continues in the song’s second verse, “Can you feel the thunder/Feel it in your bones/Time to take ‘em under/Time to send ‘em home/better buckle up/It’s a hell of a ride.”  Yes, it’s a relatively basic message, but it is a positive message.  It is a message of doing the absolute best that one can and being better than the competition, regardless of the situation, taking people by surprise by that drive.  When that message couples with the song’s adrenaline-fueled arrangement, the whole of the song becomes instantly one of Bad Blood’s best offerings and strongest examples of what makes the album in whole so appealing.  It is of course just one of the songs that serves to show how much the album has to offer listeners.  ‘We Will Prevail’ is another example of the album’s strength, both musically and lyrically.

‘We Will Prevail’ presents a slower, yet solid driving arrangement that is again centered on its guitars and drums.  Its bass line rounds out its foundation, creating a very blues-based rock arrangement that lends itself to arrangements from the likes of Muse.  That arrangement is just one part of what makes the song stand out.  As is the case with ‘Light ‘Em Up,’ this song’s lyrical content is positive in its own right.

Cherry sings in the song’s lead verse of “black hole eyes” and “dark hearts with intent to kill.”  He and his band mates sing on the song’s chorus, “Our souls are not for sale/Stand up/We will prevail/Tonight we rise/through all the lies/This is our time/Stand up we will prevail!”  The song’s second verse finds Cherry singing, “Petrified, crucified/Bank on fear/All seeing eye/Shout out/Battlecry/Won’t back down/Our flag will fly.”  This critic’s own take on this message is one of standing up to life’s adversity, not giving in to those forces that will and do work to push us down and kick us when we are down.  Cherry seems to be telling listeners to not give in to the negative forces in life, and to overcome them, too.  It is another message that any listener will welcome.  When it is joined with the song’s infectious arrangement, the whole of the elements serves to show even more why Bad Blood is such a positive new offering from the band.  It still is not the last of the album’s most notable entries.  ‘Anything Is Possible’ is yet another addition to Bad Blood that exhibits the album’s strength.

‘Anything Is Possible’ is another blues-based rock song that lends itself again to Buckcherry and even to the likes of AC/DC and Airbourne.  That is the case even down to the song’s bluesy bridge, which immediately conjures thoughts of riffs made so famous by the one and only Angus Young.  What is important to note here is that while this song’s arrangement can so easily be compared to the noted acts, it doesn’t just rip off their music.  Rather it uses those influences to develop its own musical identity, which is even better for the song.  The same can be said of the other songs discussed here.  They also are comparable to those noted acts’ works, but still maintain their own identity.  Again, here is something key to note of those songs and the rest of the album’s entries.  Now having noted that and getting back on track, the musical side of ‘Anything is Possible’ is only one part of what makes the song notable.  Its lyrical side plays its own important part to its whole.

Cherry sings in the song’s lead verse, “Sing a little song/Dance to the beat/Let’s go downtown/Let’s get on down/I got that funny feelin’/I know what you’re dealin’/You are contagious/I got that funny feelin’/I know what you’re dealin’/You are outrageous/When I’m with you, anything is possible/When I’m with you.”  He continues in the song’s second verse, “Transistor radio/Turn it up as loud as it can go/A.M. disco radio/It’s got a real nice flow/Jump to the ceiling/I know the feeling/Goodness gracious/Jump to the ceiling/I know the feeling/You are so shameless/When I’m with you, anything is possible/When I’m with you.”  Given, on the surface, this song is clearly a piece that focuses on the all-too-common topic of relationships.  What is important to note though, is that it is another song that illustrates the underlying theme of positivity that runs throughout the course of the album’s 10 songs.  It just does that in a fashion that is perhaps more radio ready than many of the album’s other songs.  Considering this, it makes the song stand out that much more.  When this is considered alongside the song’s equally accessible musical arrangement, the whole of the song stands out even more as one of the album’s most notable works.  When it is considered alongside the other songs noted here and the rest of the album’s offerings, the whole of the album becomes that much more clearly bad in the best way possible.

Bad Blood’s self-titled debut album, released independently last month, is one of the most surprisingly entertaining offerings from the rock community so far this year.  It is another offering that shows why the independent music scene deserves just as much credit and attention as the mainstream realm.  That is exhibited through all three of the songs noted here and the rest of the album’s offerings.  All things considered, they make Bad Blood anything but bad, unless one is using the term “bad” in the best way possible.  Bad Blood is available now.  More information on Bad Blood is available now along with all of the band’s latest news and more at:

 

 

 

Website: http://www.badblood.band

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/badbloodbandofficial

 

 

 

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Bad Blood Releases Self-Titled Debut

Courtesy: O’Donnell Media Group

Rock super group Bad Blood released its debut self-titled album this week.

The album and band are already getting attention from a very well-known actor, too.  Aquaman star Jason Mamoa offered his praise for the band via Twitter.

My dear friend @kennydaleborill and his band @badbloodbandofficial just released their album!,” Mamoa tweeted.  His message also featured a swipe up link to the band’s album.

Bad Blood — composed of Chad Cherry (The Last Vegas), Chris Clemence (RapScallions and Adelita’s Way), Chris Iorio (Adelita’s Way) and Kenny Borill — has partnered with music app company Vezt to release its album.  Vezt is a music rights platform that allows fans to share in portions of the royalties and profits earned from music.  It essentially lets fans have a certain portion of ownership in the songs.

Clemence explained how the partnership works in a recent interview.

“We’ve partnered with an amazing new music app Vezt that will allow our fans to share ownership in our songs,” Clemence said.  “They’ll be able to make royalties and get paid every time the songs are played, licensed, streamed, performed, etc. The more everyone listens to and promotes Bad Blood, the more money everyone makes.  It’s partnering with our fans in the success of this record.  It’s truly revolutionary and a game changer for the music business.”

The Vezt app can be downloaded via the company’s website, http://www.vezt.co and through GooglePlay.

A mini-documentary featuring the video for Bad Blood’s debut single ‘The Drug That I Need’ is streaming now here.

More information on Bad Blood is available online now at:

Website: http://www.badblood.band

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/badbloodbandofficial

 

To keep up with the latest sports and entertainment news and reviews, go online to http://www.facebook.com/philspicks and “Like” it.  Fans can always keep up with the latest sports and entertainment news and reviews in the Phil’s Picks blog at https://philspicks.wordpress.com.