The problem with these Hollywood is that they’re also so busy worrying about whether or not they can, that they rarely stop, take a breath, and ponder whether they should. Take those jokers over at Quibi, who are hemorrhaging money because they didn’t realize no one is looking for 10-minute episodes of content that can only be streamed on your phone.
Now they’ve got their founder Jeffrey Katzenberg out there making a joke of himself as he blames the company’s easily predictable struggles on our current global situation.This happens all the time in LaLa Land and the examples are endless: that Hellboy reboot with David Harbour, the live-action (?) adaptation of Cats, cramming the final season of Game of Thrones, etc, etc, etc.
Luckily, though, sometimes movie studios avoid becoming victims of their own blind ambition and rightfully decided to scrap preposterous sounding projects, such as this Batman vs Superman project from the early 2000s that would have featured Colin Farrell as Bruce Wayne and Jude Law as Clark Kent.
In a recent interview with Collider, Academy Award-winning screenwriter Akiva Goldsman pulled back the curtain on that failed Batman adaptation, saying it was the “darkest thing you’ve ever seen.”
“I wrote on […] this version of Batman v Superman [around 2001or 2002]— when Colin Farrell was cast as Batman and Jude Law was cast as Superman and Wolfgang Petersen was directing —we were in prep and it was the darkest thing you’ve ever seen. It started with Alfred’s funeral and Bruce has fallen in love and renounced being Batman, the Joker kills his wife, and then you discover it was all a lie.
Just that the love itself was constructed by the Joker to break [Bruce]. It was a time where you would be able to get these sort of stories together in script form but they couldn’t quite land in the world. Somehow, the expectations of the object — whether they be audience or corporate or directorial — it wasn’t landing quite in the way I think we imagined when we put them on the page.” [via Collider]Goldsman’s scrapped Batman vs Superman project isn’t the only ill-fated attempt at adapting the character from that era, as there was also Darren Aronofsky’s hyper-dark and frankly disturbing vision that was in the works prior to Christopher Nolan’s hiring to reboot the Caped Crusader on the big screen.
Eric is a New York City-based writer who still isn’t quite sure how he’s allowed to have this much fun for a living and will tell anyone who listens that Gotham City is canonically in New Jersey. Follow him on Twitter @eric_ital for movie and soccer takes or contact him eric@brobible.com